American Sun

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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 20 Sep 2025, 22:11

Nan Lavi Prete

The last bell spit the day out into the hallway. Bleach and old A/C breath rode the air. Backpacks bumped and slid, sneakers squeaked, somebody’s laugh cracked loud and then got swallowed by the crowd. Caine drifted with the current, shoulders loose, phone pressed flat against his thigh. He kept his eyes up enough to see over heads, down enough not to invite anybody in.

Mr. Landry was posted outside his door with a stack of graded papers, shirt sleeves rolled. He caught Caine with a small nod, that steady teacher look that read everything and didn’t make a show of it.

Caine slowed. “I ain’t got to the new one yet,” he said. “Been meaning to. I got time now.”

Landry’s mouth creased at the corners. “You do,” he said. “Countdown’s on. Just a few months.” He tipped his chin toward the seniors spilling past. “You nervous about leaving? After the year you’ve had?”

Caine shrugged. The hallway heat held sticky under the failing vent. “It’s just school somewhere else,” he said. “Same desks. Different smell.”

Landry huffed a quiet laugh. “Different smell is right. You come by if you want to talk through the all the first year stuff freshman gotta do. They’ll have you with an adviser, but you can never have too much advice. I’ll be here.”

“Bet,” Caine said. He glanced at the clock, then back to Landry. “I gotta get to the courthouse.”

Landry’s face sobered. He slid the papers under his arm and leaned closer. “You’ve come a long way from trying to steal my car,” he said. “Nobody can take that from you.”

Caine held the look a moment, something easy and appreciative moving across his face. “I hear you,” he said. “I appreciate it.”

A janitor’s bucket rattled past. Somewhere down the hall a locker slammed hard enough to ring. Caine lifted two fingers in a quick goodbye and angled through the traffic toward the front doors.

Outside, the winter sun sat thin and low, late January light that looked cold but pressed warm on skin because the air never learned how to fully cool here. The lot smelled like hot rubber and fried food drifting in from somewhere across the street. The Buick waited dull and patchy under a sky the color of dishwater.

“Hey, big head!”

Janae’s voice cut across the line of cars before he saw her. She jogged up in slides, braids bouncing, the clink of bracelets bright against the parking lot quiet. He looked over his shoulder. Gave her a nod.

“You stopped answering my texts,” she said, a little breathless and a lot amused. Her eyes ran over his face like she was checking for tells.

“I gotta fix things with my girl before I leave,” he said, plainly. “Can’t have distractions.”

She made a face like he’d told a joke. “So, you fucked and now you loyal?”

He pulled the keys from his pocket. “Don’t act like you ain’t know what you was doing. I had a girl the whole time and you still wanted it.”

He popped the back door and tossed his bag in, the fabric thumping against the torn seat. The car reeked like old vinyl and a little like drywall dust that never fully washed out.

Janae slid sideways in front of the driver door, arms crossed tight, hip knocked against the panel like it was hers to lean on. She stared at him, chin tilted. Cars idled and creaked, heat ticking in their engines. A siren floated from somewhere farther down Canal and faded.

“Janae,” he said, plain. “Move. I ain’t got time for this.”

She sucked her teeth, held his eyes an extra beat, then stepped out of the way with a little spin that said this wasn’t finished on her side. He didn’t rise to it. He opened the door and got in.

~~~

Target ran too bright for a day that felt gray. Fluorescents hummed like bugs trapped in plastic. The big red sale signs drooped on the endcaps, all that post-holiday desperation marked down in peeling stickers. Angela and Paz worked the aisles like they had a plan, tossing shower liners and a set of thin towels into the cart, arguing over whether a dish rack with a rust spot counted as “still good.”

Mireya kept her hands on the cart handle. The plastic felt greasy no matter how she shifted her grip. She didn’t say much. Her brain wouldn’t land. It kept circling the same things until they blurred together—Caine leaving, the picture, UNO money she didn’t have, Stasia’s voice in her head.

Angela waved a bundle of hangers. “We need two packs. The velvet ones so your shirts don’t slide.”

Paz snorted. “Girl, velvet hangers with empty pockets? Put them back.” She flicked one with a nail. “Dollar store. Boom.”

Mireya pushed the cart forward. The wheel with the mind of its own squeaked and then surrendered.

“Mmhm.” Angela side-eyed her, then set the hangers in anyway. “I’m not trying to live in a bando. Apartment gotta look cute.”

“You ain’t got cute money,” Paz said, but she was already pulling a shower curtain with lemons off the rack.

Mireya gave a tiny smile that didn’t settle.

They drifted through aisles of fake plants and plastic laundry baskets. Angela reached past Mireya into the cart and shifted things to make it look like organization. “You good, Reya?”

“Yeah.”

Paz glanced up from a bin of clearance throw pillows. Her face said she didn’t buy it. She didn’t push. Neither did Angela. The silence laid down between them and stayed.

At checkout, the conveyor belt crawled with flat boxes and a frying pan that would probably warp on the first high heat. Mireya kept her eyes on her phone. A text from Caine lit the screen. She swiped it away like it burned and caught the next one from Leo before it disappeared. She killed the notifications and opened TikTok out of muscle memory.

The videos spun up quick. A woman in six-inch heels flowed upside down on a pole, the camera tilted so her hair became a curtain. Another girl did a slow floor split, money pattering like rain around her. Captions rolled—how to start, best clubs in the South, “if you broke, say that.” Mireya’s thumb went still. The algorithm had heard the music bumping in the house as women flew around poles and men threw money. She locked the phone and slid it into her back pocket without looking at Angela or Paz.

The cashier read off the total. Angela split it, Paz dug through her bag for a card that might clear. Mireya pulled the cart away. “I’ll grab the car.”

Outside, the air carried a damp chill. January pretended to be winter for an hour at a time and then gave up. The sky hung low, the kind of gray that made the strip mall sign look heavier. The parking lot beeps and engine coughs swelled and thinned. A police cruiser rolled the far row, slow and bored. Mireya kept her head down and hit unlock.

Angela and Paz pushed through the sliding doors laughing about something Mireya had missed, each steering a wobbly cart.

“Road trip,” Angela said as soon as they were close enough to hear. “Before school starts. Pensacola. Or Houston. Somewhere with a pool.”

“I’m broke,” Mireya said. The words came out flat. She popped the trunk. The seal along the trunk lip stuck for a second, then released with a wet sound.

“We can split it,” Paz said, hauling the frying pan up and over. “I got my next two checks. It’ll be fine.”

“Fine for who?” Mireya said, softer than she meant. She nodded at the towels. “I gotta save every penny so I can pay for books.”

Angela bumped her hip into Mireya’s, gentle. “Come on. One night. Two at most. Before we gotta be adults for real.”

Mireya pictured Felix and Stasia’s face, the offer of more money. Her phone buzzed again in her pocket. She didn’t check. “Maybe later,” she said. “We’ll see.”

They loaded the trunk in a practiced rhythm. Paz tucked the lemon curtain between the baskets so the plastic wouldn’t split. Angela fished around, then lifted a shoebox. On top of the dress Stasia had chosen like a mirror she held up.

Angela cocked her head, grinning. “Bitch, you went got you a sugar daddy?”

Mireya laughed, abruptly, easy. She rolled her eyes and tipped her chin at the rest of the bags. “Hurry up so I can go get Camila.”

Paz turned one heel in her hand, checking the sole, the light catching on the lacquered curve. “These are at least two hundred.”

“You can have them for one-fifty,” Mireya said, still laughing. She took the box back, set it on top of the towels, and brought the trunk down until the latch caught.

She walked around to the driver’s side. The door handle stuck for a breath like it always did, then gave. She got in the car.

~~~

Late January poured thin light through the high windows, a pale slice that couldn’t touch the cold. The courtroom breathed refrigerated air, the kind that crawled under clothes and settled at the bone. Paper rustled like dry leaves. The seal on the wall stared down, promise and threat stitched into one emblem.

Caine sat still at counsel table. Back straight. Hands flat. Markus stood a step ahead of him, shoulders easy, voice ready. Across the aisle, Jill Babin stacked her filings into a blade-straight tower. William Roussel lounged a half-inch back from the table mic, elbows wide like he owned the air between them.

Markus didn’t waste time. “Judge Kennedy, months of back-and-forth have left us at the same wall. We’re renewing our request to modify probation to permit a transfer under ICAOS and, pending approval, immediate compliance with any conditions the receiving state imposes. Since our last setting, Georgia Southern has extended a firm scholarship. The window to enroll for fall has opened. Delay isn’t neutral anymore. It’s decisive.”

Babin lifted her chin. “And the State continues to oppose. Mr. Guerra remains a threat to the public. Louisiana should not export its problems and call it progress. We have a responsibility to protect our communities. Sending him across state lines to a campus environment only multiplies risk.”

Markus didn’t look over. “Your Honor, the State’s talking fear. We’re talking structure. There’s a transfer compact for a reason. Mr. Guerra is looking to attend college and better himself. The only crime he’s going to be committing is turning in an assignment late.”

Judge Kennedy held up a palm, easy. “Mr. Guerra.” The drawl softened consonants into something near friendly. “This scholarship. Athletic?”

“Yes, your honor.”

The judge rubbed his chin, thumb dragging across sandpaper stubble. A flicker in his eyes like he’d just stepped into a memory. “Got a fraternity brother from over that way. He’s a man of the cloth now. Back at Ole Miss? Lord. Another story.”

A ripple of quiet laughter lived and died in the gallery. The judge let it pass.

“Alright,” he said, voice turning to hardwood. “I’ve heard y’all argue yourselves in circles. Time to stop.”

Babin opened her mouth. The judge didn’t look at her.

“Office of Probation is ordered to initiate and submit the ICAOS transfer request for Mr. Guerra within one week. If Georgia accepts the case, this court will modify conditions accordingly to reflect supervision in the receiving state.”

Markus’s breath eased out like a knot letting go. “Thank you, Your Honor.”

Babin stepped forward, ready with another line of polished alarm. “Your Honor, the State—”

“The matter’s decided, Ms. Babin.” He didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t need to. “You may note your objection for the record.”

Her jaw clicked shut. Roussel’s stare drifted over Caine like a smirk that hadn’t found its mouth.

Judge Kennedy turned his gaze back to Caine. “Son, I’m going to suggest to those boys in the Peach State that you put time in at Pastor Hadden’s church while you’re there. Keeps your feet on ground. When you get a chance, ask him about homecoming ‘78.” The corner of his mouth almost smiled. “You tell him Judge Kennedy sent you.”

“Yes, sir,” Caine said.

“That said,” Kennedy added, the drawl thinning into steel, “don’t confuse mercy with blind trust. You violate in Georgia, Louisiana’s still got a bed with your name on it. The Farm isn’t going anywhere.”

“I understand.”

“Good.” He glanced to the clerk. “Enter the order. Anything further?”

Babin tried one last reach. “State would ask the Court to—”

“No, ma’am.” He stood. “We’re adjourned.”

The word hung there, heavier than a gavel. Chairs scraped. The bailiff called the next case. Caine rose with Markus. Across the aisle, Babin was already collecting her stack by feel. Roussel finally found his smile and let it land.

Caine didn’t give him one back. He just looked. Calm. Unmoved. Then he turned.

The hallway hit warmer by a degree, same old courthouse blend of bleach and somebody’s fried lunch hitching a ride on clothes. A siren floated thin from the street. Power moved here in paper, not volume. Paper cut deeper.

They walked out the courtroom and out into January light, brittle on the sidewalk. Traffic hissed on damp patches. They headed down the street to Markus’ office.

In the building’s lobby, an elevator dragged them up through the tired cough of old cables.

“Sit,” Markus said, already tugging a folder from the credenza and flipping it open on the desk. The letter of intent waited there, blue tabs like little flags. “Read every line. Do not sign a thing you haven’t.”

Caine read. Name. Terms. Dates. The numbers weren’t his lane. That would come later.

“Pen,” Markus said, sliding one across.

Caine signed. The scratch of the tip sounded bigger than it was. He sign-dated in the corner, then once more on the NCAA eligibility acknowledgment.

“Alright,” Markus said. “Fax.”

They walked it over to the machine. The glass still had a fingerprint in the corner from someone else’s emergency. Markus keyed in the number from the contact sheet. The machine whirred, coughed, took the page like it had a grudge against paper.

Caine watched the bar crawl across the tiny screen. Heard the distant dial, the handshake, the thin buzz of a connection finding itself. One page, then two. Confirmation stuttered out, thermal paper curling as it landed.

Markus tore it free and checked the header. “Received.”

Caine nodded once.

Outside the window, the city carried on—sirens threading lanes, a bus sighing to a stop, somebody arguing on a corner, the river pushing by with no idea who had just signed what. The air in the room felt the same. The difference lived inside the paper, in a code the right office would read and answer.

~~~

The yard at Hunt was bright and mean. Winter sun sat on the gravel while the river wind cut through khaki. Men drifted in loose clusters. The chain-link hummed when gusts hit it.

Dre sat with the Black row, back to the wall, eyes half-lidded. The heat on his face lied about the cold in his bones. Bleach and dust rode every breath.

Jamaal leaned into his shoulder. “Ain’t that dude who got walked down in the city last month your cousin?”

Dre shifted just enough to look at him. “Who you talking’ about?”

“One my homeboys wrote,” Jamaal said, mouth barely moving. “Said a nigga named Percy got hit in front his mawmaw house. Said that’s ol’ boy you tried to shoot at.”

Across the yard, the Latino table sat in a hard square of sunlight. Cards slapped. The sound carried. Dre watched a king get turned and palmed away.

“Yeah, that’s my mama brother son. I did shoot at him. Him and the white bitch DA he was talking to,” Dre said. He kept his voice flat. “That nigga was a snitch.”

Jamaal clicked his tongue. The wind lifted his cap. “Good he dead then.”

Dre’s hands settled on his knees. Skin across his knuckles looked thin. He stared at the veins there, then back to the table in the sun.

Ricardo had left with a few words.

“Front y’all mawmaw house,” Jamaal said again, like the address was proof. “That’s crazy, nigga.”

A guard’s shadow passed. A plane scratched white over the gum trees. The wind smelled like old pennies. Dre swallowed it.

He let silence sit between his teeth. At the table a dude in a green sweatshirt laughed, then folded and refolded his cards.

The gravel held a shard of green glass. He pressed it with his boot until it disappeared. The sun slid behind a thin cloud and the yard pulled in. Talk thinned.

Jamaal spat to the side. “Street clean itself sometimes,” he said. “Ain’t nobody gon’ cry for a rat.”

Dre breathed through his nose. The sun came back and put shine on the wire. A card slapped and the laughter died quick. One of the older Latino men met his look, then went back to his hand.

It wasn’t grief. It was something heavier that sat where grief should be. A knot of old blood. He kept his face quiet. In this place the only safe thing to show was the sky.

Dre turned his palms up to the sun like it could burn clean what it never reached. He didn’t need to hear more.

~~~

Late-January light drooled in through the blinds, thin and gray, the kind of New Orleans night that made the air feel stuck. The living room held the day in a low hum — traffic hissing wet on the street, a neighbor’s TV bleeding trumpet and organ, the faint vinegar of mop water still in the corners. On the rug, Camila sat cross-legged with a fistful of colored pencils clutched like flowers, her curls springing soft against her cheeks.

Caine was on the floor with her, long legs stretched out, back to the old couch.

He kept his voice serious like this was a business meeting. “Okay, what we got here, mamas?” He pointed at the page where she’d drawn a purple blob with stick legs and a tilted crown.

Camila grinned wide. “Guess.”

He squinted hard, tapping his chin. “Easy. That’s a dinosaur.”

She shrieked into her hands, delighted. “No!”

“Aight, aight.” He touched the crown. “One of them big shrimp on Mardi Gras.”

“Noooo.” She laughed so hard her body folded. “That you.”

“Oh, my bad.” He nodded solemn. “Self-portrait. I see it. You nailed the eyes.”

She leaned into him, giggles hiccuping out, then put the pencil back to the paper like work called and she had deadlines. Caine watched her fill the page with fierce concentration. The floor pressed cool through his jeans. He let his shoulders loosen. For a minute, the room held only the scrape of pencil and Camila’s breath.

The apartment door clicked. A slip of cold air, a rustle of a bag set down. Mireya walked into the living room and sat in the chair on the far side, the one near the window where the blind’s pull-string rattled in any breeze. Hoodie sleeves pushed to her elbows, hands empty. She didn’t take off her boots. She didn’t speak. Caine felt her watching before he looked up.

He kept his tone even, steady like a plank set between two roofs. “Judge approved the transfer,” he said. “I signed my letter. I’m going to college.”

The room went quieter than before. Camila pressed hard and broke a pencil tip. Little gasp. She looked up, then back at her drawing.

Mireya held Caine’s eyes for a beat that stretched. When she finally spoke, it landed dull and certain. “I meant what I said, Caine.”

Caine nodded once, more to himself than to her. He checked Camila’s face, saw only the line between her brows beginning to form. He leaned closer to his daughter. Then he looked back at Mireya.

When he spoke, his voice shifted a shade and he tagged it the way they did when they had to cut the room in half. Spanish flowed freely, hoping to shield Camila from the argument. “I can’t do life without you. I need you.”

Mireya’s mouth trembled toward a smile that never arrived. She matched his Spanish. “You should’ve thought of that when you told me fuck my dreams. Only yours are important.”

Caine’s jaw worked. “You can do nursing anywhere.”

“Who the fuck is going to pay that? You?” Her voice rose and cracked in the middle. “Did you even look at how much it costs to go out of state? Of course, you fucking didn’t.”

A horn bleated outside, long and annoyed, then faded. Camila stopped coloring. She watched their faces, searching for a cue. Caine saw it, that shine building in her eyes like a rain that hadn’t started yet. He forced his shoulders to stay loose, voice leveled.

“No puedes alejar a mi hija de mí,” he said, his voice taken on the edge that he reserved only for the streets despite himself.

“I won’t,” she shot back. “I’m not. I’ll make it work even if I have to bring her to Georgia myself. But I’m not following you and I’m not staying with you.”

Caine felt the floor under his palm, splinters along the rug edge. He’d already measured this risk. He’d already counted the cost. “I fucking made this decision for us.”

Mireya leaned forward until the chair creaked. Her teeth were set like she could crack a seed on them. “No, you made it for you. Y solo para ti.”

The room held that. The humid clench of it. Somewhere down the block a siren unscrolled, not in a hurry, just reminding everyone it existed. Camila’s bottom lip trembled. Caine his eyes to his daughter and let his face soften.

“No, no. It’s okay,” he told her, switching back to English like flipping a light. “We good, mamas.” He picked up another pencil and twirled it for her. “Draw me something else.”

She hesitated, then took it, small fingers closing around the wood. Her hand moved slower this time. The line she laid down wobbled. She pressed too hard, stopped, started again, little breath catching quick like she might cry but didn’t. The sadness showed up not in her face but in the careful way she colored inside shapes that had no edges.

Caine watched her draw. The room held its breath. Traffic hissed outside. The blind’s pull-string tapped once and went still.

He lifted his eyes to Mireya. She met them across the room.

Neither of them spoke again.

redsox907
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Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 21 Sep 2025, 03:35

poor Mila. Get used to it mamas. If Mireya going to continue to be stubborn this definitely ain't the last argument she gonna catch.

But once again, can't help but marvel at how badly he fumbled the whole thing lmao. She'd already shut down wanting to follow him, but he still makes a decision without asking her and randomly springs it on her out of nowhere.

CALL AN AUDIBLE MY MAN shesh
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djp73
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Post by djp73 » 21 Sep 2025, 06:00

Weird spot for Mireya to draw a line.
Figured Percy wasn’t going to stick around too long.
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Post by djp73 » 21 Sep 2025, 06:19

Big update there, feels like we’re on to the next phase.
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Post by Caesar » 21 Sep 2025, 19:06

redsox907 wrote:
21 Sep 2025, 03:35
poor Mila. Get used to it mamas. If Mireya going to continue to be stubborn this definitely ain't the last argument she gonna catch.

But once again, can't help but marvel at how badly he fumbled the whole thing lmao. She'd already shut down wanting to follow him, but he still makes a decision without asking her and randomly springs it on her out of nowhere.

CALL AN AUDIBLE MY MAN shesh
Poor child already traumatized from seeing her father brutalized by The Man and now he's leaving, causing her parents to split up. Pobrecita.

This is how he thought that announcement was going to go

djp73 wrote:
21 Sep 2025, 06:00
Weird spot for Mireya to draw a line.
Figured Percy wasn’t going to stick around too long.
djp73 wrote:
21 Sep 2025, 06:19
Big update there, feels like we’re on to the next phase.
Snitches get stitches, end up in ditches, etc. etc.

:yep: Final few chapters before college
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Post by Caesar » 21 Sep 2025, 19:07

Goud Won Pa Janm Fè Liy Dwèt

He woke to the kind of quiet that made a house feel abandoned. Dust hung in the blinds like old lace. The living room held on to night even after sun-up, all the light getting caught in slats and the gap under the door. Somebody’s shoe lay tipped over by the coffee table. A cartoon remote faced the couch like it had been set down mid-argument. From the back rooms came only sleep sounds—no pots, no radio, no raised voices. For once, nobody needed him yet.

Caine eased upright, blanket sliding off his shoulders. The couch springs complained under his weight, then settled. He sat there a beat, listening. No footsteps. No Hector’s cough. No grandmother’s low hum. Just the house breathing.

His box was tucked under the end table where he kept it, taped corners rubbed soft from moving it too many times. He pulled it up, lifted the lid. Notebooks—thin, cheap spirals from Family Dollar—stacked like shingles. Dozens now. He picked one with a scar on the cover, dog-eared near the back, and set it across his knees.

Camila,

I never wanted to leave you. I thought everything would work like it did in my head. But I had to take the chance. I had to find a way to provide for you that ain’t end with me dead on the concrete. I needed a way that I could come back to you and have you be proud to tell people that you were my daughter. And I wanted you to know from my words, not anyone else’s.


He paused, thumb rubbing at a crease. The room smelled faintly like last night’s grease and bleach. He kept writing.

It got real that night. When they shot at us because my friends stole from them. That’s the code of the streets, though. Might be the code of men. Can’t let anything slide for fear of weakness. It don’t sound like the movies when it’s for you. You feel the air tear. Hear the crack. You just put your head down. Shoot back. Hope you’re still breathing after. That’s why I have to leave. I have to do something else.

He let the pencil find the last lines without forcing them.

I don’t know if your mama gonna ever forgive me for leaving. She might be right not to.

He blew on the page once, like breath could make it dry faster, then folded the notebook shut and slid it back into the stack. The lid went on. The box went down. He leaned his forearms to his thighs and laced his fingers, the morning pressing hot at his neck.

His phone buzzed on the arm of the couch. Unknown number. 912.

He almost let it ring again. Then he answered. “Hello?”

A man on the other end wore a country drawl like a jacket he never took off. “Morning. James Bethel here. That Caine Guerra?”

“Yeah.”

“I’m your new probation officer,” the man said, matter-of-fact. “Transfer came through. It’s approved, but it don’t go live till May 30th. You need to be in Georgia and check in on or before that day.”

“Okay.”

“I’ll be in touch with your, uh—” papers shuffled on the other end, “—with your current PO there… Rus-sell? Roosle?” He mangled it, kept going. “I’ll see you bright and early when you get to Statesboro.”

Caine didn’t feel a need to tell him how to pronounce that. “Alright.”

Bethel waited a half-second like he expected more. Nothing came. “Alright then,” he said, and the line clicked quiet.

The room was back. Dust in the light. Couch breath. Somewhere a sink dripped. Caine stared at the dead phone, then put it down. He pushed the box farther under the table with his heel until the cardboard scraped the wood. His hand found the blanket and flattened it across the cushion so the spot looked untouched.

He sat there, listening for the house to wake. Thinking of highways and county lines, of rooms that wouldn’t know his name yet, of mornings like this in a place where the air didn’t smell like home. He thought of Roussel’s voice telling him no for sport. He thought of a man he hadn’t met, friendly on the phone, and the way power always came with a checklist.

From the back bedroom, a soft snore turned over and faded. Somewhere outside, a siren tested its throat and moved on. Morning finally made the blinds glow.

~~~

The television above the bar threw thin green light across bottles, a field the size of the wall where men sprinted in tiny bright kits and the crowd roared through battered speakers. The sound washed over the room like traffic. Ricardo leaned his shoulder into the wood, elbow on the bar, the cold ring of his beer sweating under his thumb. The place smelled like lime rinds and old mop water and a little bleach. The heat had a way of coming back even with the fans pushing stale air.

He watched the match without really caring who was playing. Bodies running, a pass in space, a cut at the edge of the box. The keeper punched it clear and the table behind him shook with somebody’s laughter. He took a slow drink. The beer tasted clean, easy, not like the metal he used to carry in his mouth after court. He set it down and caught the woman at the far corner looking his way.

She wasn’t trying to make it anything. Just a glance over the lip of her glass, the kind of look people traded when the afternoon was trying to be evening. Her lipstick was the color of ripe mango and it left a soft print on the rim. He let a small smile show. Just that he’d seen her see him. She looked away and the soccer noise filled the gap between them again.

The bartender slid a rag under a line of shot glasses and flicked water onto the floor with a practiced wrist. Somebody opened the back door and heat lifted in, pulling the smell of diesel from the alley. A cluster of men came out from the back then, moving in that unhurried way men move when they owned the room behind them.

They were clean without being neat. One wore a white polo with a buckle that caught the TV light. One had a cap pulled low, curve pressed perfect. Another had the kind of stillness that told you who he’d be if the talking started. They were laughing about a goal that hadn’t even happened yet. Then the one with the cap looked up.

His eyes landed on Ricardo’s hand. The La eMe marks lived there dark and sure, skin faded brown around them. Ricardo just let his hand rest on the bar where it was, the sweat bead rolling down the bottle and over the bone of his wrist. He met the man’s stare and held it.

No one said anything. The room did the talking it always did. Fans clicking. Ice cracking in a plastic bin. A motorcycle growling and then fading on the street. The cap guy’s jaw flexed once. The man in the white polo looked at the cap, then at Ricardo, then back at the TV like he tracked a ball in the air. Recognition sat between them.

Ricardo dipped his chin the smallest bit. The cap guy’s mouth tipped a degree, not up or down, then he looked past Ricardo to the bartender. He said something about the time. Another laughed. The woman with the mango lipstick glanced over again, quick, bird-like. The group kept moving, the white polo’s buckle throwing green light again, and the back door sighed shut after them.

Ricardo took the last swallow of his beer. The cold turned warm in his throat on the way down. He let his hand rest flat on the bar, the ink drying there like old decisions. The match finally gave the room what it had been waiting for. A striker broke loose, chipped the keeper and hit the netting with the inside of his foot. The bar cracked into cheers like they all knew him. The bartender slapped the rag on the counter and grinned at nobody.

“Dame otra,” Ricardo said, easy, the vowels soft with the city under them.

The bartender reached for a bottle already sweating and popped the cap off without looking. The hiss was small and final. Ricardo slid the empty forward, watched it get swept into a crate with others that had lived short lives. He shifted his weight and glanced down the bar.

The woman’s glass was taller and sweating, too. Something with clear liquor, slices of lime stacked like thin moons. She was scrolling her phone with her thumb, bracelets chiming soft on her wrist, the little bells you only heard when the noise around you left room for them.

“Lo que ella esté tomando,” he said, tilting his chin her way.

The bartender followed the gesture, then looked back at Ricardo with the half smile men in bars wore when the game was easy and the floor wasn’t sticky yet. “Para la güerita?”

He nodded. The bartender grabbed another tall glass, scooped ice, dropped in the limes. The television replayed the goal in three angles and a new wave of noise came as if it were fresh. Someone near the door clapped like he’d made it happen himself.

He felt the weight of the afternoon slide toward night. Outside, the street would be soaking in its own heat, tar soft at the edges, a kid somewhere kicking a flat ball, a dog sleeping under a bench until somebody made it move. Inside, the bar kept its cool the way a church did, lights dim, everybody letting themselves be held up by small rituals.

The fresh beer touched his lip. He didn’t drink yet. He looked at the woman. She noticed the bartender setting the twin glass in front of her and followed the line back to him. Her eyebrow rose like a yes that had a question inside it.

He lifted the bottle a little. That was all.

She wrapped her fingers around the glass. The lipstick left another mango half moon. She didn’t smile. Not yet. The bracelets chimed when she lifted it, took a slow sip, and set it down again without breaking eye contact. Her phone screen dimmed and went dark on its own.

Ricardo turned his wrist once, letting the sun fall on the ink for a moment. He tapped the bottle once against the bar then looked back up at the match.

~~~

The shop breathed heat and solvent and yesterday’s fry grease someone tracked in from the corner spot. Fans droned from chains and pushed air that felt like a hand against a stove. Tito moved slow between the cars, a wrench tapping his thigh, the tap keeping time with the buzz of the lights and the distant siren that came and went like a thought you didn’t want.

Hoods up. Mouths open. An engine talking in metal words only he understood. A Camaro needing a new belt. A clapped-out Tahoe with a rattle he could feel in his molars. A Civic with paint that had given up. He stopped beside the Tahoe and leaned in, listening. Something high and mean in the timing, an off prayer.

Laughter drifted from the beat-up couch he kept against the wall by the soda machine. Tee Tito was sunk into it like the couch had been made to fit him, legs spread, sneakers off, one sock half-peeled. A woman tucked in close, the two of them a pile of limbs and soft noise. Her nail traced the lines on his tattoo like she was following a map. A phone played something tinny and bright that didn’t belong to the room.

“Junior,” Tito said, voice flat.

His son looked over without moving much else. The woman glanced at Tito, then back to Tee Tito. A smile that said she belonged where the easy money was.

“You gon’ get caught slippin’ like that,” Tito said. “Laying around like there ain’t nobody around that might want to do you something.”

Junior rolled his head back against the couch and grinned. “If 3NG was gon’ do somethin’ about what I did, they’d done it already,” he said. “That was shit was back around Thanksgiving. It’s damn near April.”

Tito let the wrench knock against his palm. He said, “Took you months to figure who robbed you. Didn’t stop you.”

Tee Tito met his eyes from across the concrete and didn’t blink. “Yeah, but I had to find out who did that,” he said, lazy but sharp. He lifted his chin toward the roll-up door, the street beyond it loud and hot. “They know who shot at them. If they ain’t done nothin’ yet, they ain’t gonna do anything.”

The woman laughed again like she agreed with him. A little incense smoke from somewhere mixed with the oil and the hot rubber. Tito tasted it and it tasted like someone lying to themselves.

He looked back down into the Tahoe’s bay. The belt had a split you could slide a dime into. He pushed his thumb against it until the rubber complained. The shop noise swelled, then went thin again.

“Won’t always be this quiet,” Tito said, not looking up.

Tee Tito sucked his teeth, pulled the woman’s hand off his chest. “C’mon,” he told her, not to his father. “Get up.”

She stood fast like she knew the rules of rooms that belonged to men. She smoothed her shirt and lifted her chin at Tito, not shy, not sorry. Tee Tito grabbed his shoes with two fingers and didn’t put them on. He jerked his head toward a back office, and she followed him through.

The office door clicked and muffled the music from his phone. Tito waited a breath and listened to the fan belts sing their thin song, listened for a car he didn’t know pulling up outside. Nothing but sun and street. He lifted the rag from his pocket and wiped his hands even though they weren’t dirty yet.

There was a ’06 Impala two bays over with the hood propped by an aluminum bat because the hinge had seized. A smear of fingerprints in black across the fender from somebody leaning wrong. He set the wrench down and crossed to it, dragged the stool with his heel. When he sat, the old cushion released a breath that smelled like bleach and sweat. He liked the Impala’s engine more than he liked the Tahoe’s. He cracked his knuckles and bent in, the metal warm against his forearms.

Outside, a bus came to a stop and hummed while it waited and coughed off again. He didn’t watch the door. He didn’t need to watch the door. If something came, it would come.

Tee Tito’s voice floated out once, low, then a laugh that belonged to a boy who believed time was a thick blanket. Tito shook his head where nobody could see and reached for a socket.

~~~

They ate with their elbows on flimsy metal, breaths shining the grease paper. The restaurant wasn’t more than a takeout window and three wobbling tables under a crooked awning. Noon heat made the air syrupy, that thin late-March humidity that didn’t care what the calendar said. Fryers hissed behind the half-closed screen. A fan ticked like it had one screw left.

Caine worked through a shrimp poboy dressed, Cajun sauce bleeding into white bread. Every few seconds he wiped his thumb on a napkin that already looked like a crime scene. Ramon sat across from him, chewing slow. Tyree and E.J. shared the other table, legs stretched into the walkway, Styrofoam cups sweating circles onto steel.

Cars crept past, bass lines rolling. A bus wheezed to a stop and dumped out a handful of kids, heat-dazed and loud, gone in a wave. Somewhere behind the block a siren started, then lost interest. The smell of bleach from the dining room mop bucket fought with hot oil and losing.

Ramon balled his wrapper. “We got something in motion for Melph.”

He said it like he was reporting the weather. No chest, no story. Just facts.

E.J. leaned back, chair on two legs. “Bout time. I been waiting for this shit for a minute.”

Tyree smirked, talking around a bite of wings. “That why you been hiding in Belle Chasse, huh? Waiting in that white bitch pussy.”

E.J. dropped the chair flat and cut him a look. “Fuck you, nigga.”

Caine chuckled under his breath and shook his head. Ramon shook his too, the ghost of a smile and then gone.

Ramon flicked a crumb from his shirt. “All we need you to do,” he said to Caine, “is bring a couple cars under the overpasses. Day of. Park and dip. In and out.”

“Which ones?” Caine asked, voice low.

“Claiborne. Maybe Earhart. We got a couple crackheads hanging round that owe us. They’ll handle what they supposed to handle.”

Tyree licked sauce from his knuckle, already grinning at his own idea. “Shoulda gave them rockheads a little extra and let them spin on them Melph niggas.”

E.J. shook his head. “You would be the type to trust a dope fiend with the dirt. Gonna have all us in the parish.”

Tyree laughed. “I ain’t scared of a lil’ time.”

The fan ticked again, louder this time, like it might shake itself apart. Caine took one last bite, chewed, then set the bread down and wiped his hands.

“I can do that,” he said.

Ramon reached across the table. The dap was quick and quiet, palms meeting, fingers sliding, a pact made small.

“Bet,” Ramon said.

A kid skated past on a busted board, wheels screaming against the busted sidewalk. The cook slid open the screen and dumped a basket of hush puppies into a paper boat. The smell tried to make peace with everything else. E.J. pulled a toothpick from behind his ear and worried it between his teeth. Tyree tugged the collar of his tee, eyes tracking a girl crossing the street with a bag of ice and a laugh that made two dudes behind her lose their train of thought.

“When?” Caine asked.

Ramon tossed his chin toward downtown. “Couple weeks. Gotta wait for the big bruddas from Houston to come back. Before Jazz Fest.”

Tyree tapped the table like a drum pad. “I still think them cluckers could’ve been got them hats for us.”

E.J. snorted. “And have them nod off in the getaway car so the jakes find them? Nigga, shut up.”

Their bickering slid around Caine. He stayed with the map in his head. Underpass angles. Entrance ramps. Cameras. The way echoes carried under concrete, how engines sounded different in shade. He folded the greasy paper tight, smaller and smaller, until it fit into his palm.

His phone buzzed once against his thigh. He didn’t check it.

On the other table, Tyree’s phone danced hard against the metal. He glanced down, eyes widening. “Aye.” He stood up fast, already grabbing his cup. He slapped the back of E.J.’s shoulder. “We late.”

Ramon raised his eyebrows. “Late for what?”

“Session with Jess,” Tyree said, already moving. “Had to pay her ass extra to tell one of them lil’ niggas they gotta go somewhere else.”

E.J. was on his feet now, tossing bones into the trash bag with a clatter. “That’s because she be taxing us because Popeye had that baby with that other bitch on her.”

Ramon laughed and shook his head. “Tell her hit me up. I need a touch-up. White boy over on the West Bank fucked this shit he did up.”

Tyree grinned. “That’s why you don’t cheat on Jess, nigga.”

E.J. jerked his chin at Caine. “You sliding?”

Caine stood and shouldered his backpack. “Yeah. I’ll come.”

Tyree leaned in, that wide playful meanness on his face. “Don’t come if you ain’t getting tatted like a bitch.”

Caine bumped him with his forearm, just enough to shift him off his square, a shove with a joke folded inside. “Move, man.”

He gathered his trash, walked it to the busted can by the door, and pressed the lid down until it caught. Grease printed his fingers. He wiped them on his jeans and didn’t care.

Ramon stayed seated a beat longer, eyes on the street, measuring weather only he could feel. Then he pushed back his chair with a scrape.

“I’ma fuck with y’all later,” he said. “I got some shit to do.”

They each leaned in and dapped him up, one by one.

The sidewalk baked. A bus exhaled. Somewhere down the block, a woman yelled at a man for stepping on her shoes and then laughed because nothing stayed serious long on a day like this. The three of them cut toward the corner where E.J. had parked half on the curb, windows cracked so the heat wouldn’t choke them.

Caine fell in behind Tyree, the city lifting around them in waves—fryer hiss, siren drift, a trumpet practicing two streets over, the low talk of old men who had seen too much and still came outside to see more. He didn’t look back until the last second. Ramon was already turned away, thumb moving across his phone, face flat, plan building.

E.J. unlocked the car and the doors popped like knuckles. Tyree slid across the hood just to be extra, then yanked open the passenger side. Caine pulled the back door and ducked in, the seat hot through his shirt, the air thick but familiar.

Behind them the fan ticked once and quit. The fryer hissed on. The day kept going.

~~~

The office carried the wet bleach and dust smell that stuck in your throat. A fan pushed warm air in a lazy circle and made the papers on the corkboard lift at the corners. Mireya leaned back in her chair with her eyes half closed, as if that could press time forward. The phones had gone quiet. The clock on the wall ticked like it was stepping in mud, each second slow, refusing to help. A delivery tag curled at the corner of Mireya’s mouse pad. A fly traced the fluorescent light and gave up.

“—and he still ate it like nothing was wrong,” Denise said, tapping her keyboard with two fingers. “I said, you not tasting that?”

Mireya gave a small nod without looking up. “Mm.”

Denise kept talking, voice turned toward the monitor. A driver number. A cousin. The sauce again. Mireya let it roll by and made the appropriate sounds when it reached a question mark. The lull touched her eyelids and dragged. The AC vent rattled once and went quiet again. A stapler clicked on Denise’s desk, misfiring twice before it took. Jamie’s radio cracked with a burst of static and a driver’s last name, then silence.

The door opened and the temperature shifted. Stasia stepped in first, clean perfume cutting through the bleach. Felix followed with his phone already to his ear. Jamie came behind them, sunlight on his shoulders, the yard on his boots.

Stasia crossed the room and sat on the edge of Mireya’s desk like they had a standing appointment. “It’s been a while.”

“It has,” Mireya said, straightening. Her tone stayed even.

Stasia’s eyes ran a quick check, then came back to Mireya’s face. “You think about working with us?”

Mireya shook her head.

Stasia’s mouth tipped a fraction, not a frown. “Let me introduce you to the others, then.”

Mireya hesitated.

Stasia said, “They’re very nice,” like a door quietly opening.

Mireya nodded. “Okay.”

“Beautiful,” Stasia said, the word light. “You can make do with the tank and jeans. Leave the jacket.”

Mireya slid the jacket off and hooked it over the chair back. Denise glanced up and then back to the screen, the headset crooked, one hand already logging a plate. Felix took his call into the corner and Jamie called out to the yard on the radio. Stasia nudged the office door with her knuckles and let Mireya step through first.

Heat met them even in the night. Out in the yard, chains clinked against steel and a driver cursed at a pallet that caught wrong. Leo watched from the forklift with his chin up, not hiding the look. Kike leaned near the rebar stacks in his work shirt, hands sunk in his pockets. A couple other guys paused their motion long enough to make sure Mireya saw them seeing her. She kept her eyes forward and walked. Heat rolled off the lot like a breath from an open oven. Somewhere a gull screamed even though there was no water in sight, the sound riding the wind and breaking against the concrete.

Stasia drove. The AC worked but the day pushed back. Houses peeled by with tired paint and porches that leaned. Stasia didn’t fill the silence. Mireya cracked the window an inch for the smell of the city.

They pulled up to a building that had venue bones—hedges clipped too neat, tinted front glass, no sign. Not the mansion from last night. Mireya’s face gave her away for a second.

“We move around,” Stasia said. “Safety reasons.”

Mireya nodded once.

Stasia used a key on another door and pushed through. The back door opened to a narrow hallway where the music had turned the drywall into a drum. The bass traveled through her ribs. The air had the sweetness of setting spray and the faint hot-metal note of lights left on too long. The hallway paint showed the ghosts of hands at shoulder height. Tape scars framed a light switch. A lone bobby pin sat on the floor.

The dressing room was a cross between a backstage and someone’s idea of a bedroom—mirrors with light bulbs scabbed along the edges, a folding table in the middle, a rolling rack breathing plastic. Four women.

“Liana,” Stasia said, nodding to the corner, then toward the table, “Alejandra, Hayley,” and finally, “Jaslene.”

Liana sat in the corner with a heavy textbook open across her knees, finger holding the margin like the page might try to run. At the table, Alejandra and Hayley wore sweatpants and hoodies in different moods—Alejandra’s cropped short, Hayley’s big enough to hide a person—counting through a fat stack into thinner stacks, rubber bands waiting with their small mouths open. At the mirror, Jaslene leaned in close to her reflection, lacy bra catching the light above basketball shorts, long legs pushed out.

Alejandra turned, short and bright, a grin arriving before the words. “Pareces mexicana,” she said, Colombian music in the syllables.

Jaslene didn’t look away from the mirror. “Mami, ya tú sabes,” she said, Puerto Rican cadence, voice deeper but velvet. “Aquí todo es mexicana o hondureña.”

“Asi es,” Mireya said. The agreement came easy, slipping into her parents’ tongue.

Hayley raised her eyebrows without looking up. “English, please. Just once.” She split a stack, counting the bills quickly, practiced, and banded it clean.

Alejandra swatted at her with a few bills. “You can learn, güera.”

Liana lifted her head and waved, eyes soft, then went right back to the paragraph like she had a clock only she could hear. Mireya liked her in that instant for taking herself seriously in a room that didn’t need her to.

Jaslene leaned back from the mirror to see Mireya without the glass in the way. “You coming to work with us?” she asked. No push to it.

Before Mireya could answer, Stasia said, “She helps us with other work.” It settled the air. “Just wanted to introduce her.”

Money kept talking in small sounds. Bills sliding, bands snapping, paper soft against paper. Mireya felt it in the part of her that had been tired for years. Daycare. Groceries. Gas. The number that lived under everything. The money had the smell of fingers and air-conditioning, paper warmed by bodies and pressed flat by habit. Rubber bands sat in a coffee mug, a bouquet of small circles.

“Alright,” Stasia said, clapping her palms together once in thanks. “We’ll get out your hair.”

They stepped back into the hallway. The bass dimmed from chest to floor. Stasia waited for Mireya to pass and then pulled the door shut behind them. The bright from the dressing room leaked around the frame for a second and then disappeared. The bass softened to a thud underfoot. The hallway held the heat the way a pocket held a coin.

“I’m still not open to it,” Mireya said.

“I know,” Stasia said. No heat in it. “Hungry? There’s a Thai place around the corner that actually does spice.”

Mireya searched her face for a tell of something else. When she saw nothing, she nodded.

As they pulled away, the building shrank in the mirror. The hedges gave way to a man selling plates under a tent and a woman dragging a cooler down a cracked sidewalk. Mireya kept her hands flat on her thighs. The picture wouldn’t leave her—the neat stacks mid-count, Alejandra’s quick fingers, Hayley’s steady rhythm, rubber bands waiting to bite shut.

A dog trotted the sidewalk with no collar and no hurry. Two teenagers traded a basketball with the palm slap that always sounded the same no matter the block. Mireya drew a breath and let it out slow so it wouldn’t turn into a sound. She didn’t look at Stasia. She watched the streets line up and fall away, her mind replaying the sound of bills sliding against bills and rubber bands snapping.
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Post by Captain Canada » 21 Sep 2025, 21:53

The anxiety of the lead-up to Caine getting caught just when he thinks he is just about to get out is nerve-wracking.
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Post by Caesar » 22 Sep 2025, 11:16

Captain Canada wrote:
21 Sep 2025, 21:53
The anxiety of the lead-up to Caine getting caught just when he thinks he is just about to get out is nerve-wracking.
Getting caught?! :mmcht:
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Post by Caesar » 22 Sep 2025, 11:16

.
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Post by Caesar » 22 Sep 2025, 11:16

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