American Sun

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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 24 Jun 2025, 15:45

Agosto No Perdona

The heat had turned the whole pod sour.

Air barely moved. Sweat pooled before noon. The vents coughed but didn’t blow, and the COs stopped pretending to care. They just shouted faster and opened windows slower. Tempers flared easier. Fights sparked off nothing. Kids snapped for less.

Caine tracked it all with quiet precision. He’d carved time into routine—wake up, stretch, study, stay clear of whatever shit was going on. It had been weeks since Camila’s birthday, and the weight of August sat heavy on everything: the air, the food, the sleep, the silence.

He sat against the back wall of the pod, a world history book on the table in front of him. The pages had started to curl from the humidity. The inside cover—his makeshift calendar—held crooked pencil notes, most of them faded from sweat.

He tried to focus. Gandhi. Salt March. Civil disobedience. Something about going to jail on purpose. He underlined the word “nonviolent” and exhaled through his nose.

Trayvon’s laugh broke the air like glass.

“Yo, look at this nigga,” Trayvon called out. “Still think he in school.”

Caine didn’t look up.

“Studying for what?” another voice chimed in. “Ain’t no grades in here, bro.”

He flipped the page.

Trayvon’s tone turned hard. “Nah, see, that’s the shit I don’t like. Sit in your corner like you above everybody. Like you ain’t catch that L already.”

That was it. The real spark. Trayvon hadn’t let it go—the fight months back, the bruised ribs, the bloody nose. He’d waited, and now, stewing in sweat and resentment, he wanted his get-back.

Caine closed the book.

“You serious, lil’ bitch?” he asked quietly.

Trayvon stepped forward. “Serious as a motherfucker.”

He swung.

Caine caught it with his forearm, twisted, and cracked a shot back across Trayvon’s jaw. Another boy jumped in. Caine ducked the first punch, landed two, felt a third connect with his back before he spun and shoved the kid off.

The pod erupted.

Then Ramon charged like a train—body-checking Trayvon into a table.

EJ tackled one of the others mid-swing. Tyree grabbed the last one by the jumpsuit and flung him across the tile.

It was fast and loud. Tables tipped. Someone hit the ground hard. Then—

BZZZT.

The COs stormed in.

“Hands! Get down!”

Pepper spray burned through the pod like fire. Caine stumbled, eyes watering, body aching.

He hit the ground last.

But he went down swinging.



Solitary was colder, but not better. Time passed in slow drips.

When they released him hours later, the air outside still held its weight.

Ramon, EJ, and Tyree were already back at the table, cards in hand.

Caine dropped into the open seat, knuckles cracked and throbbing.

EJ dealt him in. “You in it now for real.”

Caine picked up his cards and flexed his sore knuckles.

~~~

The air inside the school felt thin. Over-cooled, maybe, or just foreign after too many weeks of concrete dust, diaper cream, and stove heat. The moment she stepped through the front doors, Mireya knew she didn’t belong in this building anymore—at least not like the others did.

Her backpack tugged at one shoulder, too light without her old binder, too heavy with everything she couldn’t put down.

First day back. Junior year. She used to circle the date on calendars, lay out outfits the night before, paint her nails. This time she’d barely remembered to pack a pen.

Camila had been up before dawn, sticky from the heat. Mireya fed her toast and cleaned her up while her mother yelled to herself in the kitchen about something that Camila had spilled the night before.

By the time Mireya got dressed, Camila had spit up on her shirt and she had to change again. No time to iron. No time to eat.

The bus ride over smelled like body spray and sweat. Kids laughed too loud. The girl next to her scrolled Instagram the whole ride and kept glancing at Mireya’s scuffed shoes.

Now, inside the school, everything felt sharp.

Voices bounced off the lockers like rubber balls. Someone brushed past her without saying excuse me. Two girls she recognized from freshman year walked by and whispered just loud enough.

“She look tired.”

“Always tired.”

Mireya didn’t turn her head.

Second period: Biology. She slid into the back row like a ghost returning to a place she’d once haunted. The desk still had the same sticker residue on the edge, like someone had once tried to make it personal and failed.

She didn’t take her schedule out. Didn’t pull out her pen. Just sat, blinking slowly, counting the minutes until she’d have to smile again.

The teacher, Ms. Chenier, walked in with a box of handouts and the same tight-lipped patience she always wore. She started calling roll.

“Rosas. Mireya Rosas?”

Mireya raised her hand halfway.

Later, while walking the aisles passing out schedules, Ms. Chenier stopped beside her desk.

“I remember you from last year,” she said, voice gentle but pointed. “You were in the dual enrollment track, right? Nursing pathway?”

Mireya nodded, even though the words felt like they came from someone else’s life.

“I’ll email you the new registration packet. Still time to apply for the early Delgado cohort—if you're interested.”

Mireya forced a small smile. “Yeah. That’d be good.”

It wasn’t true. Not really. She hadn’t even paid the activity fee yet. Her hours at the yard weren’t stable, and babysitting coverage was already a patchwork of favors and guilt.

But she said it anyway.

The teacher moved on. Mireya sat with the paper in her lap until the edges curled under her fingertips. The biology class circled terms she used to understand but now just sounded like static.

Behind her, someone laughed. She heard her name. Heard “diaper duty” and “smells like baby wipes.”

She didn’t turn around.

Instead, she folded her schedule once, twice, tucked it into her bag, and looked out the window where the heat shimmered off the pavement.

The sun would be higher by the time Camila woke from her nap. Mireya would be gone. Working or studying or pretending to do both. And her daughter would be home with someone else.

She used to feel like the future was something she could shape with enough effort.

Now it just felt like a hallway she couldn’t leave.

~~~

The room was cold and too quiet. Plastic chairs scraped the floor as other families settled in, voices kept low under buzzing lights. Caine sat at one of the corner tables, bouncing his knee, fingers twitching under the table edge.

The door opened.

Sara stepped in, her purse slung tight across her chest, her eyes scanning fast. When she saw him, something in her posture softened, but her face stayed guarded. She walked quickly, then slowed just before reaching him. She sat without speaking.

“You look skinnier,” she said after a beat.

“You look tired.”

“I am,” she admitted. “I been picking up shifts wherever I can. Motel off Airline. Some cleaning jobs from church friends. Just trying to stack what I can. Thought if I save enough, maybe I could get us a little apartment. For when you get out.”

Caine stared at her across the table, jaw tight. “I’m not getting out.”

Sara flinched, like he’d slapped the hope out of her hands. Her lips parted like she wanted to argue, but nothing came out.

“I’m just saying the truth,” he said, voice low. “Ain’t no sense in pretending.”

“I don’t want the truth,” she whispered. “I want something to hold on to.”

Her voice cracked. She blinked fast. The kind of blink people do when they’re trying not to cry in front of someone who already hurts too much.

Caine shifted, pulled a scrap of lined paper from his pocket. “Call Dre.”

Sara furrowed her brow. “Why?”

“He owes me. And you need help. Ask him. Tell him I said it’s time.”

She hesitated, then took the paper. Folded it once. Slipped it into the side pocket of her purse.

“Alright,” she said. “I will.”

They sat there a moment longer, neither looking at the clock, even though the CO in the corner was already starting to glance their way.

Sara reached into her purse again and pulled out a folded page. It was Camila’s—scribbled colors, wide strokes, and her name in Sara’s writing at the bottom. A drawing of something like a rainbow or maybe just the idea of one.

“She made this for you yesterday,” Sara said. “Then she pointed at your picture and said ‘dada.’ Just like that. Real clear. She does it all the time.”

Caine stared at the paper. Then away. His throat tightened.

“I was gonna bring her today,” Sara said softly. “But Maria—”

“Don’t,” Caine cut in. “Don’t bring her here.”

Sara looked at him, confused.

“I don’t want her seeing this place. Seeing me like this. I don’t care if she remembers or not.”

Sara was quiet, eyes glassing just slightly.

“I’m her dad,” Caine said. “Not an inmate.”

A CO tapped his watch. Time.

Sara stood slowly, then leaned in across the table and grabbed his hand, firm.

“I’m coming back next week.”

Caine didn’t look up.

“I’ll come alone if I have to. But I’ll be here.”

He gave the smallest nod.

Sara let go and straightened her shoulders.

“Te amo, mijo.”

“I love you too.”

She walked toward the door.

Caine stayed in the chair after she left, still holding the air where her hand had been, the drawing still sitting in the middle of the table.

~~~

The bell at Edna Karr rang softer than the one at Carver, but it still carried a bite. Quentin stood at the edge of his new classroom, watching his students shuffle in—new faces, clean uniforms, a few eager expressions, more guarded ones.

The room smelled like fresh paint and lemon cleaner. The air conditioner actually worked. The desks weren’t cracked. No rust-streaked filing cabinets. No busted blinds. It felt... stable.

“Alright,” he said, voice calm but clear as students settled. “Take a seat. Take a breath. You made it here. That counts.”

Some of them smirked. One boy in the front row yawned without covering his mouth. Another girl already had a pen poised, waiting to be told what mattered.

Quentin smiled faintly. “Name’s Mr. Landry. We’ll go over rules and all that tomorrow. Today I just want to know how many of you think this class is gonna be a waste of your time.”

A few tentative hands went up. He nodded.

“Appreciate the honesty.”

Laughter trickled across the room.

The first period passed steady. Second followed the same rhythm. There were questions about class structure, laptops, assignments. No fights. No outbursts. No hallway drama boiling over into his space. Not yet.

By fourth period, he found himself checking the wall clock like he couldn’t quite believe the smoothness of it all.



That night, Quentin stood in his kitchen, pouring rice into a pot while the radio murmured jazz from the counter.

Ashley leaned against the doorway, glass of wine in hand, loose curls pushed behind her ears. She’d changed out of her scrubs already, soft clothes, no makeup.

“You’re smiling,” she said, tilting her head. “That mean your transfer wasn’t a disaster?”

Quentin smirked. “Didn’t get cursed out. Didn’t have to break up a fight. Nobody threatened to stab anybody.”

Ashley lifted her glass. “To miracles.”

They clinked.

He stirred the pot, thoughtful. “It’s different over there. Better resources. More structure.”

“That’s why I told you to take it.”

He nodded. “Still feels weird. Like I’m cheating on the fight.”

Ashley raised an eyebrow. “The fight?”

“Kids who don’t get this kind of school. This kind of shot.”

She walked over, set her glass down, and leaned against the counter beside him.

“You didn’t stop fighting just because the cafeteria has working A/C,” she said.

He looked at her. “I sent Caine another packet last week.”

She sighed through her nose. “Quentin.”

“It’s just schoolwork.”

“It’s not just anything.”

He didn’t respond.

Ashley softened, placing a hand gently on his forearm. “I’m glad you care. I am. But that boy... I don’t know if he wants saving.”

“I’m not trying to save him,” Quentin said. “I’m just making sure if he ever reaches up, something’s there to catch him.”

Ashley didn’t argue. She didn’t agree either.

She kissed his cheek, slow and quiet. “Dinner smells good.”

“Don’t lie,” he muttered.

She laughed. “I’m not. Just hopeful.”

~~~

The motel room stank of bleach and old air. The AC unit groaned in the window like it was choking on the heat, barely doing enough to stop the sweat from creeping along Percy’s neck. It had been like this for weeks—gray curtains, scratchy sheets, stale cereal boxes on the dresser, and a view of the parking lot where nobody parked longer than a night.

He scratched absently at his ankle with the hook end of a bent hanger, dragging it under the edge of the monitor strapped to his leg. It was starting to blister. Not that anyone cared.

The walls were thin. Thin enough to hear the woman in the next room sobbing on the phone last night. Thin enough to hear the deputy’s boots echo down the breezeway before they even knocked.

Now, it was quiet. Just Percy, the hum of bad air, and a yellow manila folder sitting on the foot of the bed.

His attorney had dropped it off ten minutes ago with a mumbled, “It’s official now.” No handshake. No look in the eye.

The folder was heavier than it should’ve been. He hadn’t opened it yet.

He reached for it anyway.

Inside: a typed document, stapled neatly, state seal stamped on top. State of Louisiana vs. Caine Guerra. Percy didn’t bother reading the whole thing. He flipped straight to the bottom line.

Recommended sentence: deferred. Probation. In exchange for testimony.

He stared at it.

No jail time. No juvenile placement. No boot camp. Just witness prep, maybe court security, and then—freedom.

The price?

His name on record. His words on tape. A permanent mark with the DA’s office that said he helped.

The kind of mark you don’t shake on the outside.

Percy rubbed at his ankle again, the band itching like it knew the decision had already been made.

They’d moved him out of the city for a reason. Boutte wasn’t far, but it might as well have been a different planet. No family here. No friends. Just TV, calls from lawyers, and time.

Too much time.

He closed the folder, slid it onto the nightstand, and stared at the ceiling.

There was no going back.
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American Sun

Post by Captain Canada » 24 Jun 2025, 20:28

Nasty ass Percy.

Soapy
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American Sun

Post by Soapy » 24 Jun 2025, 20:52

Caesar wrote:
24 Jun 2025, 15:45
The bell at Edna Karr
I see the play already. Salute.
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Post by Caesar » 25 Jun 2025, 06:53

Captain Canada wrote:
24 Jun 2025, 20:28
Nasty ass Percy.
Can't trust your own people sometimes :smh:
Soapy wrote:
24 Jun 2025, 20:52
Caesar wrote:
24 Jun 2025, 15:45
The bell at Edna Karr
I see the play already. Salute.
Nooticer nooticing
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Post by Caesar » 25 Jun 2025, 06:53

Puertas y Promesas

The attorney room at OJJ was always too cold. Four walls of blank cinderblock, a buzzing vent that never moved air, and a metal table that rocked if you leaned too hard on the edge. Caine sat still, arms crossed, watching Markus flip through a stack of notes while Nicole typed with quick, controlled strokes on her laptop.

“Trial’s on the calendar,” Markus said, not looking up. “No more delays. From here on out, it’s about preparation and control.”

Caine nodded once, quiet.

“You’re going to get cross-examined,” Markus continued. “They’ll hit you with texts, call logs, surveillance, maybe witnesses—whatever they can twist into narrative. We need to prep you for that.”

Nicole looked over her screen. “That means controlling the story. Ours has to feel lived-in. Believable. Theirs is going to paint you as a risk. We need the jury to see something human.”

Caine shifted in his seat. “Alright. What y’all need?”

“Character witnesses,” Markus said. “People who can speak to who you are outside this case. Before all of it.”

“I don’t got many.”

“Give us who you’ve got.”

“My mom,” Caine said. “And Mireya.”

Nicole paused. “Just them?”

Caine looked like he was about to say something else. Then he did.

“I thought about Mr. Landry.”

Markus didn’t blink. “He can’t take the stand, Caine. You know that.”

“I know,” Caine said. “I’m just saying… he looked out for me.”

“I’d say that should be looks, not looked,” Markus said, voice quieter. “But it doesn’t make him a viable witness. He’s still the named victim. The DA would eat us alive.”

Caine nodded, jaw clenched. “Then it’s just my mamá. And Mireya.”

Markus scribbled the names onto a legal pad. “How much does your mother know?”

“Not much,” Caine said. “She got her own struggles. I kept most of it away.”

“And Mireya?” Nicole asked, voice soft but direct.

Caine hesitated. “She knows everything. Almost everything, anyway. Who I ran with. How I made money. What I did to keep it.”

Markus and Nicole exchanged a glance—tight, brief.

“If she testifies truthfully, she could hurt your case more than help it,” Nicole said.

“She won’t lie,” Caine replied.

“That’s what we’re saying,” Markus added. “She might not get a choice.”

“Then don’t make her do it,” Caine said. “She ain’t built for this. She just trying to be a good mom, not sit on no stand telling people her baby daddy business.”

Nicole closed the laptop slowly. “We’ll reach out to both of them. Do pre-interviews. See what’s safe to use.”

A knock came from the doorway. The CO didn’t step in, just gave the signal.

Markus stood, gathering his notes. “Keep thinking. If anyone else comes to mind—teachers, neighbors, mentors—let us know. We need more than just two people who love you.”

Caine stayed in his seat. “That’s all I got.”

Nicole gave him a look—not pitying, but honest. “Then we’ll work with that.”

The lawyers walked out.

Caine sat another few seconds longer, then rose slowly and followed the CO out, the silence clinging to him like a shadow that wouldn’t let go.

~~~

The porch steps creaked under Dre’s weight as he shifted from one foot to the other, sweat collecting under his collar. The Guerras’ house hadn’t changed—peeling paint, sun-faded numbers over the door, and the same porch light that hadn’t worked in years.

He knocked once.

Sara answered almost immediately, like she’d been waiting. She didn’t smile. Just opened the door wider.

“Caine told me to call you,” she said quietly. “Said you owed him.”

Dre nodded, stepping inside. “I figured.”

The house smelled like Pine-Sol and fried plantains. A box fan buzzed in the hallway, rattling against the floorboards. Saul’s shoes were by the wall. Someone’s jacket slung over a dining chair.

They didn’t sit.

Sara crossed her arms. “He said you’d help. But what I really want is to know if any of it’s true.”

Dre shifted his weight. “I don’t think you want to know.”

Her voice cracked. “I’m his mother. I deserve to.”

Dre looked at her, then away. “If they ever call you up there and ask what you know, you can still say the truth: nothing. That’s what matters.”

She stared at him. “I don’t care what the court thinks. I just want him home.”

Dre didn’t speak right away. Then he reached into his hoodie pocket and pulled out a folded wad of bills. He laid it on the coffee table.

“It’s five hundred. It’s what I was able to get together on short notice.”

Sara looked at it like it burned.

“Take it,” Dre said. “For rent. Food. Whatever.”

“I don’t know where this came from.”

“It came from me.”

“That’s not what I meant.”

Dre’s mouth pulled tight, but he didn’t argue.

“I’m trying to fix it,” he said finally. “Been trying since the night everything fell apart.”

Sara reached out slowly and took the money, folding it without looking down.

Dre headed for the door. She followed.

“Tell him I’m doing my best,” he said, pausing on the step. “Even if it don’t look like it from in there.”

“I will.”

He nodded, pulled his hood up, and walked off into the heat.

~~~

Camila had been screaming for the better part of twenty minutes.

Not full-blown crying—just that sharp, ear-scraping whine that clawed at the base of Mireya’s skull. She’d changed her diaper, tried juice, tried rocking her. Nothing worked. Camila just squirmed and shrieked and kicked at the tray of her high chair, cheeks blotchy, curls clinging to her forehead in damp little spirals.

Mireya crouched in front of her, holding a rubber spoon full of sweet potatoes like a peace offering. “Please,” she whispered. “Please just eat.”

Camila slapped the spoon from her hand. Orange puree spattered across the floor.

Mireya flinched.

The heat in the kitchen felt like it was crawling inside her skin. The fan on the counter hummed uselessly. Her laptop was open on the table, a quiz half-finished on the screen—two questions answered, four tabs open, and a blinking cursor like it was mocking her.

She stood up slowly, pressing her palms against the counter to steady herself. “Okay,” she said to no one. “It’s fine.”

Camila screamed again.

From down the hallway, the door to her mother’s room opened with a jolt. Heavy footsteps. Then Maria stormed into the kitchen in a long nightshirt and a twisted expression.

“¡Por Dios, Mireya! What the hell is going on?”

“She won’t stop,” Mireya said. “She’s just—she’s tired or something, I don’t know—”

“You don’t know?” Maria snapped. “You’re her mother.”

Mireya bristled. “And I’m trying.”

Maria glanced at the mess on the floor, the spoon, the laptop glowing behind her daughter. “Trying to study while your baby screams like she’s dying?”

“I’ve got a test,” Mireya shot back. “I’m behind. If I don’t—”

Maria marched over and slammed the laptop shut. The sound echoed.

“Attend to your child.”

“I am,” Mireya snapped. “I’m trying to do both.”

Maria folded her arms. “Then you’re doing both badly.”

That hit like a slap.

Mireya stared at her. “I can’t do everything alone. I’m still a kid, too.”

“Your father left when you were Camila’s age,” Maria said. “You think I had help? You think I got to cry about it?”

“No estoy llorando,” Mireya said through gritted teeth.

Maria pointed toward Camila. “Then do your job. That little girl didn’t ask to be born.”

“Neither did I,” Mireya whispered.

Maria’s jaw clenched. For a second, it looked like she might say something else—something crueler. But she turned and walked out, muttering under her breath in Spanish.

Mireya stayed in the kitchen, frozen.

Camila wailed again, red-faced and sweaty.

Mireya picked her up and held her against her shoulder, shushing gently through clenched teeth. Her hands shook. Her legs did too.

“I’m trying,” she said aloud to no one. “I really am.”

~~~

By now, the rhythm of Hunt had settled into Ricardo’s bones.

Mornings started with the sound of steel—cell doors buzzing open, trays sliding through slots, boots on concrete. Breakfast was always cold. Something gray with grits or eggs or both, never enough. Rec time, if they got it, came with rules that shifted by the day. Who could be out. Who couldn’t. Who just got jumped and who was waiting to jump back.

Ricardo didn’t speak unless he had to. He’d learned that fast.

His Spanish was sharp—native, fast, with the clipped rhythm that told people exactly where he came from. That helped. So did the fact that he fought when pressed. The first week, some older dude tried to size him up in the shower. Ricardo didn’t wait. Didn’t posture. Just swung. Hard. The COs dragged them both out, blood on his knuckles and a black eye swelling shut, but he was still standing.

That earned him a kind of respect. Not friendship. Not safety. But space.

Now he stuck close to the other Latinos. A few Salvadorans, one Nicaraguan, a kid from Corpus who said ese a lot and claimed he had cousins in MS-13. Ricardo didn’t ask. They didn’t ask him either. That was the deal—don’t pry, don’t front, don’t fold.

They played cards. Did pushups in the yard. Passed snacks and ramen packs under bunks. Survival wasn’t about strength. It was about rhythm. Knowing when to speak and when to disappear.

Today, a CO barked orders over the intercom, then unlocked their door late. Ricardo slipped out fast and fell into line for laundry. Some young guy in front of him bumped his shoulder on accident and spun around quick, eyes wide, half-apology already on his lips.

“My bad, bro. I ain’t see you.”

Ricardo didn’t respond. Just stared at him until the guy turned back around and didn’t speak again.

That was how it worked. Don’t bark, don’t smile. Just be there, still breathing.

Later, back in the dorm, he lay flat on his bunk, one arm under his head, the other on his chest, staring up at the pipes that ran crooked along the ceiling. The room smelled like mildew and unwashed socks.

Sometimes, he'd press his fingers into his ribs just to remind himself he was still real.

He remembered the last time he saw Caine—on that quiet street, the night before everything spiraled. Ricardo had boosted the Charger and pulled off clean, leaving Dre, Percy, and Caine behind. No words. Just a nod through the windshield before he disappeared into the dark.

And the next day he lost his freedom.

He tried not to think about his mother. Or what Dre might be doing out there. Or should be doing out there.

A plastic fork clattered to the floor across the room. Someone cursed in Spanish. A CO barked something back. Then silence again.

Ricardo rolled onto his side and closed his eyes. He’d made it through another day.

That was something.

Even if it didn’t feel like enough.

~~~

The office trailer at the yard stank of old coffee and diesel. Mireya sat at the back desk with a stack of order logs, double-checking column totals that didn’t match up. Her fingers tapped absently against the calculator as she stared at the paper, numbers swimming in and out of focus.

No one said why the runs with Leo stopped. They just did. No more calls. No envelopes. No easy side cash tucked under the cupholder. What followed wasn’t explanation—it was silence. The kind that made you feel watched. Paperwork started to double-stack at her station again. People looked longer than they needed to. And the quiet tension of the yard seemed to hum a little louder whenever Leo passed through.

She was still trying to decide if she was relieved or anxious.

Outside, the hydraulic brakes of a cement truck hissed. Somewhere in the yard, someone shouted about rebar.

Inside, the door creaked open.

Leo stepped in like he always did—lazy grin under a sweat-darkened ball cap, safety vest half-zipped over a dust-streaked shirt, concrete powder clinging to his work boots. He looked around the office slowly, then walked straight to her desk.

Mireya didn’t look up.

“Hey, stranger,” Leo said. “Miss driving me around?”

She kept her eyes on the numbers. “I miss the extra money.”

Leo chuckled. “Honest. I like that.”

He leaned on the edge of her desk, close enough that she could smell the sweat and chemical bite of concrete dust clinging to his clothes. Then he reached into his pocket and pulled out a few folded bills. He slid them beneath her hand, resting lightly on the mouse.

“What’s this?” she asked without moving.

“You said you needed it,” Leo said. “I always keep the pretty ones taken care of.”

Mireya stared straight ahead, her jaw tightening.

In the corner of the office, one of the newer clerks—a woman with tired eyes and pinched lips named Denise—watched them from over the rim of a Styrofoam cup. She turned and spoke low into her phone, back half-turned, but it was clear who she was watching.

Mireya didn’t touch the money. Not right away.

Leo leaned in slightly, voice lower now. “Just a little help. That’s all. Unless you want it to be more.”

She finally looked up at him.

“Am I supposed to say thank you?”

Leo’s smirk widened. “You’re supposed to say what you mean.”

Mireya took the bills, folded them once, and slipped them into the drawer under her desk. Her eyes didn’t leave his face.

“I mean I’ve got work to do.”

Leo tapped twice on the desk, like he’d made his point. Then he turned and walked out.

The door swung shut behind him.

Mireya sat still, the hum of the overhead light louder than it had been a moment ago. Her fingers drifted back to the mouse.

She didn’t finish the totals.

~~~

Caine sat stretched out on his bunk, one foot planted on the floor, the other leg extended along the edge of the frame. His back pressed against the cool cinderblock wall as he thumbed through the last few pages of The Fire Next Time. A torn strip of lined paper was tucked inside—half of a commissary sheet he’d started writing on earlier. Just Camila’s name and the date so far.

Nothing else had come yet.

The pod was quiet. The kind of heavy midday silence that came with heat. Even the AC sounded like it was struggling to keep up.

The door clanked open.

Ramon stepped in first, ducking his head slightly, followed by Tyree and EJ. They moved easy—confident. Like they’d already decided how this was gonna go.

“What’s good,” Tyree said, giving him a quick nod.

Caine set the book aside. “What’s happenin’?”

Ramon leaned against the bunk post, arms crossed. “Got some people outside who need a name. Somebody solid. Someone who don’t play.”

“Somebody who’ll pick up if we say you sent us,” EJ added, stepping into the room last.

Caine nodded once. He didn’t need it broken down. “Tito.”

Tyree raised an eyebrow. “That Tito Jackson looking ass old nigga in the Melph?”

“Yeah,” Caine said. “Keeps it quiet. Runs out a garage near the river. Sells low-key—pills, powder, small circles. Doesn’t deal with mess. He hears cops sniffing around, he’ll cut the whole block loose.”

Ramon nodded slowly. “That sounds like our type of guy.”

“He don’t really trust new people,” Caine warned. “But if you tell him I sent you and you don’t act stupid, he’ll listen.”

“You got a number?” Tyree asked.

Caine bent down, tore a corner off a commissary sheet from under his mattress, and jotted down the digits in block print. He handed it to Ramon.

Ramon folded it once and slid it into his waistband. “Your name still good with him?”

Caine paused, then nodded. “Yeah. Far as I know..”

They were already halfway to the door when EJ turned back.

He looked at Caine for a beat, then said, “If your people on the outside are solid, you keep us in the loop. We keep you good in here—you help us stay good out there.”

His tone was casual, but the weight behind it wasn’t.

Caine nodded once. Not out of gratitude. Just understanding.

EJ gave a short nod, then followed Ramon and Tyree out.

Caine leaned back and pulled the note out again. Camila’s name stared up at him, but the page stayed blank.

He pressed the pencil to the paper.

And started over.

Soapy
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Post by Soapy » 25 Jun 2025, 07:02

Caesar wrote:
25 Jun 2025, 06:53
Mireya stared at her. “I can’t do everything alone. I’m still a kid, too.”
should have thought about before she laid down with a bum ass nigga :kghah:
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Captain Canada
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Post by Captain Canada » 25 Jun 2025, 11:59

Mireya's mom a hypocrite huh :drose:

redsox907
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Post by redsox907 » 25 Jun 2025, 14:22

Captain Canada wrote:
25 Jun 2025, 11:59
Mireya's mom a hypocrite huh :drose:
Do as I say not as a I do type shit.

can't say I don't do the same to my kids :shrug:

this shit better hurry up if Caine gonna be playing CFB26.
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Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
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Post by Caesar » 25 Jun 2025, 15:09

Soapy wrote:
25 Jun 2025, 07:02
Caesar wrote:
25 Jun 2025, 06:53
Mireya stared at her. “I can’t do everything alone. I’m still a kid, too.”
should have thought about before she laid down with a bum ass nigga :kghah:
Calling a 16 year old a bum is wild, sir
Captain Canada wrote:
25 Jun 2025, 11:59
Mireya's mom a hypocrite huh :drose:
They be like that
redsox907 wrote:
25 Jun 2025, 14:22
Captain Canada wrote:
25 Jun 2025, 11:59
Mireya's mom a hypocrite huh :drose:
Do as I say not as a I do type shit.

can't say I don't do the same to my kids :shrug:

this shit better hurry up if Caine gonna be playing CFB26.
Here we go with these comments.

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

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Post by Soapy » 25 Jun 2025, 18:31

Caesar wrote:
25 Jun 2025, 15:09
Here we go with these comments.
my boy is new to the site and he saying the same thing lmao we wasn't lying

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