American Sun

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

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 11306
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 23 Aug 2025, 22:18

Pa Gen Lannwit San Rèv

The chair creaked when he shifted, a thin scrape of wood against the floor that made him freeze. He waited, pen paused between his fingers, eyes flicking to the two bodies in the beds.

Mireya lay on her side, one hand tucked under her cheek, hair spilling loose across the pillow. Camila’s smaller form rose and fell in steady rhythm, her thumb half-pressed against her mouth, the soft wheeze of her baby-breath breaking the quiet. Neither stirred.

Only then did Caine let the chair tilt back onto its rear legs again, balancing it in a way that let him rock without noise. The pen twirled once more over his knuckles, smooth from hours of practice. Little tricks like that kept his hands busy when the rest of him wouldn’t stay still.

The room smelled faintly of bleach and baby powder, undercut with fried grease clinging to the fabric of Mireya’s curtains. Outside, a siren moaned somewhere too far off to be urgent, fading back into the heavy night hum of the city. The walls here were thin, but for once New Orleans wasn’t spilling into the room.

His notebook sat open across his lap. The lines caught the light from the weak bulb in the hall that leaked under the crack of the door. He bent low, shoulder hunched, writing in the tight, slanted script he didn’t let anybody see.

Camila, he wrote.

The words came slow at first, like they always did.

Dreams don’t live here. Not for us. People talk about goals like they a thing you just walk toward. Like you get to pick. But I was brought up different. Learned that kind of shit died when the levees broke. Learned that anything soft get washed away first. That’s when I stopped thinking about dreaming. All I learned to do was survive.

He pressed the pen harder, the letters grooving into the paper.

You gon’ hear people tell you you can be anything. They ain’t lying exactly. But they ain’t talking to girls like you. World already got its hands out waiting to take something from you. You half-Mexican, half-Honduran, Black. Poor. With me as your daddy. They gon’ expect you to fail before you even talk.

He stopped, jaw tightening. The silence pressed harder now, the kind that made every creak in the walls sound like footsteps coming for you. He rolled the pen between his fingers again, then set it down long enough to flex his hand.

His eyes drifted back to Mireya. Even in sleep her face looked worn, like she never got the hours she needed. She curled toward the empty space where he’d been, as if her body knew where to find him even half-dreaming.

He pulled the notebook closer again.

But tu mama—she different. She the only one who ever made me think maybe I could want more than what the streets give. She make me believe for a second I could be more than somebody running round with a gun, taking from people just to make sure we had diapers and food. She the closest I ever got to thinking maybe I could want better. Not just for you. For me.

His throat tightened. He tapped the pen against the page until the urge passed. Then he shut the notebook fast, the soft thump of it closing louder than it should have been in the quiet room.

He slid it into his backpack, deep into the side pocket where nobody would think to look. Even Mireya didn’t know about the pages he kept adding. Letters stacked on letters, some finished, some just lines trailing off mid-thought. They weren’t for her. They weren’t for him either. Only for Camila, if she ever got old enough to want them.

Caine stood, careful to push the chair back without a sound. The floorboards gave under his weight anyway. He crossed the small room, every step a measured silence.

Camila stirred but didn’t wake when his shadow fell over her. Her curls were damp against her forehead, one little fist clenched near her cheek. He crouched low, sliding his palm softly over her hair, the strands fine as thread against his skin. For a second her face relaxed, her mouth falling open, breath catching. He bent and pressed his lips just above her temple.

Then he straightened and turned back toward the bed. Mireya shifted as he slid under the blanket, the mattress sagging toward him. Her body found his automatically, head nuzzling against his chest, hand slipping across his stomach. She sighed once, deep, and settled back into sleep.

Caine lay still, staring up at the cracked ceiling where the paint had started to bubble near the vent. His heart beat hard from words he hadn’t said out loud.

The city outside kept humming, but inside that room, in that one small space, he let himself breathe like it was safe.

Even if it never really was.

~~~

The block was alive in fits and starts, the way it always was when the sun started its slow dip but the night hadn’t claimed it yet. Laughter scattered across the cracked pavement, dice clicking against concrete, somebody’s ringtone buzzing sharp before being silenced.

Ramon stood a half-step back from the circle, hands in his pockets, watching the cubes dance. Sweat clung to the back of his neck, his shirt sticking, the September heat refusing to fade even with evening coming on.

E.J. crouched low, all grin and trash talk. “Come on, nigga, don’t be scared. Let them bitches roll.” He snapped his wrist, the dice bouncing, clattering to a stop on sevens. Groans went up. He snatched the bills off the ground, holding them high like a trophy.

Ramon didn’t smile. He tapped the shoulder of one of the younger boys in the circle and nodded toward the edge of the block where a skinny man hovered, scratching at his arm. The boy caught it quick, slid off, hand already digging into his pocket for the small bag. The fiend passed over a few crumpled bills, barely looked at what he got before hustling back down the street, shoulders jerking with that too-fast, too-nervous walk.

Money in, money out. Just like always.

E.J. cursed as his next throw came up snake eyes. “Man, fuck this game.” He pushed back, brushing dirt off his shorts, and walked over to where Ramon had posted. His grin was still there, but tighter now, his cash folded smaller in his hand.

Ramon didn’t look at him. He jerked his chin toward the far end of the block. “That car been sittin’ there a lil’ minute. You think that’s the jakes?”

At the corner, a dark sedan idled, lights off, windows tinted too heavy.

E.J. squinted, then laughed. “We been serving fiends all day. If that was them boys, they’d been hopped out on our ass already. That’s somebody waiting on something.”

“Or waiting on us,” Ramon said. His voice stayed flat, but his eyes didn’t leave the car. “Could be 110. Could be Dooney. ROD. Byrd. Anybody.”

E.J. shrugged like it was nothing, then stepped off the curb. “Fuck that.” He strutted into the middle of the street, arms spread wide. “Aye!” His voice carried down the block. He flashed signs with both hands, chin raised, daring. “What’s good?”

For a second, nothing moved. Then the driver’s window eased down. A Black man leaned out—dreads hanging to his jaw, gold fronts glinting when he spoke.

“I’m just waiting for my baby mama, lil’ brudda,” he called, voice lazy, unbothered.

E.J. barked a laugh. “Then wait somewhere else. Get the fuck on..”

The window slid back up, but the car stayed put, engine humming low.

E.J. shook his head, turned back to Ramon with a shrug. “Nigga soft. He ain’t nothing. Let him sit.” He jogged back to the circle, sliding into the noise of the dice game like he hadn’t just put himself in the open.

Ramon stayed where he was. He stared at the car, long enough that the sounds around him started to blur. Dice hit pavement. Voices rose and fell. A bottle clinked against the curb. But all of it sat behind the hum of that engine.

Finally he moved, slow, crossing to the steps of a vacant lot where weeds grew tall through the chain link. He sat, knees wide, elbows braced. His hand slipped down to the shadow under the bottom step.

The cold steel of the handgun found his palm like it had been waiting.

He shifted it once, making sure the weight sat right, then set it close enough to reach fast, far enough it didn’t look like he was flashing. His eyes never left the car.

The block kept laughing, kept losing money, kept serving fiends like it was nothing. E.J. whooped at a lucky roll, back in the middle, money flashing in his fist again.

But Ramon’s gaze stayed locked. He knew better than to let comfort fool him. Cars didn’t just sit for no reason.

The hum of the engine never went away.

And neither did the weight in his hand.

~~~

The apartment door clicked shut behind her, too loud in a space this quiet. Mireya slid her bag down by the wall, kicked off her shoes, shoulders sagging under the weight of the day. The smell hung heavy—bleach that couldn’t hide the grease clinging from something fried earlier.

“Mami,” she called, voice flat. She wanted her mother to know she was home. No later claim of sneaking.

A faint “hm” floated from the back bedroom. Nothing more.

The kitchen light buzzed overhead. Counters cluttered with unopened mail, a chipped ashtray, the usual small decay. On the stove sat a pot with rice hardened to its edges. Mireya scraped some onto a plate, added a piece of chicken from under foil, shoved both into the microwave. The door clapped too loud.

At the table, something caught her eye: a white card, clean and sharp against the mess. She pulled it close.

William Roussel. Probation Officer.

Heat shot through her chest. The microwave’s hum blurred into a growl. The chair screeched back as she stood, the card pinched between her fingers like evidence.

Her mother was on the bed in her house dress, folding a shirt into neat squares. She didn’t look up when Mireya entered.

“Where you get this?” Mireya’s voice cracked sharp.

Maria placed the shirt down, smoothing it once with her palm. “He came to my job. Said if Caine start slipping, I should call him.”

Mireya blinked, heat flaring. “You serious? That’s the same man who tore through my room at Camila’s birthday. You already know what he is.”

Maria didn’t flinch, her tone flat. “He keeps clean, there’s no problem.”

“That’s not the point.” Mireya’s voice climbed. “Why would you talk to the police? You call him, you might as well be the one locking the door on him.”

Maria folded another shirt, eyes steady. “He already locked his own door. I didn’t put him there.”

Mireya’s breath came sharp. “So you just gonna help keep him there? That helps who? Sure as hell not Camila.”

Maria finally looked up. Her gaze was tired, but the words were sharp as glass. “Better she learns early. Men like him don’t stay. Prison or a coffin. That’s the truth you don’t want to face. I keep telling you but you want to learn the hard way. Doesn’t mean my granddaughter has to with you.”

Mireya’s throat tightened. “You don’t get to say that. He’s still here. He’s trying. And you—” her chest rose hard, “—you’d rather hand him over than admit you might have been wrong about Caine.”

Maria’s jaw set, but her tone didn’t rise. If anything, it softened, crueler for it. “You think I’m wrong? Do you see how they live? Why do you think he’s always here? Su madre? Ha. Siempre drogado. Love has you blinded. La manzana no cae lejos del árbol.”

The words landed heavier than if she’d screamed them. Mireya’s hand trembled around the card.

“So you’d rather side with him?” Maria went on, folding slow, deliberate. “The man who has power over him, over all of us. At least he’s honest about what he is. Your boy’s the one still lying.”

Mireya’s chest burned. “You talk like he’s nothing. Like he’s disposable. But he’s Camila’s daddy. He’s the only one who ever—” her voice broke, “—who ever stayed.”

Maria shook her head, calm, dismissive. “Stayed? He was never here, mija. You are just too stubborn to admit it. Don’t mistake his shadow in your bed for a future.”

The microwave beeped, shrill, splitting the silence.

Mireya’s hands shook. She tore the card in half, then again, the pieces falling like scraps of ash. “You’re not calling him.”

Maria’s reply came quick, flat as a slap: “Childish. Paper or no paper, the world still works how it works. You’ll learn that one way or another.”

Mireya stormed back down the hall, fury buzzing in her ears. The microwave had long stopped, but the plate inside was steaming when she yanked the door open. She grabbed it too quick—the heat seared her fingers.

“Shit.” The hiss slipped between her teeth as she dropped it onto the counter with a crack. Rice scattered, chicken slid against plastic. Her hand throbbed, skin angry red.

From the bedroom, Maria’s voice carried steady, final: “You still a child. Pretend all you want, but the world don’t care.”

Mireya didn’t answer. She stood over the counter, chest heaving, staring at the mess. The apartment hummed with refrigerator noise, a siren fading outside.

She pressed her burned fingers into her palm until the pain steadied her. The anger stayed. Heavy. Lodged where nothing could shake it loose.

The torn pieces of the card still littered the hall, proof that in this house, even silence belonged to somebody else.

~~~

The huddle broke with Caine and Jay stepping onto the field together. The Karr fans felt it before the snap — the two-QB look had the bleachers buzzing. Heritage’s sideline started pointing, their safeties hollering checks, everyone scrambling like they’d just seen a ghost formation.

Caine lined up in shotgun, Jay sliding into the slot. Tyron split wide right, Matt alone on the left, Corey tucked in tight. In the trenches, the line dropped into their stances, arms slick with sweat, already jawing at the line across from them.

The snap smacked into Caine’s hands. One step left, then the quick shovel to Jay. Heritage’s linebackers bit instantly, chasing Jay like the ball had glued itself to him.

Jay didn’t even flinch. He reared back and zipped it right back across the formation to Caine, drifting behind the line.

Caine caught it clean, eyes upfield before his cleats even dug in. The safety froze, caught between Tyron’s crossing route and Matt breaking deep. Caine drove a strike over the middle.

Tyron snatched it in stride, lowered his shoulder through one DB, twisted free for ten more before getting dragged down near midfield. Chains moved. Crowd roared.

The sideline rushed forward, helmets bouncing, hands waving. But Jay was the first one in Tyron’s face, smacking his helmet, shouting loud enough for both sidelines.

“That’s me! That’s me!” He pounded his chest, grinning wide, pointing back toward where he’d thrown it. “Ain’t stoppin’ me, bitch niggas!”

Caine jogged up, giving Tyron a slap on the back of the helmet, but his eyes cut sideways at Jay. The grin stuck to Jay’s face like it was permanent, basking in the noise as if the pass belonged in his stat line.

Derrick shoved the Heritage nose tackle after the whistle, barking, “Soft! Whole line soft!” while Darnell yanked him back by the jersey, muttering but smirking the whole time.

The ref motioned for the ball to reset. Caine wiped sweat off his face with the back of his glove, jaw tight, and got set for the next call.



The snap came hot. Caine dropped back, eyes cutting across the field — Matt covered on the dig, Corey jammed at the line, Tyron doubled over the top. Jayden leaked out but the linebacker closed too fast. Nothing there.

Pressure crashed in from his blindside. He felt it before he saw it — the way the air shifted, the sudden shadow flicking across his edge vision. He spun left, the defender’s hand just grazing his shoulder pad.

Now the pocket was gone. Green jerseys chasing. Cleats tearing at the turf.

Caine darted downfield, cutting across the hash, then planted hard to the sideline. A Heritage corner lunged, fingertips brushing his jersey — too late.

The crowd roared as he sprinted free, feet chewing yards. He kept his eyes up, scanning even as he ran, every instinct tuned to angles, pursuit, escape. Twenty yards. Twenty-five. He slid at the sideline before the safety could close, dirt flying up around his knees.

First down.

He popped up, chest heaving, slapping the ball once against his thigh. Helmets slapped his shoulders when he jogged back toward the huddle.

The scoreboard lights reflected in his visor, Karr up big and cruising. He felt the weight of every eye in the stands, the whole city watching him move.



The call came in heavy on motion.

The crowd was already stamping the bleachers, the sound rolling down like thunder. Heritage’s corners barked checks, pointing at Corey, trying to disguise the double.

Caine saw it. Didn’t matter.

The snap hit his palms. Jay streaked across the formation in motion, defenders turning their heads with him. Caine faked the handoff into Jayden’s stomach, then dropped back two quick steps, eyes still on the defense.

Corey broke inside hard, then snapped vertical, slicing between the safeties before they even knew they were late.

Caine’s arm whipped. The ball screamed downfield, tight and perfect.

Corey stretched, snagged it over his shoulder, and trotted into the end zone untouched.

The stadium detonated.

Caine jogged downfield, grinning for the first time all night. Corey spiked the ball, then mimed cocking a machine, firing at the Heritage defensive backs. The whole offense piled in — dancing, clowning.

Even Derrick lumbered downfield, both arms raised, shouting, “That’s us! That’s us all night!” Darnell jogged behind him, laughing, throwing up mock pistols with his fingers.

Caine lifted his hands, running by Patriots sideline, and mimed three clean trigger pulls at their players. The Karr sideline exploded in answer, players running out just to join the noise.

The ref’s whistle shrieked, hands waving them back. But the swagger lingered, echoing in every gesture, every laugh.

Heritage jogged back to their sideline, heads down.

Caine kept running, mouthpiece dangling from his teeth, sweat running into his mouth. For once, the noise wasn’t chasing him. It was carrying him.



Third and short. Heritage stacked the box, linebackers crouched low, daring Karr to run it.

Caine crouched in shotgun, Jayden lined up beside him. Derrick barked at the defense, Darnell slapping his helmet, ready to maul whoever crossed his face.

The snap cracked. Caine faked the handoff into Jayden’s gut, tucking the ball against his own chest. The defense collapsed inside, but by the time they realized, Caine was already cutting off Derrick’s hip, legs churning.

The first linebacker hit him square, helmet under his chin. Pain burst across his ribs, but his feet never stopped. Another body piled on, then another, but Caine leaned forward, driving through the mess. The whistle blew only after he dragged them all three yards past the marker.

First down.

He popped up fast, ripping the ball out from under the pile, raising it high. His mouthguard hung from his facemask as he shouted, “You gotta see me, pussy! You gotta see me!”

The sideline roared. Teammates swarmed — Tyron slapping the back of his helmet, Ricky grabbing his shoulder pads, laughing. Even Jay jogged up slow, chin high, muttering, “They lucky you didn’t fumble.”

Caine smirked, chest heaving, but he didn’t answer. He just flipped the ball back at the ref and turned for the huddle.

The crowd was on its feet, stomping and hollering. Caine wiped sweat from his face, breath ragged but steady.



The scoreboard read lopsided now. The last minutes ticked away with the backups on the field — freshmen getting their shine, the crowd already celebrating.

Caine stood near the sideline, helmet off, sweat cooling on his temples. His jersey clung heavy, grass stains streaked across the front. He paced a line just behind the white chalk, still locked in like the game hadn’t ended yet.

A hand clapped his shoulder pads.

Coach Joseph. Headset off, play sheet folded under his arm. His voice cut through the noise, calm but edged with pride.

“Hell of a night, Guerra,” he said. “You commanded that shit.”

Caine nodded once, eyes still on the field. “Felt good.”

Joseph tilted his head. “It looked good. Reads were clean. Ball came out quick. And you ain’t just surviving out there — you owning it.”

Caine’s chest rose, a mix of exhaustion and something sharper. He kept his face straight, but the words sat deep.

Joseph leaned closer, voice low so it didn’t get lost under the band’s horns blaring from the bleachers. “Keep stacking games like this, son, and they gon’ have to pay attention. Colleges, scouts — all of ‘em.”

Caine swallowed, jaw tight. He thought about Roussel, about probation meetings at sunrise, about the leash he could never shake. But out here, under lights, it felt like Joseph’s words might be true.

“Yes, sir,” he said finally, steady.

Joseph patted his shoulder again, then stepped back, eyes already back on the freshmen grinding out the clock.

Caine stayed on the sideline, helmet dangling at his side, watching the seconds bleed away.

For once, he let the noise wash over him — the band, the crowd, his teammates still clowning. For once, it didn’t feel like it was pressing him down.

It felt like it was carrying him.

redsox907
Posts: 1385
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 24 Aug 2025, 03:50

Mireya sinking - Caine rising :hmm:

oh and EJ or Ramon getting shot :yep:
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 11306
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 24 Aug 2025, 22:03

redsox907 wrote:
24 Aug 2025, 03:50
Mireya sinking - Caine rising :hmm:

oh and EJ or Ramon getting shot :yep:
At this point, you just predicting a mass casualty event with everyone getting shot :pgdead:
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 11306
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 24 Aug 2025, 22:03

Fòs Pa Vini San Pri

The CO’s voice cut across the tier, flat and bored:

“Helaire. You got a visit.”

Dre blinked once, then pushed back his chair slow. He wasn’t expecting anybody. His mama had stopped showing up after that last letter, the one that read more like an obituary than anything a mother was supposed to send. Ain’t nobody else wasting a weekday to see him.

He kept his face even, stood up smoothly. Eyes followed him from the tables — that was normal. Every move in here was clocked by somebody. He rolled his shoulders once, like shaking dust off, then walked behind the CO.

The visitation room buzzed low: plastic chairs scraping, vending machines humming, kids crying too loud for their mamas to hush. It smelled like bleach that didn’t stick, like old sweat ground into cinderblock.

He stepped in, scanned. And stopped.

Tito.

Sitting across a bolted table, leaning back like the place was his living room. Plain white tee, chain flashing when he shifted, smile not quite reaching his eyes.

Dre slid into the chair across from him. No slick grin, no wide-eyed surprise — just a quiet, steady look. “Didn’t figure I’d see you in here.”

Tito chuckled once, low. “Figured I’d check on you. You holdin’ up?”

Dre shrugged. He let it land casual, not careless. “Almost got poked last month. But that’s the game in here. Otherwise… I’m straight.”

Tito nodded, like he respected the answer more for its understatement. He leaned forward, forearms on the table, voice dropping under the hum of the room. “You know who Caine running with now?”

Dre shook his head slow. No quick denial, no extra words. “Ain’t spoke to him.”

Tito studied him, quiet long enough for the fluorescent buzz to fill the gap. Dre kept his eyes steady but not sharp — a man holding a line, not drawing one.

“He on people’s radar,” Tito said finally. “Junior looking for him.”

The name pressed heavy into the room. Dre let his gaze slide to the carvings in the table: initials, years, prayers, curses. He ran a finger once over a gouge in the plastic like it might spell something back.

He kept his voice low. “I don’t know nothing. I been in this bitch since January and Caine can’t contact us.”

Tito leaned back, exhaling slow through his nose. “I figured.” He shifted, chair legs creaking, like he was about to stand.

Dre lifted his chin just enough to meet his eyes. “What y’all want with him?”

Tito paused, hand on the chair back. “Me? I just want to talk. Get some answers. But Tee Tito…” He let the sentence trail, shook his head. “That’s different. Ain’t mine to say.”

He bent closer again, resting one palm flat against the table, his chain swinging forward. “But I’ll say this: I always respected y’all. You. Pretty Rick. Caine. Y’all didn’t fold. Took what came and didn’t put nobody else in it. Stood up and took it like men, even though Caine ain’t still behind them bars like you. That’s rare.”

The words sat between them, carrying weight Dre didn’t try to dodge. Percy’s name stayed unsaid, but both of them heard it in the silence.

Dre nodded once. Not eager, not quick. Just steady. “If I hear something, I’ll let you know.”

Tito tapped the table once with his knuckle, then straightened, chair legs scraping loud against the floor. He gave Dre a last long look — a mix of respect and warning — then headed toward the door, chain flashing under the buzzing lights.

Dre stayed sitting, the empty chair across from him humming louder than the whole room. He traced that same gouge in the table again, jaw tight, breath slow.

Respect didn’t come free. Not in here. Not out there either.

~~~

The cafeteria sounded like a game already in progress — voices bouncing off cinderblock walls, chairs scraping the floor like sneakers on a court. Grease hung in the air, thick enough to cling to your skin, fries and pizza and whatever mystery meat the lunch ladies had run under the broiler too long.

Caine sat at the end of the table with Matt, Tyron, Corey, and Darnell. His tray sat mostly untouched, just a carton of milk sweating beside his elbow. He had both arms folded on the table, head dipped like he was listening hard.

Matt was halfway through retelling a story he’d already told twice. Didn’t matter — he liked hearing himself as much as anybody else did.

“Bruh, so this fat bitch was shaking—and I mean shaking all them rolls—her ass on Trey, right? This motherfucker acts like he spilled his drink on her,” Matt said, leaning forward, hands spread wide like he was preaching. “Whole white dress look like it got baptized in D’usse. Everybody in that bitch look, like—”

Tyron slapped the table and cut in. “Like she was in one of them old Cash Money videos. Except you saw all the creases in her stomach and shit. I’m telling you, tragic.”

Corey bent over laughing, his forehead nearly hitting his tray. “She ain’t even leave! Stayed right there, talkin’ about she ‘good.’ Bitch, you not good. You look like a holiday ham someone done put liquor on.”

Darnell banged the table with his fist like it was a drumline, egging them on.

Caine smirked, shaking his head once.

“Bet at least three of y’all asses still tried to fuck,” Caine said, voice quiet but cutting through.

The whole table cracked up. Darnell nearly dropped his fork, Corey slapped his shoulder, and Tyron pointed across the table like he’d been waiting on that line.

“Lowkey!” Tyron said. “You know Matt don’t care about none of that shit.”

Matt threw both hands up, grinning, but his face was already red. “Nigga, come on, I got standards.”

“Yeah, low ones,” Corey shot back.

“Lower than that bitch titties,” Tyron added, sending them all back into another round of laughter.

Caine leaned back, letting the noise roll over him. One line was all it took — he didn’t need to add more. He didn’t laugh loud, didn’t slap the table like the rest. Just sat there, shoulders loose, lips pressed against a half-smile.

The noise at the table shifted when two shadows cut across the light. Janae and Tasha, sliding into the space like they’d been expected. Tasha dropped her tray across from Matt, already loud, teasing him about his haircut before she’d even sat down. Janae went straight to the chair next to Caine.

Without asking, she looped her arm through his.

The clink of her bracelets against his skin pulled every eye to them. Her perfume rose above the cafeteria funk, sweet and sharp, the kind of scent that didn’t belong in a place like this.

She leaned in close, her voice lilting, playful. “What y’all talking about, big head?”

Caine looked down at her arm hooked through his, then up at her. His face didn’t move much, just a slow shake of his head.

“Mm-hmm,” Janae said, giving him a look that dared him to answer for real.

The other guys tried and failed to hide their reactions. Tyron elbowed Corey under the table, both of them grinning like they were in on some secret. Matt covered his mouth with his hand, shoulders shaking. Darnell leaned back and whistled low, shaking his head slow, like he was seeing more than what was in front of him.

The laughter came in waves, not loud but knowing. Nobody said it out loud, but the message was clear in the side-eyes and nudges: Caine had taken Jay’s quarterback spot, and now he had his sister sitting on his arm.

Caine didn’t move Janae’s arm. Didn’t lean into it either. He kept his elbows planted on the table, his face unreadable, letting the noise swirl.

He knew how fast rumors moved — faster than highlights, faster than truth. A look, a laugh, a gesture. That’s all it took for stories to get legs.

Janae stayed leaned into him, a sly smile tugging at her mouth like she knew exactly what everybody else was thinking.

Caine finally looked at her, steady and quiet. He didn’t say a word.

The table roared again anyway, like his silence was the loudest thing they’d heard all lunch.

Caine let it ride.

~~~

The heat clung to her like it wanted a fight. The sun had baked the blacktop all day, and now, walking across the parking lot, every step kicked up the smell of tar and old oil. Mireya tugged her backpack higher on one shoulder, keys pressed into her palm. The strap cut a groove into her collarbone, the kind of dull ache she’d stopped noticing a long time ago.

Her brain was moving faster than her feet. Rent, food, daycare, gas. Clothes for Camila, who’d outgrown more in less than a month. A stack of bills spread out across her mom’s kitchen table, Maria sighing loud every time she passed by, like the sight of her was a personal failure. College sat at the end of it all like a taunt — classes she still swore she’d find a way into.Every number she added came with another subtraction she didn’t want to make.

She kept her head down, weaving through clusters of kids shouting across the lot. Car doors slammed, music thumped from somebody’s cracked speakers, sneakers squeaked on pavement. All she wanted was the silence of her car, even if the A/C took five minutes to start blowing anything but hot air.

Footsteps slapped the ground behind her. Quick, uneven. Jogging.

“Yo, what’s up?”

Mireya didn’t slow. A boy’s shadow slid into step with hers, shoulders broad under a Carver hoodie. She turned her head just enough to see him. Donnie.

She stopped dead in her tracks, eyes narrowing. “What the fuck do you want?”

Donnie laughed like it was a game, like she hadn’t meant it. Hands lifted, palms out. “Damn, chill. I just said hey.”

“You did. Now leave.”

He didn’t. He matched her stride when she started walking again, a half-grin tugging at his mouth like he thought it might work on her. “I was just wondering… where your man getting calls from?”

Mireya shot him a sharp look. “What?”

“You heard me.”

“No, I didn’t.”

Donnie chuckled, pulled his phone from his pocket. “Me and the guys looked him up. He on one of them sites. Ranked.”

Her face stayed blank. “Speak English.”

“One-star,” Donnie said, tilting the screen her way. “Look.”

Mireya snatched the phone, thumb gripping hard against the cracked glass. The site was plain, black font on white:

Caine Guerra – Quarterback – 6’3” – 185 lbs – Edna Kar High School
Interest: Alcorn State

That was it. Bare bones. But her eyes stayed locked on his name like it might vanish if she blinked.

Her chest pulled tight. A flicker of pride rose before she could stop it — his name out there, like it mattered to somebody besides her, besides Camila. And just as fast, it twisted into something else.

Her lips pressed thin. “I don’t know what this supposed to mean.”

Donnie shrugged, tucking his hands into his hoodie pocket. “Means somebody watching him. College coach, maybe. Ain’t nobody put your ass on a site for no reason.”

She handed the phone back, her arm stiff. “Got it.”

But Donnie didn’t take it. He just grinned wider, leaning a little closer. “Since your man up and about to dip, you might as well put your number in there.”

The words hung in the thick air. Mireya didn’t move. Didn’t blink. She just kept the phone extended between them, her stare flat and hard.

Silence stretched. A car honked somewhere out on the street.

Finally, Donnie shifted, grin faltering. He plucked the phone out of her hand slow, like he didn’t want to admit he’d lost the stare-down. “Aight. Was just saying.”

Mireya turned, walked the last few steps to her car. Keys dug into her palm, backpack strap cutting deeper into her shoulder. She unlocked the door and slid inside, slamming it harder than she meant to.

The car reeked of old fast food and baby wipes, sweat trapped in the seats from too many summer afternoons. She dropped the backpack onto the passenger side and just sat there, breathing, staring through the windshield.

That damn page burned behind her eyes. Caine Guerra. One-star. Alcorn State.

Caine’s name alone — just his name, just the measurements of his body — bought him a page on some website strangers could click on. Enough to get him noticed.

Heat crawled up her neck. She shoved the gearshift into reverse, jerking out of the parking spot too fast. The wheel trembled under her grip, tires whining as she cut across the faded paint lines.

Out on the street, kids’ voices echoed behind her, laughing like the day had cost them nothing. Mireya pressed harder on the gas, jaw locked, that knot in her chest swelling heavy as concrete.

~~~

The sun was starting to dip, but the heat hadn’t gone anywhere. It sat heavy in Trent’s backyard, pressing down on the patchy grass and the tilted lawn chairs they’d dragged into a circle. The smell of fried grease from somebody’s kitchen drifted over the fence, mixing with the damp musk of clothes hanging off the line. A dog barked three houses down, chain rattling against a pole.

Trent tossed a football from hand to hand, bored more than anything. Javi had his shoes kicked off, socks dirty, legs stretched long. Zoe leaned toward Saul, braid swinging forward, her laugh tucked low like it belonged only to him.

Mia side-eyed the two of them. “Y’all whispering like somebody’s aunties at church. Spit it out.”

Javi grinned, leaning forward, pointing. “Nah, I know what it is. Saul plotting how he gon’ run when Pedro show up again. Boy damn near broke the sound barrier last time.”

The laugh exploded out of him first, loud and sharp. Trent doubled over, nearly dropping the football. Even Mia cracked a smile before shaking her head.

Saul felt heat rise to his face. “Man, I ain’t running this time.” He straightened in the chair, looked from Javi to Trent like he was daring them to keep it going.

“Yeah, aight,” Javi said, smirk wide. “What you gon’ do, talk him to death?”

The laughter rolled again, easier this time, riding the summer air.

Saul sat up, jaw tight. “Nah. I got that thang on me.”

The words dropped flat.

For a second Trent just blinked at him, then let out a short laugh. “Boy, shut up. You sound like a SoundCloud rapper.”

“Swear,” Javi said, still half-laughing. “This man talking like he Luca Brasi. What you got, a Nerf gun?”

Saul didn’t answer. He leaned down, grabbed his backpack by the strap, and hauled it into his lap. The zipper rasped open loud in the quiet that followed. He slid the gun out slow, metal catching the last of the sunlight.

Laughter cut off like a switch.

Trent’s eyes went wide, football slipping from his hands into the grass. Javi leaned forward, smirk gone, his mouth open but no words coming out.

Mia shot up in her chair. “Are you serious right now? Saul, what the hell—do you even know how to use that?”

Zoe crossed her arms, shrugged like it was nothing. “I showed him.”

Mia whipped toward her. “Why would you do that?”

Zoe didn’t flinch. “’Cause he asked. Better he knows than be out here waving it like a dumbass. Y’all always running y’all mouth.”

Saul kept the gun flat across his lap, his finger nowhere near the trigger, just holding it so they could all see. His heart hammered anyway, blood rushing in his ears. “If I’m gonna have it, I should know how to use it. Simple.”

Nobody laughed now.

The air pressed down heavier than before. Trent sat frozen, eyes flicking from the gun to Saul’s face and back again. Javi leaned back slowly, shaking his head, lips pressed tight. Mia’s arms stayed crossed, jaw clenched. Even Zoe, who’d smirked before, watched Saul different now — quiet, her eyes sharp, measuring.

A car rolled by on the street out front, bass rattling the fence. The dog barked again, chain snapping taut. Every sound felt too close, like the whole block knew what was sitting in Saul’s lap.

He slid the gun back into the bag, careful, zipping it shut. The sound was too loud in the still air. He dropped the backpack to the ground at his feet. The weight hit the grass with a dull thump.

No one relaxed.

Trent cleared his throat but didn’t pick up the football. Javi rubbed the back of his neck, eyes locked on the bag. Mia shook her head, muttering under her breath, too low for him to catch. Zoe tapped her nail against the arm of her chair, one, two, three — steady, like she was waiting to see what he’d do next.

Saul leaned back, tried to act easy, but the air didn’t shift. He’d thought pulling it out would make him feel bigger, like he’d finally shut them up. Instead, it just stretched the space between all of them, made the heat heavier, the silence sharper.

Nobody called him a liar anymore. Nobody laughed.

But nobody looked at him the same, either.

~~~

The Quarter pulsed under neon. Bourbon Street wasn’t just loud — it breathed, a constant churn of bass from open club doors, brass echoing from a corner band, the rise and fall of drunk laughter slurring into the night. The air was thick with grease and sweat, sweet rum bleeding out of half-crushed daiquiri cups rolling across the pavement. Caine moved with Ramon, Tyree, and E.J. through the crowd, shoulder to shoulder, letting the street swallow them whole.

Tourists staggered past with beads already around their necks, plastic cups sweating in both hands like trophies. A preacher shouted into a microphone, voice cracking against the wall of noise. A couple girls leaned over a balcony, shirts hitched too high, shrieking at the crowd to look up.

E.J. bumped Ramon with his elbow, grinning. “Look at us, man. Out here raising these lil’ honor-roll niggas wrong. Contributing to the delinquency of juveniles.”

Ramon smirked, nodding toward Caine and Tyree. “Facts. These boys supposed to be worried about algebra. Instead, they worried about the block.”

Tyree puffed his chest out, tugged at the chain on his neck. “Nigga, I’m like Kevin Gates. A gangster and a gentleman for those who understand.”

E.J. slapped his knee, nearly doubling over. “Shut yo goofy ass up. Other thing you got in common with that freaky nigga is fucking your cousin once or twice.”

Even Caine cracked a smile, low and short, shaking his head. He didn’t need to add much — their noise filled every space. He just walked, eyes steady, scanning like always. Quarterback vision, same as on the field: watching bodies shift, gaps opening and closing, angles revealing themselves if you stayed patient enough.

They passed one of the strip clubs, a pair of women leaning in the doorway trying to pull stragglers inside. One had glitter on her chest that caught the neon, her smile already tired. Ramon peeled off, swagger in his step, chain glinting as he leaned close.

“What it lookin’ like in there, mama?” he asked. “They got money?”

She sucked her teeth, rolled her eyes toward the empty street. “Fuck no. Dead as hell.”

Ramon laughed, shook his head, jogged back to the group. “Ain’t shit moving in there.”

They hadn’t gone ten steps before a group of Latino men spilled out of the same doorway, voices quick, low. The words hit Caine’s ear without effort — buscando mota.

He didn’t hesitate. He peeled off toward them like he’d always been part of the conversation. “¿Quieren comprar? Tengo lo que buscan.”

The men froze, then shifted closer, surprised. One of them answered back, cautious but interested. Caine nodded, words coming smooth, no pause, no translation needed. Spanish slid off his tongue easy, learned young, sharpened later.

Behind him, Ramon, Tyree and E.J. watched, laughing quiet to each other.

“I still never remember that motherfucker speak that shit,” E.J. muttered.

Tyree smirked, scanning the crowd, speaking gibberish meant to be Spanish. “He in the element, too. Speaking fast.”

Caine kept his voice low, leaning in with the men. They wanted weed. He glanced over his shoulder once — Ramon already knew what was up, eyes narrowed, body angled like muscle. Tyree’s head was on a swivel, watching cops, watching everybody. E.J. leaned back casual, like they were just waiting for directions to the next club.

Cash moved first. Caine felt the wad pressed into his palm, folded tight. He kept it low, didn’t flash it, just clenched his fist and nodded. He turned back, walked to Ramon, handed it off like it was nothing more than a handshake.

Ramon slipped it into his pocket, face cool. Tyree slid forward, pressing the bag into one of the men’s hands without a word, eyes still on the street. The group drifted off into the crowd, fast, disappearing back into the churn of neon and noise.

Caine adjusted his hoodie, slipped back into line with the others.

E.J. looked at him, shaking his head. “They thought you was Mexican too?”

Caine’s mouth twitched. “Nah. Dominican. Told ’em I no Black, like Big Papi. Sammy Sosa.”

That broke the quiet. Ramon bent forward, laughing so hard he had to hold his stomach. Tyree slapped Caine’s back, grinning wide. Even E.J. doubled over, wiping his eyes.

Their laughter spilled into the noise of Bourbon, folded into the brass and the shouting, the preacher’s voice, the stench of alcohol baking into the street. Four boys moving like men, caught in the current of the Quarter, the city pulling them deeper whether they noticed or not.

Caine laughed too, but low, the sound caught in his chest. The wad of cash was already gone from his hand, passed off, part of the machine. Easy. Too easy.

He kept walking, head tilted up at the glow of the neon, but his eyes stayed busy. Always scanning. Always waiting. Because he knew a good play didn’t last long, and the street had a way of snapping shut on you when you least expected.

~~~

The bell over the door gave a tired jingle when Mireya pushed it open. The shop smelled like burnt espresso and sweet syrup, the kind that clung to your clothes after a few minutes. Ceiling fans turned lazy above her head, not doing a damn thing against the humidity that followed her inside.

She tugged her hoodie sleeves up to her elbows, wiped the sweat from her palm onto her jeans, and stepped into line. The menu board loomed overhead, chalk letters advertising caramel swirls and seasonal flavors she didn’t care about. What she wanted was simple: something with enough caffeine to drag her through the rest of her shift at the yard, keep her from nodding off at the desk with invoices still stacked in front of her.

The door jingled again.

Heels clicked against the floor. Mireya didn’t have to turn to know someone dressed out of place had walked in. The air shifted. Heads lifted.

“Are you in line?”

She looked up. Stasia stood there, posture straight, clothes tailored sharp enough to cut. A silk blouse, slacks pressed, jewelry that caught the light. Too polished for this part of town, too polished for the scuffed tile under their feet.

Mireya shook her head once. “Go ahead.”

“Thanks.”

Stasia ordered quick, voice clipped, then slid her card across the counter with the kind of ease Mireya never had at a register. Before Mireya could step forward, Stasia spoke again. “Put hers with mine.”

Mireya blinked. “You don’t have to—”

“I know.” Stasia didn’t look back, just nodded at the cashier.

Mireya exhaled through her nose, stepped up anyway. “Uh… small frappe.”

Stasia glanced sideways, eyebrows raised. “Make it a large.”

The barista nodded, scribbling on the cup. Mireya felt heat crawl up her neck, not from the shop’s air. She didn’t argue.

They moved to the side to wait. Stasia gestured toward an empty table by the window. “Sit with me.”

Mireya hesitated, then dropped into the chair across from her, pulling her hoodie tighter around her arms.

For a moment Stasia just studied her, eyes sharp, fingers tapping once against the table. Then: “So what is it you want to do with your life? Because I know you don’t plan to sit behind that desk talking about loads of concrete forever.”

Mireya gave a half-shrug. “I want to be a nurse, but—”

Stasia cut the air with her hand. “No buts. What’s stopping you?”

Mireya met her gaze, steady. “Money. What else?”

That earned her a small nod. Stasia leaned back in her chair, bracelets sliding down her wrist. Silence stretched long enough for the hum of the espresso machine to fill it.

“I suppose that’s right,” Stasia said finally. “Still… you’re better than punching numbers in that office. Better than working a dead-end job.”

Mireya’s jaw tightened. “You don’t know me like that to say what I’m better than.”

Stasia’s lips curved, not quite a smile. “I know enough.”

The barista called their names. Stasia rose first, collected both drinks, then set the larger cup down in front of Mireya. She didn’t sit back down.

Outside, the air was heavier, dusk slipping in slow. They walked out together, then split — Stasia toward a gleaming car too clean for the block, Mireya back toward the yard’s chain-link and dust.

“Hey.”

Mireya turned.

Stasia stood by her car door, hand on the handle, her voice carrying clear. “Years ago, when I was your age, my mother told me — if I can’t win at the game the way it’s being played, that just means I need to change the rules. Sometimes, you have to just fucking take what you want.”

She slid into the driver’s seat, door closing with a muted thud.

Mireya stood there for a second, frappe sweating in her hand, the straw bending under her grip.

Back at the yard, the forklifts would be growling, Me shouting, Jamie buried in paperwork. Same grind waiting, same money never enough.

She turned and walked, the echo of Stasia’s words following her. It sounded too close to Caine’s voice when he justified the hustle — that same logic of bending rules until they broke.

And it left her wondering.

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

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 25 Aug 2025, 08:41

Caine does realize that the rumors with him and Janae would also backfire on him as well, right?
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 11306
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 26 Aug 2025, 19:14

Soapy wrote:
25 Aug 2025, 08:41
Caine does realize that the rumors with him and Janae would also backfire on him as well, right?
Caine Guerra thinking about all the potential consequences of his actions? This Caine Guerra?

redsox907
Posts: 1385
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 26 Aug 2025, 22:43

I mean it don’t sound like Mireya talks to anybody at Karr like that - why would anyone tell her?

But so much for your Caine Guerra don’t cheat bit. Boy already seen the play and made the throw, he’s just waiting for the touchdown catch now.

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

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 27 Aug 2025, 08:03

redsox907 wrote:
26 Aug 2025, 22:43
I mean it don’t sound like Mireya talks to anybody at Karr like that - why would anyone tell her?

But so much for your Caine Guerra don’t cheat bit. Boy already seen the play and made the throw, he’s just waiting for the touchdown catch now.
Jay on the phone as we speak
User avatar

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

American Sun

Post by Captain Canada » 27 Aug 2025, 10:21

Consequences of one's actions evade these characters like nothing else :obama:

redsox907
Posts: 1385
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 27 Aug 2025, 11:16

Soapy wrote:
27 Aug 2025, 08:03
redsox907 wrote:
26 Aug 2025, 22:43
I mean it don’t sound like Mireya talks to anybody at Karr like that - why would anyone tell her?

But so much for your Caine Guerra don’t cheat bit. Boy already seen the play and made the throw, he’s just waiting for the touchdown catch now.
Jay on the phone as we speak
If we're keeping it a buck, Jay a punk if he don't try to smash Mireya. You steal my spot and playing my sister like that? I'm fucking your bitch on god

In before Caesar says Mireya is a down ass bitch while she still got white boy dick on her breath Image
Post Reply