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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 20 Apr 2025, 21:29

En carne propia

The walls in the back room of the station were off-white and stained near the floor, like someone had tried to mop away everything that ever happened there. The hum of fluorescent lights buzzed overhead. It wasn’t cold exactly, but the kind of stale air that made sweat stick to your back.

Caine sat cuffed to the table, jaw tight, spine straight. He didn’t shrink from the room, didn’t flinch at the silence. He knew what this was. The only thing that surprised him was how calm he felt.

The door opened with a quiet click. A detective stepped in—not loud, not angry, just steady in the way people got when they thought they already knew the ending.

“Detective Martel,” he said, as he sat down. “Appreciate you joining us this morning.”

He tossed a small brown paper evidence bag onto the table. It slid to a stop in front of Caine. Inside was a few zips of weed.

“This what you worried about?” Martel asked, voice almost casual. “’Cause I’m not.”

He pulled out a chair, flipped open a thin manila folder, and laid it flat. Names were printed in bold type across several arrest reports. Photos. Notes.

“You know how we got to you? You got picked up because your boy rolled on you. Said you were with him and Ricardo when it went down. Put you down as the mastermind behind everything. That’s enough to hold you—for now.”

Caine didn’t move.

Martel continued, “But let’s say you help me fill in the rest. Maybe that statement doesn’t lead to charges that stick. Maybe you walk outta here with less than what you’re holding now.”

He turned the folder so Caine could see. Paper-clipped pages with photos of Ricardo. Percy. Names scribbled in the margins: guys from around the way, Tito. Dre was noticeably absent from the list.

“You see, Caine, you’re in a bad spot. But you’re not done. Not yet. You got time to help yourself.”

Still no response.

“You played quarterback for Carver, right?” Martel said, flipping to another sheet. “Pretty good one, too. Kid like you, smart, athletic… you shouldn’t be in a place like this.”

Caine looked at him, the faintest smirk tugging at the edge of his mouth. "But here I am."

Martel nodded slowly. “Yeah. Here you are. But how long you stay here? That part’s up to you. Who else was there that night? You give me something real, something actionable, I go to the DA, tell them you cooperated. That matters.”

Caine’s eyes flicked to the bags of weed on the table. Then to the folder. Then back to Martel.

But he didn’t speak.

Martel exhaled through his nose. “Alright, Guerra. You wanna keep playing the strong, silent type? Let’s see how long that works for you on the tier. It’s rough even in juvenile lockup.”

He stood, tucked the folder under one arm, and knocked on the door twice. Another officer opened it without looking.

The detective didn’t say goodbye. Didn’t even glance back.

Caine sat there another full minute, eyes on the little bag of weed.

Then he leaned back against the chair and stared at the ceiling like he was trying to memorize every crack in it.

He could still hear Martel’s voice echoing in his head, soft and certain, like the man hadn’t even needed an answer. Like he already knew Caine wouldn’t fold, but wanted him to sit with the pressure. The names on the folder flickered in his mind—Ricardo, Percy, Tito, his own—and for a second, the air felt thinner in the room.

Caine flexed his fingers beneath the cuffs. Not to get free. Just to feel something that still belonged to him.



The cell was colder than the interrogation room and smelled like bleach and skin. Concrete walls boxed Caine in with half a dozen other boys—some younger, some maybe his age, but none older. This was juvie. And he was one of the biggest bodies in the room.

He didn’t sit. Not right away.

He stood with his back against the far wall, arms folded, chin lifted just enough to make anyone think twice. His posture said what his mouth wouldn’t: don’t come near me.

Some of the younger kids gave him quick glances and then looked away. One sat on the floor with his head buried in his knees, rocking slightly. Another paced the floor, muttering to himself. A third kept watching Caine, like he wasn’t sure if he wanted to challenge him or ask for protection.

Caine stared straight ahead.

He didn’t want to talk. Didn’t want to listen. He just needed to survive this part without making a scene.

Eventually, he took the bench furthest from the toilet, his shoulders square, hands resting on his knees. The cuffs were off now, but the pressure in his chest hadn’t left.

A wiry kid a few feet away, probably thirteen at most, scratched at his wristband. “What you in for?” he asked.

Caine didn’t answer. Didn’t even look at him.

“Cool,” the kid muttered. “Me neither.”

Voices echoed from down the hall—officers shouting, a door slamming, someone shouting curses at anyone and everyone. Time didn’t move in there. It just pressed down, heavy and slow.

He leaned back, eyes half-closed, trying not to think. But everything rushed in anyway—Sara’s face when the cuffs went on, Mireya face when he left, Camila clinging on to him, Dre putting him in this by bringing Percy around.

The names from the folder floated back up.

Somewhere deep in the station, a buzzer sounded. Caine didn’t move.

A CO stepped to the bars. “Guerra. On your feet.”

He stood. Didn’t ask where they were taking him. Didn’t care. Just followed the sound of his own footsteps echoing.

The booking area buzzed with quiet machinery and louder indifference. Caine stood in line behind another boy with swollen knuckles and dried blood beneath his nose. Ahead, the fingerprinting station clicked with methodical rhythm.

When it was his turn, the deputy didn’t say much. Just motioned for him to step forward. Caine complied, silently. His hands were pressed into black ink, each finger rolled with clinical efficiency across the scan pad.

“Hold still,” the deputy muttered.

The mugshot came next. He stood against the wall, jaw tight, face blank. The flash was too bright, the lens too close. He blinked, but never looked away.

The paperwork followed. One form after another, name after name. The deputy slid a sheet toward him.

“Charges include attempted carjacking, grand theft auto, unauthorized use of a vehicle, conspiracy, possession with intent.”

Caine signed where they pointed. He didn’t read it.

“Sixteen,” one of the deputies said, glancing at the sheet. “Should’ve been worried about prom, not prison.”

Caine gave him nothing.

Another sheet landed in front of him. “Initial hearing’s set. Public defender’ll call when they feel like it.”

His wrists were re-cuffed. A second deputy took his arm and led him down a hallway that smelled like antiseptic and rubber.

As they turned the corner, Caine saw a cart stacked with plastic bags—shoes, belts, clothes. All labeled. All belonging to boys who looked like him.

He didn’t ask when he’d get his back.

He didn’t ask anything.
~~~

The baby monitor blinked quietly on the nightstand, casting soft green light across the dark room. Mireya sat on the edge of her cousin Elena’s couch, knees pulled up, phone face down beside her. She hadn’t touched it since listening to the voicemail.

Sara’s voice still echoed in her head. “They took him last night. In front of everybody.”

Camila stirred in the travel crib a few feet away, letting out a soft coo that quickly faded. Mireya didn’t move. She just stared ahead, hands clasped in her lap so tightly her knuckles had turned pale. Her back ached from sleeping in odd positions the night before. Her stomach twisted every time she thought about the way Caine looked when he walked out the door.

Elena entered the room with a warm mug of coffee and held it out silently. Mireya took it, her fingers trembling slightly.

“You okay?” Elena asked.

Mireya didn’t answer right away. She stared down at the cup like it might say something back to her. “I thought I’d feel relieved,” she said at last. “Or angry. But I just feel tired.”

Elena sat down beside her. “You’ve been doing this alone for a while. It’s okay to feel tired.”

Mireya shook her head. “I told him he’d end up like this. I told him. I begged him.”

“Yeah,” Elena said gently. “And now he knows you weren’t lying.”

Mireya looked over at Camila, who had shifted in her crib, one tiny fist tucked beneath her cheek.

“How do I tell her he ain’t coming back soon?”

“She’s a baby. She won’t remember,” Elena offered.

“That’s what I’m afraid of,” Mireya said, voice breaking.

Silence stretched between them.

“I didn’t want to leave him behind,” she added. “I just couldn’t let her grow up thinking that kind of love was normal. That kind of silence. I didn’t want her to grow up not knowing who her father was.”

Elena raised an eyebrow. “He chose this. Time’s are hard but there are plenty of men who make it work without crime. Don’t rewrite the story in your head before it’s even done.”

Mireya hesitated. “I know. I just…” She sighed. “I keep wondering if I made it worse by not saying more. If I should’ve tried harder to pull him out of it.”

“You said plenty,” Elena said. “And you stayed. That’s what counts. You were trying to protect yourself. Protect her.”

Mireya finally picked up the phone again. Checked it. No missed calls. No messages.

She put it right back down.

Camila sighed in her sleep, little fists resting near her face.

And Mireya leaned back against the couch, staring up at the ceiling, feeling her chest tighten like the grief was a second spine pressing through her skin.

She didn’t cry.

She didn’t have anything left to give the tears.
~~~

The phone rang twice before Sara picked up.

“Yeah,” she said, her voice steady but not cold. Just guarded.

Caine didn’t speak right away. He sat in the corner phone booth with the receiver pressed to his ear, trying to find the right words and coming up short.

“It’s me,” he finally said.

Sara let out a breath. “I know.”

He leaned forward, elbows on his knees. The cord twisted around his fingers.

“How’s Camila?”

“She’s good. With Mireya and Elena.”

He closed his eyes. “I didn’t want this to happen.”

“I believe you,” she said. “But that don’t change where you are.”

Caine pressed his forehead to the wall beside the phone. “I didn’t run, Ma. I could’ve, but I didn’t.”

“I know you didn’t,” she said. Her voice softened, but there was something underneath it. “That scared me more than if you had.”

Caine lifted his head slowly. “Why?”

“Because it means you were ready to take the weight,” she said. “And baby, I don’t want you to be that ready for it. Not yet.”

A long silence stretched between them.

“I told her you said you love her,” Sara added. “Not sure how much it means to a baby, but I told her anyway.”

Caine nodded. “Tell Mireya too. Please.”

“I will.”

He waited then asked in Spanish.

“Ma… do you hate me?”

Sara was quiet for a beat too long. When she spoke, her voice cracked for the first time.

“I don’t hate you, Caine. I’m scared for you. I’m disappointed, yeah, but I’m terrified too. You’re my only son. My only child. And every time that phone rings late, I brace for your name.”

Caine swallowed. “I’m gonna fix it. I swear.”

“I want to believe that,” she said. “But I’ve been wanting to believe for a long time.”

A mechanical voice cut in: You have one minute remaining.

“I love you, Mama.”

She paused, voice catching. “Y yo a ti, mijito. Más de lo que sabes”

The line went dead.

Caine hung up the phone and sat there a while longer, hand still resting on the receiver like it might ring again.



Lights dimmed at nine. Not off—just lower, like pretending to be night.

Caine lay on the top bunk, arms folded under his head, staring at the ceiling through the faint glow of the overhead bulb. He hadn’t said a word since the phone call. Not to the kid in the bunk below. Not to the COs. Not even to himself.

Around him, the dorm settled into uneasy quiet. A boy cried into his mattress two bunks over. Another mumbled threats in his sleep. Someone far across the room laughed without reason.

Caine didn’t flinch. He just listened.

The cold from the concrete seeped into the thin mattress. His sweatshirt was balled under his head for a pillow. His charge sheet sat folded in his pocket, unread.

He could still feel the phone in his hand, even though it was gone. Still hear his mother’s voice. That crack in it when she called him “baby.”

A CO walked past with heavy keys jangling, shining a flashlight through the slots.

Caine kept still. His eyes tracked the slow sweep of the beam. It passed, and he was alone again.

He thought of Mireya. Of Camila’s tiny fist gripping his finger.

He thought of the little boys who used to chase him down the field after practice, pretending they were him. The way his cleats used to dig into turf under Friday night lights. The rhythm of his cadence echoing across the line. It all felt so far away now—like someone else's story.

Now he was here.

No shoulder pads. No turf. Just walls, metal, and time.

He didn’t cry. Didn’t shake. But every part of him felt heavy.

He hadn’t even been sentenced yet, haven’t even seen the judge, but something about him already felt gone.
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Captain Canada
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American Sun

Post by Captain Canada » 21 Apr 2025, 11:28

#FreeCaine
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djp73
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Post by djp73 » 21 Apr 2025, 13:11

this joint about to be about Caine's backup

Soapy
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Post by Soapy » 23 Apr 2025, 13:48

Captain Canada wrote:
21 Apr 2025, 11:28
#FreeCaine
oh but when kam defends himself he's a criminal :umar:
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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 27 Apr 2025, 15:47

Captain Canada wrote:
21 Apr 2025, 11:28
#FreeCaine
until its backwards!
djp73 wrote:
21 Apr 2025, 13:11
this joint about to be about Caine's backup
Fucking your cousin's baby daddy is some iniquitous work.
Soapy wrote:
23 Apr 2025, 13:48
Captain Canada wrote:
21 Apr 2025, 11:28
#FreeCaine
oh but when kam defends himself he's a criminal :umar:
Kam was an unrepentant heathen. Caine was trying to do what he thought was right to provide for his daughter.
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Post by Caesar » 27 Apr 2025, 15:47

El precio de cada paso

The morning was gray and heavy, the kind of sky that pressed down instead of opening up.
Caine sat shackled at the wrists and ankles in the back of a juvenile transport van, his body swaying slightly with every bump in the road.

The chain connecting his cuffs rattled faintly with every pothole they hit, a constant reminder with every jolt that he didn’t belong to himself right now.

Across from him, five other boys filled the benches. Some were smaller, younger—twitchy, wild-eyed. Others sat slouched low, all false bravado and forced laughter.

One of them, a wiry kid with a busted lip, beat a rhythm against the side of the van with his cuffed fists—thud-thud-thud, relentless, agitated. The noise bounced inside the metal walls, setting Caine’s teeth on edge.

He kept his gaze pinned to the scratched-up mesh covering the tiny windows. Outside, the city moved past in chopped-up flashes: the sagging awnings of corner stores, the tilted street signs, the boarded-up gas station he and Ricardo used to bike past.

They passed near his old block—close enough for him to recognize the curve of the street—and his stomach twisted. He thought about Mireya’s porch. About Camila’s soft weight tucked against his chest. About everything he wasn’t sure he’d ever touch again.

“Hey, big brudda,” a boy said across from him, flashing a grin with a chipped tooth. “What you in for?”

Caine didn’t move. Didn’t blink.

“Bet it was some dumb shit,” the boy muttered under his breath when Caine stayed silent. Another boy snickered, slapping his knee.

Caine leaned his head back against the cool metal wall of the van. He closed his eyes for a second and tried to slow his breathing, focusing on the clink of chains and the low hum of the engine instead of the ache growing behind his ribs.

It wasn’t fear.
Not exactly.
It was something heavier. A knowing.

Whatever was waiting at the courthouse, whatever came next, he couldn't run from it.

The van jolted hard as it turned sharply into a lot. The CO sitting up front barked, “Sit up straight! Eyes forward!”

Caine opened his eyes just in time to see the courthouse looming up through the mesh window—gray concrete, cracked steps, a row of iron bars covering the basement windows. It looked more like a place you disappeared than a place you went for justice.

The van creaked to a stop.

The CO threw the door open, and a wall of muggy Louisiana air rushed in, thick and clinging to Caine’s skin.

“Move it!” another voice barked.

One by one, the boys filed out, their chains scraping the metal floor with every step.

When it was Caine’s turn, he swung his legs over the edge and dropped to the ground, the shackles yanking tight with a sharp metallic clink.

He straightened his shoulders, lifting his head even as the weight of the chains tried to drag him down.

He wasn’t going to walk into that building hunched over.

Whatever was coming, he was meeting it standing up.



The juvenile courtroom smelled like dust and cold coffee. The kind of smell that clung to old carpet and worn benches, the kind that stayed with you longer than it should.

Caine shuffled in with the others, ankle chains clinking with every step. They moved them through a side door, away from the public, and lined them up like cattle along a low wall. There weren’t many spectators—just a few scattered family members sitting stiffly in the gallery, faces drawn tight with fear or disappointment.

His eyes found his mother immediately.

She sat two rows back, spine ramrod straight, hands folded tightly in her lap. Beside her, Mireya sat just as rigid, her face pale but controlled. No Camila. Probably for the best.

Caine kept his gaze locked forward. No shame. No pleading. Just acceptance.

The public defender assigned to him—a thin man with hollow eyes and rumpled clothes—sidled up quickly, flipping through Caine’s file as if seeing it for the first time.

“Guerra, right? This is your arraignment. You’ll plead not guilty for now. They’ll set another date,” he muttered.

Caine nodded once.

The judge, a stern-looking Black woman with sharp glasses and graying braids pulled into a bun, called the courtroom to order.

“Docket 4832, State of Louisiana vs. Caine Guerra.”

The clinking of Caine’s shackles echoed too loudly in the small room as he stepped forward.

The judge read through the charges: attempted carjacking, conspiracy to commit a felony, possession with intent to distribute, grand theft auto, unauthorized use of a vehicle. Each word felt detached, surgical, like it wasn’t even about a real person.

The judge looked up. “Does the State wish to be heard on bond?”

The assistant district attorney, a man in a slick navy suit, rose smoothly.

“Yes, Your Honor. The State requests that bail be denied. The defendant is charged with a violent attempted carjacking against a school teacher—an educator in our community—and there was gunfire involved during the commission of that crime.”

Murmurs stirred in the gallery. Sara stiffened visibly. Mireya flinched.

Caine didn’t react. Didn’t blink. Even though he knew he hadn't pulled a gun. Even though he hadn’t shot at anyone. None of it mattered in this room.

The ADA continued, voice slicing clean through the court. “Given the violent nature of this offense, the defendant's known associations, and the fact that he is the purported mastermind of a small cell of criminals in the city, the State believes he represents a clear danger to the community.”

The judge shifted her gaze to the public defender.

The man cleared his throat. “Your Honor, my client is sixteen years old. He has no prior criminal record. He’s a student-athlete with strong community ties. We respectfully request reasonable bail be considered.”

The ADA was already shaking his head before the words finished.

“Your Honor, respectfully, community ties didn’t stop him from attempting an armed carjacking. From firing shots at an unarmed citizen simply trying to protect his property. We believe he is a significant risk to public safety.”

The courtroom hung heavy with that accusation.

The judge barely hesitated.

“Bail is denied. The defendant is remanded to the custody of the Office of Juvenile Justice pending further proceedings. Next court date is set for thirty days from today.”

Caine’s heart thudded once, heavily. But outwardly, he didn’t move. Didn’t flinch.

As the deputy grabbed his arm to lead him out, he glanced back—one quick moment.

His mother was sitting perfectly still, tears slipping down her face even as she kept her head high.

Mireya’s hands were clasped so tightly in her lap they shook, but her eyes stayed locked on Caine until the door swung shut between them.



The holding cell behind the courtroom was colder than the courtroom itself.

Concrete walls. Fluorescent lights buzzing overhead. A scratched-up bench bolted to the floor.

Caine sat on the end of it, wrists cuffed, ankles chained, the stale air pressing against his chest.

The courtroom’s words still rang in his ears:
Bail is denied.
Gunfire during the commission of the crime.

He could still see his mother’s tear-streaked face, the way Mireya clenched her own wrist like it was the only thing keeping her together.

A boy across the room—skinny, twitchy—paced in circles, muttering curses.

First, he brushed past Caine by accident.

Caine didn’t move.

Then the boy did it again—this time with a shoulder shove.

Caine stood up so fast the chain at his ankles clattered against the concrete.

The boy sneered, sizing him up. “You mad, lil’ bitch? Whazzam?”

Before he even finished the sentence, Caine moved.

He swung hard, cuffed fists smashing into the boy’s mouth with a sick crack of bone against bone.
The boy stumbled back into the bench, blood already spilling from his lip.

Caine wasn’t done.

He lunged after him, grabbed him by the shirt collar, shoved him backward into the wall so hard the boy’s head bounced off it with a hollow thud.

The whole cell erupted—yelling, shouts, metal chains rattling.

A deputy outside banged on the bars. “Hey! Hey! Break it up!”

Two COs rushed in, one grabbing Caine by the shoulders, yanking him backward. Another grabbed the other boy, who was spitting blood and shouting curses.

Caine fought the grip for half a second, chest heaving, adrenaline making his muscles twitch.

“Get the fuck off me!” he snapped, struggling against the cuffs digging into his wrists.

The deputy slammed Caine face-first against the wall with practiced efficiency.

“You wanna add assault to your sheet, motherfucker?” the deputy growled in his ear.

Caine squeezed his eyes shut. Breathing hard. Feeling the fury pulse just beneath his skin, begging to keep going.

But he didn’t fight anymore.

The deputy held him there another few seconds before dragging him back to the bench and forcing him down.

“Sit. And don't move.”

The door clanged shut again behind the COs. The other boys stared at Caine now with a different kind of respect—or maybe fear.

Caine sat frozen.

Chest burning. Eyes burning. Fists aching.

And under all of it—shame curling in his gut like smoke he couldn’t cough out.

When the deputy came back later, calling names for transport, Caine stood without a word.

Straight-backed.

Hands curled into fists even inside the cuffs.

And this time, he didn’t even bother wiping the blood off his knuckles.
~~~

The courthouse steps felt steeper walking down than they had walking up.

Sara gripped the rusted railing with one hand, her purse clutched against her side with the other. She moved slow, deliberate, each step a fight against the wobble she could feel creeping up her knees.

Mireya followed beside her, quiet as the grave.

Neither had said a word since the judge’s gavel fell.

Outside, the morning heat had thickened into something suffocating. The parking lot shimmered under the weight of it, but neither woman made any move toward the car. They just stood there, stuck between the courthouse and the world waiting beyond it.

Sara finally broke the silence.

“They said he hit somebody back there.”

Mireya didn’t answer right away. She stared at the ground, watching ants crawl over a crack in the pavement.

“I know,” Mireya said eventually, voice thin. “I heard.”

Sara wiped at her forehead with the back of her hand, though it wasn’t sweat she was trying to erase.

“He’s losing himself in there already,” she said in Spanish, voice thickening. “And it’s only been a day.”

Mireya bit down hard on her bottom lip. She wanted to say something—wanted to find the words that could fix this, soften it, make it survivable.

But nothing came.

“He didn’t even look scared,” Sara said, almost a whisper. “He just... looked gone.”

Mireya nodded, a sharp, painful jerk of her head. “He’s trying not to be broken. Trying to hold himself together the only way he knows.”

Sara laughed—a broken, ugly sound. “Ain’t no holding yourself together in a place like that. They don’t let you. They break you, and they watch you stay broken.”

A group of other families trickled past them, heads bowed, whispering to each other. A woman sobbed openly, clutching a little boy to her chest as a deputy led another young man in shackles past the crowd.

Mireya wrapped her arms around herself, suddenly freezing despite the heat.

“What do we do?” she asked, the words barely audible.

Sara shook her head. “We wait. We pray. And we hope to God he remembers there’s something left worth coming back to.”

They stood there a little longer, the sun baking the concrete under their shoes, the courthouse looming behind them like a threat.

Finally, Sara reached into her purse, pulled out her keys, and jingled them in her hand like she had to remind herself she still had something she could control.

“You riding with me?” she asked, voice rough.

Mireya nodded.

They didn’t say anything else.

They just walked to the car, moving slow, carrying the weight of someone else’s war on their backs.
~~~

The front door of Percy’s grandmother’s house rattled under Dre’s fist.

Bam. Bam. Bam.

“Who is it!?” came the sharp reply—the old woman, tired but not surprised.

“It’s Dre!” he barked back, already shoving the door open the second the lock clicked.

She squinted at him through the screen door. “Whatever this is, you leave it outside my house.”

Dre ignored her and barreled inside, boots pounding the faded carpet. The house smelled like bleach and burnt oil, the TV droning something meaningless in the background.

Down the hallway, he didn’t bother knocking.

He kicked Percy’s bedroom door open so hard it bounced off the wall.

Percy looked up from his phone, wide-eyed, fresh sneakers on, clean clothes, a silver ankle monitor flashing weakly under his cuffed jeans.

The sight of him—comfortable, breathing free—sent a fresh wave of rage crashing through Dre.

“You out already,” Dre growled, voice low and vibrating.

Percy stumbled to his feet, hands up. “Dre, chill—listen—”

Dre didn’t let him get the words out.

He crossed the room in two steps and grabbed Percy by the front of his hoodie, lifting him off his toes and slamming him into the wall so hard the whole room shook.

Percy’s phone clattered to the floor.

“You snitched!” Dre barked. His face was inches from Percy’s. “You folded on Caine! You folded on Ricardo! You folded like a bitch, nigga!”

Percy squirmed, trying to push Dre back. “I had to! They said twenty years, Dre! Twenty years if I didn’t give 'em somebody—!”

“And you gave 'em Ricardo!” Dre shouted, slamming him against the wall again. “Ricardo wasn’t even there, you pussy ass bitch! He wasn’t even at the damn house!”

Percy’s mouth opened, but nothing came out.

Dre let him go—only to shove him back harder with both hands.

“You couldn’t say my name, right? 'Cause that would’ve meant admitting your own cousin was with you!” Dre's voice broke into something rawer. “You dragged Ricardo down just to make yourself look better!”

Percy stumbled, catching himself on the corner of the dresser.

“I ain’t mean—Dre, it—it wasn’t like that—”

“It was exactly like that!” Dre snarled. “Now Ricardo sitting in OPP, Caine sitting in OJC, all 'cause you scared to take your own damn weight!”

Percy wiped his mouth, shaking. “I didn’t mean for them to get locked—”

“You think the DA cares what you meant?!” Dre shouted. “You think they gon’ let Ricardo walk out clean after you put his name on that damn statement?!”

Their grandmother appeared at the doorway, tears welling in her eyes.

“Stop it, Dre. Please, no more,” she whispered.

Dre turned to her, breathing heavy through flared nostrils, fists balled at his sides.

He turned back to Percy, his voice colder now, quieter but twice as dangerous.

“You made me look like I was in on it,” Dre said, voice flat. “You made it seem like I sat back and let you hang Ricardo to save yourself. You gonna get me killed out on these fucking streets, nigga.”

Percy shook his head frantically. “No—I didn’t—I swear I didn’t—!”

“You already did,” Dre said. “You can't unsay it.”

He stared at Percy one more time—the boy he used to share snowballs with, who he fought kids for in grade school—and he didn’t feel anything anymore.

Not even anger. Just something hollow and cold.

“You better not ever call me family again,” Dre said, voice razor-sharp.

He stepped back toward the door.

“You better not ever come near the block again, either. 'Cause next time somebody sees you walking down that street, it ain't gon' be me who handles it.”

Percy stood frozen in the middle of his room, breathing hard, shaking all over.

Dre pushed past their grandmother, who sobbed quietly into her hands, and stormed out the front door without looking back.

The screen door slammed behind him, rattling on its hinges.

Outside, the sun was brutal overhead, but Dre didn’t feel it.

Didn’t feel anything but the heat crawling up his spine and the weight settling heavier on his chest.

He pulled his hoodie up over his head even though it was ninety degrees out.

And he kept walking.

Because there wasn’t anything else left to do.
~~~
The lights dimmed again, just like the night before. Not off. Never off. Just dim enough to make everything uglier.

Caine lay on the top bunk, arms folded behind his head, staring at the faint cracks in the ceiling. They looked different in the dark. Deeper. Hungrier.

Around him, the dormitory creaked and shifted. Someone cried softly into their blanket two bunks down. Someone else cursed under their breath, punching at the thin mattress like it could punch back. The air was thick with sweat and cheap disinfectant, and it never seemed to move.

Caine closed his eyes.

The day blurred inside his head—hard footsteps, cold handcuffs, the judge's voice reading off his life like it was a list of receipts. The shackles clinking with every step into court. His mother’s tear-streaked face. Mireya sitting stiff beside her, looking like she might shatter if anybody touched her.

And now?

Now there was nothing but this slab of a mattress and the pounding in his chest.

But what ate at him now, deeper than the cuffs, deeper than the chains, was Dre.

Dre, who said he had him.
Dre, who promised nothing would touch him.

And it was Dre's cousin who folded.

Dre's blood.

He had rode for Dre. Kept his mouth shut for Dre.

And what did it buy him?

A cell.
A record.
A future strangled out before it even took its first real breath.

The anger rose up hot in his throat—sharp, bitter. It burned worse than the fear.

He thought about Dre's hand on his shoulder, telling him they were good. Solid.
Family don't fold.

But Dre’s family had folded first. And Caine was the one bleeding for it.

The blanket twisted under his fists. He gritted his teeth so hard his jaw ached.

Above him, the pipes rattled with the hum of bad plumbing.

Somebody moaned in their sleep.

Caine stayed silent.

Because what was there left to say?

He hadn't even been sentenced yet.

But in his gut, he knew—

He had already been judged.

Not by a court. Not by the system. By the people he thought would ride with him until the wheels fell off.

And the worst part?

He still wasn’t sure if he hated them for it.

Or if he hated himself more for believing in them.
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Captain Canada
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Post by Captain Canada » 27 Apr 2025, 17:30

Goddamn. That's a tough one.
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djp73
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Post by djp73 » 28 Apr 2025, 08:33

Seems early to start a CFB 37 RTG...

Soapy
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Post by Soapy » 29 Apr 2025, 07:26

Caesar wrote:
27 Apr 2025, 15:47
Soapy wrote:
23 Apr 2025, 13:48
Captain Canada wrote:
21 Apr 2025, 11:28
#FreeCaine
oh but when kam defends himself he's a criminal :umar:
Kam was an unrepentant heathen. Caine was trying to do what he thought was right to provide for his daughter.
home depot right there bro
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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 04 May 2025, 20:06

Captain Canada wrote:
27 Apr 2025, 17:30
Goddamn. That's a tough one.
Hitting 'em in the feels
djp73 wrote:
28 Apr 2025, 08:33
Seems early to start a CFB 37 RTG...
Here he go :rolleyes:
Soapy wrote:
29 Apr 2025, 07:26
Caesar wrote:
27 Apr 2025, 15:47
Soapy wrote:
23 Apr 2025, 13:48
oh but when kam defends himself he's a criminal :umar:
Kam was an unrepentant heathen. Caine was trying to do what he thought was right to provide for his daughter.
home depot right there bro
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