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redsox907
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Post by redsox907 » 15 Aug 2025, 14:52

I'm in the middle here. On one hand, Maria was being a straight up bitch about watching Mila. But at the same time, she does not need to be held 24/7 Mireya :cmon:

Set that baby down with some blocks, say leave me alone for a minute, and get back to doing the work you need to do - not finding excuses to not do it.

I think the question for Sara about regretting a decision was more foreshadowing about her thinking about stripping rather than fucking Leo, although it was framed that way.

I'm on board with Ashley. Mentor him at school, don't invite the fucker who robbed you back to your house. BUT I have no room to talk - I got back with the bih who shots me so :yeshrug:
Last edited by redsox907 on 16 Aug 2025, 04:33, edited 1 time in total.
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AJ_Josh
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Post by AJ_Josh » 15 Aug 2025, 15:55

Either showing my age or my whiteness but I'm so confused reading this lol. Creative ideas though
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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 16 Aug 2025, 04:24

Chillcavern wrote:
15 Aug 2025, 12:40
Maria is a terrible grandmother, Christ on a sandwich.

The curse of a grandparent who didn’t want to see/babysit their grandchild. Thank god Sara exists.

Ashley actually keeping it real with Quentin is priceless. Caine probably would benefit from such a dinner/ role models he’s not wrong.

Just…Caine did try to steal his car Image
Gotta make sure Mireya is constantly punished for getting knocked up at 15 (right, Kyle? :troll:)

Ashley was trying to tell him she likes her car!
Captain Canada wrote:
15 Aug 2025, 13:40
Goddamn, Maria sucks so much.

No wonder I don't like Mireya :curtain:
Image
redsox907 wrote:
15 Aug 2025, 14:52
I'm in the middle here. On one hand, Maria was being a straight up bitch about watching Mila. But at the same time, she does not need to be held 24/7 Mireya :cmon:

Set that baby down with some blocks, say leave me alone for a minute, and get back to doing the work you need to do - not finding excuses to not do it.

I think the question for Sara about regretting a decision was more foreshadowing about her thinking about stripping rather than fucking Leo, although it was framed that way.

I'm on board with Sara. Mentor him at school, don't invite the fucker who robbed you back to your house. BUT I have no room to talk - I got back with the bih who shots me so :yeshrug:
I swear to God this man will always find a way to blame Mireya :pgdead: She did find a way to get the work done.

Committed to that stripping thing, eh? Just for reference, in the Gret Stet of Looziana, you can't be a stripper until ya 21 and they CONSTANTLY raid strip clubs to ensure compliance.

*attempted to rob him. Quentin saying erryone need a second chance.
AJ_Josh wrote:
15 Aug 2025, 15:55
Either showing my age or my whiteness but I'm so confused reading this lol. Creative ideas though
On one hand, I'm "drove to high school with a case of burned CDs in my car" years old so age maybe, maybe not. On the other hand, I can't help with the whiteness bit :pgdead: I figure if djp can manage, anyone can :kghah:

Thanks for checking in, though, man.
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Post by Caesar » 17 Aug 2025, 18:46

Chalè Nan Zo

The phones at Hunt sat in a row along the wall, each one hanging crooked on its cord like it had already given up. Ricardo stood a few steps away, heel bouncing against the dull concrete. The place always smelled like sweat baked into stone, mixed with disinfectant that never seemed strong enough to scrub out the years of skin, blood, and spit ground into the block.

He shifted from foot to foot, palms slick. He knew he looked jumpy—every muscle wired too tight—but he couldn’t stop. Word had gotten out, the way it always did in here. Somebody heard somebody else talking about his appeal. Didn’t matter how careful he’d been, the air itself carried rumors. That kind of news turned into a magnet—drew eyes, drew whispers, drew envy. Appeals meant hope, and hope in a place like this was worth more than money. Worth stabbing over.

He rolled his shoulders, cracked his neck, tried to shake it off. Didn’t work. The yard felt like it was watching him through the walls.

When his turn came, he stepped up and pressed the receiver to his ear, the plastic cold and greasy at once. He dialed, knuckles flexing tight over the buttons, the black ink of his tattoos shifting with the stretch. The letters had been laid in heavy by a steady hand inside—La eMe’s mark burned permanent now. It got him protection. It also meant he’d chosen a side whether he wanted to or not.

The ring dragged long. He pressed the phone harder to his ear, stomach twisting like the call might die before she picked up. Then—

“¿Bueno?”

Ana’s voice carried thin through the line, distance laid over it like gauze. Relief punched the air out of him, but it didn’t settle the nerves crawling his skin.

“Ma. Soy yo.”

“Ricardito.” Her tone warmed quick, then faltered. “Me regresaron los papeles otra vez. The office say no. They make it harder every year with this new gobierno. I don’t know if…”

He shut his eyes, pinched the bridge of his nose. Even here, miles and wire between them, he could see the lines on her face, how the years had pressed deeper since he’d been locked away.

“Keep trying,” he said, voice low. “I started my appeal. If it goes through—” he paused, glanced over his shoulder at the CO half-watching from his stool, “—I’ll be gone. Out the country.”

There was silence on the line, broken by the faint hum of a bad connection. Then Ana’s voice came sharper:

“Culiacán is not safe, mijo. You can’t come here. You know this. The carteles, the killings—people disappear.”

Ricardo leaned forward until his forehead almost touched the scratched plexiglass in front of him. His hand curled tight around the receiver, tendons sharp under his skin. The tattoos stretched again, black against brown, spelling out a loyalty he never asked for but carried anyway.

“Safe?” He let the word hang, bitter. “Ain’t no safe, Ma. Not here. Not there. Inside, outside—it’s all the same game. Only difference is the view.”

She didn’t answer right away. He could hear her breathing, shallow, like she was holding back something. Maybe tears, maybe anger.

He pressed on, softer now. “Better hunted out there than caged in here.”

The words tasted like rust. He believed them, but the weight of them pressed into his chest heavy as concrete.

The line popped, crackled. For a second he thought it might cut out. He stared down at the floor, traced the old gum stains in the concrete with his eyes. Every mark here had history—fights, deals, blood—but none of it mattered to the men serving life. To them, his talk of appeals was a spark in dry grass. They’d snuff it out before it caught flame.

“Stay strong, mijo,” Ana whispered finally. “Dios está contigo.”

He closed his eyes. Didn’t say amen. Didn’t say anything. Just listened to the static, fingers rubbing over the black ink that had branded him both shield and target.

When the CO barked “Time!”, he set the receiver back in the cradle slow, like if he moved too fast it’d shatter the last thread tying him to her.

Turning back toward the block, he felt it: eyes. Inmates leaning in their seats just enough, conversations clipped mid-sentence. Even silence had weight here. Every step away from the phone was a test—how steady he kept his hands, how even he kept his breathing.

Danger was everywhere. But so was he.

~~~

The recruiter’s office didn’t look like the commercials. No flags flapping, no soldiers running through mud, no posters promising Be All You Can Be. Just four beige walls, a desk too shiny for the scuffs in the carpet, and the faint mildew smell underneath fresh paint. The AC rattled in the corner but never caught hold; the room felt humid, thick, like every breath Percy took had to be worked for.

He sat stiff in the plastic chair across from the desk, shoulders squared, back too straight. His knees jutted out wide, the way grown men sat. He wanted to fill the space. His palms sweated against his jeans, but he pressed them flat to his thighs, kept his chin up.

The recruiter flipped open a folder, pen resting neat on top. Black man, maybe late thirties, uniform crisp enough that Percy wondered if he had another pressed just like it hanging in the back. Nothing sloppy about him. Even the way he breathed sounded measured, like time itself bent into order around him.

“There’s a place in the Army for just about anybody,” he started. His voice carried the steady cadence of somebody who’d said it a hundred times this week. He tapped the folder. “But you’ll need your GED. That’s first. No high school diploma, you don’t move forward.”

Percy nodded once, quick, eyes locked forward. “I can get that.”

The recruiter didn’t smile. “With your record, you’ll need a waiver. That takes time. And you’ll have to stay clean. Drug test—no exceptions. Discipline.”

The words stacked up in Percy’s chest like bricks. GED. Waiver. Clean. Discipline. Each one pricked his pride, cut the air thin. He nodded again, slower this time, heat crawling up the side of his neck. Always hoops. Always some office. Always somebody’s paper telling him yes or no.

He thought about the courthouse, about the word witness hanging over him like a cheap disguise. Not a snitch, a witness, Babin had said, as if a new label could change what people already decided he was.

The recruiter let the silence sit, eyes on him steady. Percy shifted in the chair, leaned back a little, forced his arms loose. Tried to look like it didn’t bother him. “Yeah. I understand.”

The pen scratched against paper. The sound made Percy’s jaw tighten. Every line the man wrote felt like it could trap him forever, like his whole future was being boxed into neat little check marks.

Still—something underneath the sting kept pulsing. The man hadn’t told him no. Not like school, not like Dre’s boys who had cut their eyes at him ever since, not like his own cousins who’d gone quiet when his name came up. For once, somebody was saying, there’s a place for you. Not without conditions, but not a door slammed in his face either.

His pride flared, wanting to spit back that he wasn’t some lost cause needing waivers and clean sheets. But the hunger burned hotter: if this was the way out, he’d swallow whatever it took.

He leaned forward, elbows on his knees now. “So if I handle that… I’m good?”

“You handle that,” the recruiter said evenly, “then we can talk about the next step.”

The sentence landed heavy. Not a promise, not a guarantee—but not dismissal either.

When it was over, Percy walked out into the parking lot. The Louisiana heat smacked him like a hand, sun bouncing hard off windshields and blinding him for a second. The blacktop radiated through his sneakers, air thick with the smell of oil and hot rubber. He shoved his hands in his pockets, pulse rattling his ribs.

GED, waiver, clean, discipline—the words echoed, heavy as chains. But beneath the burn was fire.

They thought paperwork was gonna be the thing to break him.

He squared his shoulders, pulled in a breath hot enough to sear.

Nah. He’d find a way.

~~~

The sun leaned heavy over the field, pressing down on the helmets and pads until the plastic carried its own heat. Sweat stung Caine’s eyes beneath the facemask, slid along his jaw, soaked the collar of his practice jersey until it clung dark against his shoulders. August in New Orleans didn’t let you forget it for a second—thick air, buzzing cicadas bleeding into the shrill of whistles, the ground soft where cleats chewed up grass.

He jogged back into line after a rep and caught it—the noise that wasn’t just teammates. Murmurs, the scrape of metal bleachers, the shuffle of bodies shifting in the stands. He squinted past the facemask. The bleachers were fuller than yesterday, fuller than he’d seen all week. Men in polo shirts and baseball caps leaned forward, clipboards balanced against their knees. Sunglasses flashed hard in the sun every time one of them tilted his head.

His chest tightened. That many eyes meant something.

“Yo, you blind or something?” Derrick’s voice cut in, helmet cocked as he trotted up beside him. He jerked his chin toward the bleachers. “You see all them scouts, huh? Whole parking lot full of rentals today.”

Caine kept his mouth shut. The sound of whistles, coaches barking, cleats digging in—he let it fill the space.

Derrick grinned anyway. “We ranked number one. Top in the state, top in the country. They watching everybody who ain’t locked down yet. That’s why they here.”

Corey slid by, tugging at his chinstrap, laughing under his breath. “Man ain’t even Google us before suiting up. Thought this was just some Friday night lights bullshit.”

Caine shrugged, rolled his shoulders loose, made his voice flat: “Ball’s ball.”

“Shiiid,” Corey said, shaking his head. “You gon’ learn quick.”

The line shifted forward. Coach Joseph’s whistle cracked sharp across the air, and Jay stepped in to take the next series. His helmet gleamed under the sun, his gait cocky in that way Caine had already clocked—chin up, arms swinging wide. Jay clapped Tyron on the back before the snap; Keon hooted from the sideline like it was already game day.

Caine folded his arms over his chest, jaw locked behind the mouthguard. Every time Jay’s cadence rang out, the cheers from Tyron, Keon, a couple others hit harder. Louder. Like they wanted him to hear where they stood.

The ball snapped. Jay rolled out, hit Matt on a slant. Matt tucked and sprinted, legs pumping, whistle ending the play quick. The bleachers clapped—not loud, not all of them, but enough. Jay jogged back, chest puffed, helmet tilting toward Caine like a dare.

Another snap. This time he dumped it off quick to Devin leaking out of the backfield. Devin lowered his pads, barreled ahead until the whistle cut. More cheers.

The split was right there, open. Some helmets bobbed with Jay, some didn’t.

Coach Joseph let it go two more plays, then snapped his whistle loud enough to bite through the chatter. His voice carried the kind of authority that didn’t waste words: “That’s enough. Quit the damn parade. Guerra—” his eyes cut to Caine, sharp but pragmatic, “—show me.”

Caine pulled the mouthguard from his teeth, jogged onto the field. His cleats sank into the soft ground, every step carrying weight. He caught the ball, barked cadence, and the line moved. Snap clean. Drop back. Eyes cutting across the field like scanning for danger on a street corner—read, adjust, shift.

Matt broke free on the out. Caine planted, whipped it clean, ball popping against Matt’s chest as he turned upfield. Whistle.

Back in line, breath sharp, sweat rolling down his temple. He felt the eyes pressing from the bleachers, all those shaded lenses tracking him.

Next snap. Hand-off to Jalen. He burst through the gap, pads popping against Tyron as he sealed the edge. Whistle.

Caine adjusted his helmet, licked the salt off his lip, locked back in. Every rep was a test. Every glance from the scouts in the stands weighed like a file being built on him. And over his shoulder, he could feel Jay’s presence—shadow hot, eyes on him, waiting for the first mistake.

He took the next snap, heart steady, body tight, and drove it anyway. Because out here, the only thing worse than being unseen was being seen and slipping.

~~~

The office smelled faintly of dry-erase marker and coffee gone cold. The air was stale, heavy in the way school hallways always felt once the last bell had cleared most of the kids out. Mireya shifted the binder on her lap, the plastic cover slick against her sweaty palms. Her shirt clung to her back where the humidity had followed her in, but she forced herself to sit straight in the chair across from Ms. Hanley’s desk.

Ms. Hanley typed something on her computer, the clack of keys sharp in the quiet, before finally turning her attention over. She adjusted her glasses, smoothed a stack of forms beside her, the motions practiced, automatic. “Alright, Mireya. What’s on your mind?”

Mireya opened the binder. Tabs marked with sticky notes jutted from the sides, some creased, some curling from being handled too much. Sheets of paper had scribbled numbers along the margins, columns circled, red pen slashed through places where she’d done the math over and over again. She tapped a page with her index finger, keeping her voice even.

“I’ve been looking at scholarships,” she said. “Trying to figure out how much they’d actually cover. The tuition doesn’t look bad, but it’s the housing. That’s the part that… it doesn’t add up.”

Ms. Hanley nodded slowly, folding her hands on top of the desk. Her nails were short, chipped red polish clinging to the edges. “You’re right. Housing is a big cost. But depending on where you apply, scholarships can take care of a big chunk. Sometimes most of it, if you get the right package.”

Mireya let out a breath, small but sharp. Her shoulders eased a fraction, though her stomach stayed tight. “That’s what I was hoping.”

Ms. Hanley reached into a drawer, pulled out a stack of pamphlets. Bright covers with smiling students under bold headings—“Plan Your Future!” and “Start Here, Go Anywhere!” She slid a few across the desk. “Have you thought about Delgado? Or River Parishes? A community college might be more realistic.”

The word hit like a slap.

Mireya froze. Her jaw tightened, though she kept her face flat. She stared down at the pamphlets—blues and greens and stock-photo smiles—and didn’t move to touch them.

Ms. Hanley kept talking, voice smooth, like she was ticking boxes on a checklist. She tapped her pen lightly on the desk as she spoke. “Plenty of students start there, get an associate’s, and move on if they want. And truthfully, plenty of people stop at an associate’s degree and find good jobs. Healthcare, office work, even management tracks sometimes. It’s a solid path.”

Mireya swallowed, the taste of bitterness rising sharp in her throat. She thought about the bills folded into envelopes on her dresser. She thought about the nights Camila slept curled on the mattress beside her while she stayed awake, calculator app glowing in her hand, re-working numbers until her eyes burned.

And here was Ms. Hanley, smiling gentle, handing her a smaller box to fit into. Realistic. Like her dream was already too big, like it had to be cut down to size before it could even breathe.

She slid her thumb along the edge of her binder, pressing until the skin whitened. Her voice stayed polite, level. “Right.”

Ms. Hanley pushed the pamphlets closer, tapping the corner of one with her nail. “Just something to think about. Nothing wrong with taking a steady route. Sometimes it’s the smartest move.”

Mireya nodded once, sharp. The kind of nod meant to end a conversation. She reached for the pamphlets, stacked them neatly, slid them into the binder without looking at the covers.

The silence stretched, filled only by the low hum of the computer fan. Ms. Hanley gave another small smile, then turned back to her screen, already typing notes.

Mireya stood, the chair legs scraping faintly against the tile. She shifted the binder under her arm, the weight of it heavier now. “Thanks,” she said quietly, voice flat.

Out in the hallway, the air felt no lighter. The buzz of the overhead lights pressed down as she walked, her footsteps hollow on the linoleum. The pamphlets pressed stiff against her ribs through the binder, every step making her more aware of them. She kept her face calm, her chin level, but inside her chest was a slow burn—hotter than the sun outside, hotter than the stifling air.

Realistic.

Always the word people handed her. Always the lesser track, the smaller dream, the polite cage dressed up like guidance. She thought of Camila’s little voice asking questions she didn’t always have answers for. She thought of all the times she’d been told no, or less, or wait, or not for you.

Her jaw locked.

She walked faster, binder pressed tight against her side, silence burning hotter than anything she could’ve said out loud.
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Post by Captain Canada » 17 Aug 2025, 22:07

Realistic is a problem for her even though high school been smacking her upside the head? Let me stop while I'm ahead :curtain:
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Post by Caesar » 18 Aug 2025, 13:47

Captain Canada wrote:
17 Aug 2025, 22:07
Realistic is a problem for her even though high school been smacking her upside the head? Let me stop while I'm ahead :curtain:
When she glow up and become a US senator, I don’t want to hear nathin
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Post by Caesar » 18 Aug 2025, 13:47

Nan Silans Sal

The bell had rung, but the halls still swelled with bodies and noise. Sneakers squeaked sharp on tile, lockers slammed too hard, somebody’s voice carried over the crush, calling for a ride. The air hung heavy, sour with sweat that had soaked into polyester, fried food grease clinging from lunch, bleach cutting faint but not enough.

His backpack hung low on one shoulder, jersey stretched across his chest. He walked easy, unhurried, the heat rolling off the blacktop not shifting his pace.

He shoved open the glass doors and the heat outside grabbed hold. September sun bounced off blacktop, baking up through his shoes, gluing his jersey to his back. Cicadas whined in the trees by the street, loud enough to drown the honks and bass lines from cars pulling out of the lot. He adjusted his backpack strap, eyes set on the field house.

“Look who they didn’t give a JV number to,” Janae’s voice came from his right, quick and teasing. She slipped in beside him like she belonged there, braids swinging over her shoulder.

On his other side, Tasha sipped at a Styrofoam cup, rattling the ice. She tilted her head his way. “Who you pay for that?”

Caine’s mouth pulled at the corner. He didn’t turn. “I ain’t never had to pay for nothing I wanted.”

The line sat between them, heavy as the heat. Both of them caught it. Janae’s grin curved sharper, her eyes dragging over him with a quick flicker. Tasha laughed low, shaking her head.

“So you not a Soulja Slim type of nigga?” she said, her tone sly.

Caine laughed once, rough. “Fuck no.”

They walked like that, the three of them cutting across the lot as the noise behind them thinned — buses growling in the distance, cars honking, voices fading into corners. Janae leaned closer, her arm brushing his.

“After the game, I know a spot,” she said. “House party. Gonna be live.”

Caine shook his head, eyes still forward. “Going home.”

She rolled her eyes, scoffing. “That’s weak.”

“Kid don’t sleep if I ain’t there.” His voice came flat, final.

Tasha sucked air through her teeth, smirk sliding across her face. “Aw, look at you. Good daddy and all that.”

“You don’t see that every day,” Janae added, softer now, like she hadn’t meant for it to slip out that way.

Caine chuckled, low in his throat, enough to make it seem like he was in on the joke.

The lot spread out in front of them, heat rising in waves, the smell of exhaust mixing with the sweetness from a snowball stand across the street. Somebody hollered at a girl walking by, a car stereo rattled windows. Janae tossed her braids back, eyes flicking at him like she wanted to say more, but she bit it back. She and Tasha split away toward the cars, their laughter trailing behind them.

Caine hitched his backpack higher, jaw set. His skin was sticky with sweat, the sun pressing down, but his steps stayed steady.

Up ahead, Jay cut into the field house doorway. His jersey was half untucked, headphones loose around his neck. He looked back, eyes locking on Caine’s.

No words. Didn’t need them. Everything was already in that glance — who the coaches trusted, who the players leaned toward, who had the weight to carry the season.

Jay broke it first, pushing through the door without a change in his face.

Caine stood there for a beat longer, heat rolling down his back, then followed.

~~~

The bleachers were already hot when Mireya climbed them, Camila tugging her hand hard enough to pull her off balance. Angela and Paz followed close, weaving through knees and paper plates and Styrofoam cups, until they found a row halfway up. Mireya settled first, pulling Camila into the space beside her. The metal burned through her jeans the second she sat. She shifted, but there was no escape from the heat.

The stadium smelled like grease and syrup — fried fish sizzling in vats down by the fence, smoke from a grill curling into the stands, and melted sugar dripping off snowballs clutched in sweaty hands. The band blared brass notes that bent sharp in the air, drums rolling so loud they rattled through the metal beneath their feet. All of it pressed against her, thick and close, every sound stacking on the next until it was one heavy noise.

Camila wriggled forward, nearly pitching over the row in front until Mireya caught the back of her shirt. Her curls stuck damp to her forehead, face shining.

“Mami, look!” she clapped her hands, voice cutting high over the crowd. “That’s daddy!”

Mireya followed her point. Caine stood on the field, jersey stretched across his shoulders. He flicked his wrist loose, dropped into his stance, shoulders squared. Even from here, he looked like the game was already his. Camila bounced against her arm, her pride loud enough to turn a few heads nearby. Mireya gave her daughter an animated smile and nod.

Angela leaned back on her elbows, sweat gleaming along her collarbone. “They really got all these people watching them? Shit, he might really end up in the league.”

Paz grinned around her straw. “Rich as hell. Y’all front row at the Dome, nails done every week.”

Mireya shook her head, flat. “Even if that happened, that’s years away. We’d still be broke right now.”

Angela huffed a laugh but didn’t push it. Paz clicked her tongue, eyes drifting back to the field.

Mireya shifted on the burning seat again, stretching her legs out in front of her. The crowd buzzed around her — whistles from the field, vendors calling out prices, kids cutting between rows with snowballs dripping down their arms. She let her eyes sweep across the section, faces blurred together in the sun, until one caught and stuck.

A few rows down, Janae leaned in close to her friends, laughing big. Her braids swung, lip gloss flashing when her head tipped back. She touched the girl beside her on the arm like the joke couldn’t sit still, her laugh ringing louder than the horns.

Heat crawled up Mireya’s neck. Her mouth pulled sharp without her meaning it.

Angela followed her gaze. “Isn’t that the girl from back a few months ago?”

Mireya’s jaw tightened. “She’s trying to fuck Caine. All over his fucking IG, leaving hearts and eyes like she ain’t got no shame.”

Paz rolled her eyes, long and slow. “Definitely not a girl’s girl.”

Mireya shook her head, eyes forward again. Her thigh pressed hard against the burning metal, nails digging through denim just to keep her hand still. Caine was hers, but girls like Janae didn’t care about that. Out here, with the jersey and the eyes on him, he looked too easy to want.

“Mami, Mami, look how far he throw it!” Camila yanked at her arm, voice lit up.

Mireya blinked, snapping back to the field. Caine set his feet, arm cutting through, the ball sailing high and long down the sideline. The receiver pulled it in and the crowd burst up, brass crashing over the noise. Camila clapped so hard her palms smacked pink, her laugh bubbling up, bouncing on the seat though it burned her legs the same as Mireya’s.

Mireya turned toward her, her own smile breaking wide and bright, the kind that reached her whole face. For Camila, it always did.

But when she looked back to the field, the tightness in her chest hadn’t moved. The sound of her daughter’s joy wrapped tight around her, but her eyes stayed locked on the field. Caine stood easy on the field, shoulders loose like none of the weight around them ever touched him.

The smell of grease and sugar thickened in the air. Janae’s laughter carried up from the row below, sharp against the roar of the crowd. Mireya swallowed, her chest tight, jaw locked. She didn’t look down again.

~~~
The lights hit him first. Too bright, humming overhead, hot enough that sweat crawled down his spine before he even strapped in. Helmet dangled in his hand, chinstrap swinging against his thigh.

Eighteen months. A year and a half since he’d felt this — the turf under his cleats, the band rattling through his chest, the hum of a crowd that wanted blood or glory or both.

His foot bounced against the grass like it had in the cell, back when movement was the only way to burn the noise out of his head. He squeezed the facemask, knuckles tight, breath pushing through his teeth.

All around him, his teammates shouted, slapped helmets, shoulder pads knocking like drums. Jay strutted down the sideline, jaw set like it was his stage. Caine kept his eyes on the field. Shaw’s defense stretched, helmets low, watching. Waiting.

The noise swelled—horns, drums, voices stacked in the bleachers, the faint tang of fry grease and spilled beer drifting down. Police ringed the fence line, flashlights slung on their belts. Caine felt them even when he didn’t look.

He shut his eyes for a second, mouthguard grinding his teeth. His chest buzzed with something he couldn’t slow—fear, pride, rage, all of it twisted tight.

The whistle shrieked. He slid the helmet on, buckled in, and jogged toward the huddle.



Caine walked into position, scanning the defense. He rubbed his hands on his pants, habit more than nerves.

Shaw’s front crouched low, linebackers rolling forward, safeties creeping. He called cadence, voice sharp, throat dry.

Snap cracked.

The pocket folded fast. Helmet slammed into his ribs, hands clawed at his jersey. He spun loose, legs churning, rolled left. Defender lunged, fingertips brushing his pads, but he squared his shoulders, cocked his arm. Ball ripped cross-body, low and spinning. Tyron pulled it in, cut upfield, whistle shrieking as the sideline roared.

Caine staggered up, chest rattling, facemask clogged with turf pellets. He spat the mouthpiece into his hand, looking at the nearest Eagles defender and signaling the first down.

Back in the huddle, Jay wiped sweat from his neck, jaw tight. “Man, that was all the catch,” he muttered, low and sharp, eyes already shifting off him.

Caine just bent, hands on his knees, pulling air into his lungs.



Caine dropped back, hand patting the ball as he went through his progressions. The pocket imploded around him.

He stepped back, putting his hand on the back of one of his linemen to push away and avoid getting rolled up on. He spun around and saw daylight flash, bolting for it.

Hands dragged on his jersey, pulled across his back, but he ripped free, legs pounding. Sideline open. He lowered his shoulder into a hit, barreled out fifteen yards down before the whistle cut.

He bent over, helmet tilted back, breath rasping loud in his ears. Shaw’s sideline barked wrap up until their throats cracked. He shoved the mouthguard back in, grinned once, and jogged back.

Matt smacked him on the helmet, shouting “Show ‘em that speed, big brudda!”



Coach Joseph flashed the signal from the sideline, and Caine barked it out, voice cutting through the noise. Jay jogged across the formation, sliding behind the line. Shaw’s safeties pointed, shouting, shifting hard to follow him.

Snap.

Ball in Caine’s hands, quick toss forward into Jay’s chest on the sweep. The defense chased like it was drawn for them—linebackers flowing wide, corner sprinting downhill.

Jay took two hard steps, then flipped the ball back. Caine caught it clean, rolled left. The field opened up—half their defense buried in the wrong direction.

He squared, feet heavy in the turf, and let it fly. Spiral cutting the air, Matt pulling it in downfield, crowd detonating before the whistle even hit.

Jay smirked once when they reset, nothing said. Like he’d written the play himself.



Fourth quarter. Clock bleeding. Caine crouched low, hands flexing on the laces, eyes slicing the defense. Shaw sold out—linebackers creeping, safeties already breaking.

“Go!” Caine shouted, the ball rifled toward him.

The pocket collapsed like jaws closing. Helmets hammered his chest, bodies pressed him back. He planted his cleats, felt ribs screaming, but held his eyes downfield.

A sliver opened—Tyron breaking once, free for half a breath. That was enough.

Caine let it rip a heartbeat before the hit folded him. Ball cut through the air, spiral tight, perfect. Tyron hauled it in on the run, end zone flashing under the lights. Touchdown.

Caine hit the turf, chest caved, lungs empty. For a second he lay flat, facemask grinding against rubber pellets, light searing his eyes. Then hands pulled him up, teammates slapping his helmet, shouting in his ears.



The scoreboard glared above, proof in numbers. Karr on top, Shaw bent double, hands on knees, coaches hoarse.

Caine crouched on the sideline, helmet dangling from his fingertips, chewing on his mouthpiece. Noise swelled around him—the band, the horns, the bleachers shaking. His vision stretched wide, always scanning around him.

He looked down the sideline and locked eyes with Coach Joseph.

The old man give him a slight nod before turning back to the field to shout instructions to the offense with Jay at quarterback for the final drive of the game.

Caine looked down at his hands, gloves muddied and battered from the turf. Still holding on.

~~~

The door rattled under Saul’s hand before he even twisted the knob, his palm slick with sweat. He yanked it open, and Zoe stepped in like she owned the place—eyes cutting left and right, sharp, sizing up the hallway as though someone might jump out.

“Anybody home?” she asked, lowering her voice.

Saul shrugged, leaning against the frame, trying to play it cool though his heart thudded loud in his chest. “Somebody always home here. My tias, abuela, my lil’ brother, cousins. Whole house full. My dad’s not here though. We can go to my room.”

Zoe raised her brows, lips quirking. “So when you say ‘your room,’ the word your doing a lot of work in that.”

He smirked, more out of reflex than confidence. “It’s mine enough.”

Zoe flicked her eyes toward the back of the house. “Maybe we just head out to the shed again. Just in case your mawmaw walks in lookin’ for socks or somethin’.”

Saul snorted but didn’t argue. “Bet.” He pulled the screen door open, the hinges squealing, and stepped onto the back porch. The air hit thick, heavy with September damp, the kind that clung to skin like another shirt. From blocks away drifted the muffled roar of a crowd, whistles cutting sharp through the stillness—Friday night football echoing across New Orleans.

The backyard grass crunched under his sneakers, dry in patches, muddy in others. A single bulb above the porch buzzed, throwing yellow light across the dirt path that led to the shed crouched at the back fence line. The shed smelled of oil and mildew even before they pulled the warped door open.

Zoe stepped inside first, brushing cobwebs off the frame. “Romantic,” she said, rolling her eyes but not pulling back.

Saul shut the door behind them, the noise of the football game fading to a low hum, replaced by the shed’s close, damp quiet.

“You got condoms?” she asked, casual but pointed.

“Yeah,” Saul said too fast. He glanced around. He knew he’d stashed them here—didn’t want to risk keeping them in the house. His gaze swept across shelves stacked with paint cans, old lawn tools, his grandpa’s rusted toolbox. Then he spotted the corner of a cardboard tab sticking out.

“There.” He tugged open the metal box, hand closing around the carton of Trojans. Relief pricked his chest—then it stalled. His eyes caught on something black wedged beneath the tray of wrenches.

The shape was wrong. Heavy. Cold just looking at it.

Zoe leaned against the wall, arms folded. “What’s up? You look like you seen a ghost.”

Saul didn’t answer right away. He reached in and lifted it out—a pistol, weighty in his hand. The metal smelled faintly of oil and dust. His throat tightened.

Zoe straightened. “Saul… what the fuck?”

He turned it over, careful, fingers stiff, like it might go off just from him breathing too close. The sight of it pulled something hard through his chest.

“Who’s that even for?” she pressed, voice sharper now.

Saul stared at the floor. “Probably Caine.”

The words slipped out flat, but they landed heavy. He pictured his cousin—Caine always watching, always tense, like the world was a setup waiting to happen.

Saul’s pulse pounded in his ears. He stared at the gun so long his hands started to shake. Finally, he set it down on the nearest shelf with a slow care, the clink of metal on wood too loud in the cramped shed.

Silence thickened in the shed, heavy as the air. Saul’s eyes stuck to the pistol on the shelf, breath tight in his chest. The shape of it seemed to pull all the sound out of the room.

Zoe stepped forward, slow, then reached out and caught the hem of his shirt between her fingers. She tugged once, gentle but sure.

“C’mon,” she said, voice softer now, almost coaxing. “Take this off.”

The words cut through his daze. Saul blinked, dragging his eyes off the gun and back to her. Her look wasn’t playful—more like she was pulling him out of a place she didn’t want him to sink into.

He swallowed, then grabbed the fabric himself and yanked the shirt over his head. Sweat clung to his skin, the bulb above throwing a weak light across the lines of his shoulders.

Zoe took it from him, letting the shirt drop from her hand, stepping in closer until her arm brushed against him. She kept her gaze steady on his face, not the weapon glinting on the shelf.

“Forget it,” she murmured, tilting her chin up toward him.

Saul nodded, though the weight of what he’d touched still pressed at the back of his mind.

~~~

The fieldhouse door slammed behind him, echoing against cinderblock before it died into the night. The air outside hit Caine heavy, hotter than inside, thick with grease smoke and car exhaust drifting low under Claiborne. His shirt clung to him, still wet with sweat. The roar of the game was fading, replaced by the scrape of cleats on pavement, parents calling out to kids, the hiss of traffic folding back over the city.

“Daddy!”

Camila broke loose from a cluster of people near the gate and sprinted, arms pumping, ponytail bouncing. Her sneakers slapped the concrete with every step until she threw herself into him. He caught her without flinching, the small body colliding into his chest with a thud. She latched onto his neck, breathless and loud, already spilling words about touchdowns, the band, the crowd chanting his name.

Caine pressed his face into her hair. She smelled like cotton candy, sticky against his cheek. His chest eased for the first time all night.

Mireya came behind, slower, steady. The stadium lights threw her face into sharp planes, shadows under her eyes. She didn’t say anything at first—just watched Camila wrapped tight around him. When Caine bent, his daughter still clinging, and kissed her, she let him. Quick, the taste of sweat and lip gloss, then she pulled back enough for him to see the set of her mouth.

“Thanks for coming,” he said, adjusting Camila’s weight on his shoulder. “Know you had to skip work for this.”

Her lips tucked inward, then parted again. “Worth it. I want her to see you play.”

Caine nodded, shifting his hold as Camila tugged at his ear. He was about to answer when a voice cut in from the side.

“Hell of a game, son.”

A man in an Alcorn State polo strode across the walkway, smile easy, tablet tucked under his arm. He carried himself like he had every right to be here.

Caine moved Camila to his other hip and reached out. “Appreciate it.”

“Jermaine Gales,” the man said. “Offensive coordinator, Alcorn. You kind of came outta nowhere, huh?”

Caine gave a short laugh that caught in his throat. “Yeah. Been away from the game a bit.”

Gales nodded like he knew exactly what that meant. His gaze slid to Camila, arms locked around her father’s neck. “That your little sister?”

Caine’s jaw tightened but relaxed when he looked down at Camila. “Nah. My daughter.” He tipped his chin toward Mireya. “That’s her mom.”

For the first time, Gales turned to Mireya. She dipped her head once, lips pressed flat, offering nothing else.

“Alright then,” Gales said, grin widening. “Got six myself. Listen—wanna get you out to Alcorn for a visit. You, and your family. Full scholarship. Everything paid. You just show up and do what you do best.”

The words hung in the air. Mireya shifted, arms folding tighter across her chest, shoulders drawing in. Her silence thickened, different now.

Camila tugged at Caine’s chin, asking if they could get nachos on the way home, her voice high and certain. He nodded absently, eyes still on the man in front of him.

Caine felt the truth clawing up his throat—that probation had him on a leash, that Mississippi might as well be another country. He clenched his jaw until it ached. “I’ll see about making it happen,” he said.

“Good man.” Gales pressed a card into his palm, fingers firm. “Keep in touch.”

And then he was moving again, already headed toward another family, another boy with sweat still drying on his skin.

Caine stayed rooted. Camila’s chatter dimmed into a hum against his neck, her small body heavier now as the game’s energy drained out of her. The card sweated in his fist.

“Mississippi, huh?” Mireya’s voice broke the quiet. Smooth on the surface, sharp beneath.

Caine shrugged, shifting Camila higher. “If it’s free.”

They walked toward the parking lot. Gravel cracked underfoot. Car doors slammed. Headlights swung across the blacktop, catching faces in passing flashes. Families peeled away, laughter and shouting thinning into the distance. The stadium lights hummed behind them, less bright now, the field already darkening.

Camila sagged in his arms, thumb pushed into her mouth, words finally spent. Her breath warmed his shoulder in slow bursts.

Caine stared straight ahead, the card pinched between his fingers. Every step felt heavier. Beside him, Mireya kept her arms crossed, lips pressed in.
User avatar

Captain Canada
Posts: 4735
Joined: 01 Dec 2018, 00:15

American Sun

Post by Captain Canada » 18 Aug 2025, 14:51

Oh would you look at that - another domino falling.

redsox907
Posts: 1391
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 18 Aug 2025, 19:43

Caesar wrote:
18 Aug 2025, 13:47
When she glow up and become a US senator, I don’t want to hear nathin
that scandal when Leo comes out finna hit hard :curtain:

still need to read todays update so that's all I'm gonna say atm

Soapy
Posts: 11594
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 19 Aug 2025, 07:14

Isn't Jay a senior too? tough scene

and please have this girl take those damn ACTs already :camdead:

enough is enough
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