American Sun

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

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 13941
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 23 Nov 2025, 22:33

Cast Your Doubts unto the Lord

Trell sat with his forearms on the picnic table, fingers laced, watching the strip of parking lot beyond the gazebo roof. The shade barely helped. Heat still crawled up off the concrete and into his legs.

Ant stood a few feet away with his shoulder against one of the gazebo posts. His arms were folded across his chest. A thin wind tried the space and failed, moving just enough hot air to rattle the leaves around the park. Somewhere a kid yelled near the swings and a woman answered without looking up from her phone. Traffic ran steady on the street that cut along the far fence.

A car rolled up slow, tires crunching where the blacktop broke into gravel. Three men sat inside, windows down enough that their laughter got there first, Spanish riding the last line of whatever joke had hit just before they parked. The driver eased the car crooked into a space not far from the gazebo and killed the engine. Doors opened one after another, thudding shut in uneven rhythm.

Julio climbed out of the driver’s side, shoulders broad, grin already set. The two men with him slid out on the passenger side, still catching the tail of the joke they had been telling, heads tipped toward each other. Julio tugged at the collar of his shirt as he walked, then let his arms spread wide as he stepped up under the gazebo.

“What up, homie?” he called, the words rolling out easy.

Trell pushed up from the bench in one smooth move. He stepped out from the table to meet Julio halfway under the shade. Their hands hit, palms catching, fingers locking. They pulled each other in for a quick hug, chest to chest for a second, hands landing heavy on each other’s backs.

On the break, Trell tapped a loose fist into Julio’s midsection in a fake punch, knuckles thudding against soft. “You getting fucking fat eating all those tacos, Julio.”

Julio laughed, loud enough that a couple of kids by the jungle gym glanced over before going back to their game. He slapped his own stomach with an open hand, the sound sharp. “That’s what having a good woman does for you, bro.”

He leaned past Trell to dap up Ant, their grip short and firm. Ant nodded once and went back to his post near the beam, eyes sliding over Julio’s two men and then out across the park again. The two stayed back under the edge of the roof, hands loose at their sides, sneakers scuffing the concrete in small shifts.

Trell dropped back onto the bench. Julio lowered himself onto the one across from him, forearms braced on the table, shoulders still relaxed. The wood carried the thump when he set his weight down. Ant stayed standing. Julio’s boys did too, one near the end of the table, the other near the steps, both close enough to hear everything without crowding the talk.

“Hey, I’m sorry about how those fools were acting the other day, huh?” Julio said. “Lalo let someone get in his head and make him think shit was something that it wasn’t.”

Trell gave a slow nod that didn’t give much away. “You know we don’t do business like that,” he said. “I ain’t tell Ant to kill him only ‘cause of you, but next time?”

The end of the sentence hung there between them. Ant didn’t move. He only shifted his weight off the post a fraction, enough to show he heard his name.

Julio brought both hands up, palms open in a loose surrender. “I get it. I wouldn’t blame you. But know there was punishment dealt out to both of ’em, Lalo and Eddie.”

Trell watched his face for a beat, then dipped his chin. “Appreciate that.”

Julio let some of the tension leave his shoulders. “Didn’t know you spoke Spanish now, though,” he said, grin creeping back. “You been on Duolingo?”

Trell’s laugh sat low in his chest. “That was Google translate.”

Julio sucked his teeth and leaned sideways toward his men without breaking eye contact with Trell. “Fucking Google translate,” he said, amused. The two behind him chuckled on cue. Then he turned back, eyes a little sharper. “That wasn’t no fucking Google translate.”

Trell only rolled one shoulder in a small shrug. The park hummed around them. A horn popped somewhere past the trees. Someone fired up a grill near the far picnic tables and the smell of meat and charcoal started to cut through the damp air.

Julio shifted, business settling over the easy grin. “We need a few more packs every time we reup,” he said. “The fucking Naranjo got it hard to get shit through TJ and Nogales, Brownsville.”

Trell tapped one knuckle against the tabletop, the sound a soft knock. “We might be able to figure some shit out,” he said.

“I know Peanut had them hookups all up and down I-95,” Julio went on. His finger traced an invisible line on the wood between them, dragging from one side to the other.

“85, too,” Trell said. “We still got shit rolling over just the same.”

Julio nodded, satisfied. His gaze shifted off the highways and landed on closer ground. “Cass still in the game?”

The question landed quiet. Trell’s eyes flicked toward Ant for a breath, almost nothing, then back to Julio. He shook his head once. “Nah.”

Julio snapped his fingers and laughed, a quick sharp sound. “She was that motherfucker’s secret weapon, amigo. Kept shit real smooth.”

“I know,” Trell said. “But you know she got Peanut’s J.R. to be there for.”

Julio’s smile thinned into something more thoughtful. He nodded once, then turned his head toward his men and dropped into Spanish. “¿Crees que el niño es para el viejo jefe?”

The one closest to the table snickered. The other let out a short breath through his nose, shoulders jumping once. They shared the line between themselves and let it fade. Trell’s face didn’t change. His sunglasses hid where his eyes went.

“Well, next time you see her?” Julio said, back in English. “Tell her to hit me up next time she’s in Houston for old times.”

Trell dipped his chin, answer short. “I’ll do that.”

Julio slapped the table once with his palm, the sound cutting through the park noise. He pushed back from the bench in the same motion so the legs scraped against the concrete. “Let’s go get some fucking food, man. We can keep talking business but I’m hungry.”

Trell shook his head, the corner of his mouth pulling up. “You always fucking hungry, nigga.”

~~~

The sun sat low enough that the light slanted in over the tops of the pines and bounced off the white helmets on the field. Heat pressed down on the grass and on the metal bleachers and on the patch of dirt by the sideline where the boys in pads had worn the green away.

Laney sat under a thin tree just past the painted stripe, a folding chair sunk an inch into the soft ground. The shade helped some. Her sunglasses stayed on even with the limbs cutting most of the glare. It made it easier not to meet too many people’s eyes, easier to watch only what she needed to.

Out on the field Knox jogged into his spot with the other players, helmet wobbling a little on his head as he looked over at the sideline. His little chest plate rose and fell faster than it should for the middle of the first half. The coach shouted in a tight voice, lining the boys up, one hand on his own cap, the other pointing to where he wanted them.

Tommy stood close to the chalk, feet set square, arms crossed high on his chest. He didn’t yell. He didn’t move much at all. His eyes stayed on Knox and the line, face still, jaw tight. From where she sat, Laney could see the way his shoulders barely shifted when the play started, like he was bracing for contact too.

Every few snaps Knox’s head turned quick toward the tree. He looked for her, quick and jerky, the way kids did when they were checking to see if the person who mattered was watching. Each time Laney lifted the corner of her mouth and gave him a small smile, a nod he could see through the dark lenses. It didn’t slow the way he fidgeted at the line, cleats digging little nervous trenches at his spot.

Blake stood just off her shoulder, a half step behind her chair, the plastic bag of chips crinkling each time he reached in. Grease spots bloomed darker on the crumpled bottom edge. He had one hip leaned toward the tree trunk, ball cap tugged low, eyes on the field. When the play blew dead and the whistle cut through the air, he licked orange dust from his fingers, slow, then rubbed his hand down the front of his jeans.

“Told Nevaeh that I want to put Josiah in football as soon as he’s old enough,” he said, eyes still on the boys, “but she says that it messes up your brain. I told her it teaches discipline.”

Laney didn’t turn her head. Her gaze stayed on Knox as he jogged back to his huddle, hand going up to adjust his chinstrap. “Ain’t you play football in high school?” she asked.

Blake nodded, a little smile pulling at his mouth as some old Friday night came back to him. “Yeah. Receiver.”

“I can see why she thinks that then,” Laney said, her voice easy.

Blake let out a short sarcastic laugh. “Very funny, Laney.”

Down the sideline, Braxton and Hunter were a tangle of skinny legs and too-big jerseys with the other little boys. They had drifted toward the far end where the line of cones opened into an empty patch of field. Somebody’s older cousin tossed them a smaller ball and they were taking turns throwing it, arms too wild, passes wobbling but chased down anyway. Their shouts rose and faded over the whistle and the thump of pads.

Blake shook a few more chips into his palm and nodded toward the sideline where Tommy stood. “You back to normal now that he’s back, huh?” he said. “Back to being a cold bitch.”

Laney looked up at him then, just enough that he could see her eyes over the rim of the sunglasses. “I don’t think that was ever different when it came to you,” she said.

Blake glanced down into the bag, the corner of his mouth tipping. “You ain’t wrong,” he said.

Laney pushed herself up out of the chair, the metal legs scraping a little in the dirt. She brushed her hands once down the front of her jeans and walked toward the sideline, steps steady, head angled toward the field. She stopped beside Tommy, close enough to share his shade from the brim of his cap, but a step behind his shoulder where she always seemed to settle.

On the field Knox was under center, knees bent. The line across from him bounced on their toes. The coach shouted the count. Tommy’s arms stayed locked across his chest.

“You’re makin’ him nervous,” Laney said, low enough that it barely carried past his elbow.

Tommy cut his eyes toward her for a second, then back to the play. “He’s not doing what the coach is telling him to do,” he said.

The ball snapped. The boys shoved into each other in a clatter of plastic and breath. Knox hesitated a beat before he drove his feet, getting turned halfway as the play went by. The whistle blew them dead again.

“’Cause you’re makin’ him nervous,” she said, just as quiet.

“You shouldn’t have been coddling him when I was gone,” Tommy said.

Laney’s jaw worked once behind the sunglasses. Her eyes narrowed, then smoothed out again before he looked back at her. “I’m sorry,” she said. “I was just tryin’ to help.”

“Stepping out of your place, more like.”

Her lips pressed flat for a second. The heat pressed at her back. She shifted her weight, voice even. “It’s hot out today. You need anythin’?”

Tommy gave a small shake of his head, eyes never leaving the field.

Laney turned on her heel and walked back to the tree. The chair waited where she had left it, one leg sunk deeper into the grass. She eased herself down and let the metal take her weight, crossing one ankle over the other.

Blake watched her settle. He lifted the bag of chips, gesturing toward Tommy with the crinkled corner. “Bet he’d agree you gotta teach your family discipline,” he said.

Laney didn’t say anything, just kept her eyes on the field.

~~~

Caine knelt by the side of the bed, one knee on the worn carpet. The room was dark except for the thin strip of light coming in from the hallway. It cut across the comforter and the small rise of Camila’s body under it. Her curls had spread over the pillow in a soft fan, tight coils catching whatever light there was. Her mouth was parted, breaths coming slow, chest lifting and falling under the cotton of the little Georgia Southern shirt she had insisted on sleeping in.

He slid his palm over her hair, fingers moving gentle so he didn’t wake her. The strands gave under his hand and sprang back. She made a faint sound in her throat and settled again, lashes resting heavy on her cheeks. The smell of baby lotion still clung to her, carried up from her skin when he leaned closer.

He bent and pressed his lips to her forehead. When he drew back, he brushed a thumb along her hairline, then eased himself up, joints protesting after the night’s hits. He gave the comforter one last small tug up toward her shoulder and stepped back from the bed.

The apartment was quieter once he opened the door. The TV in the living room hummed low, some late-night recap cutting through all the way from the couch. The light from the screen washed in down the short hallway, throwing a dull glow on the walls. Caine pulled the bedroom door almost shut, leaving it open just enough to hear her if she shifted or called out, then walked toward the sound.

Sara and Mireya sat side by side on the couch. The TV showed highlights from some other stadium, colors different but the same churn of bodies. Volume sat low enough that the commentator’s voice was only a murmur.

Sara looked up first when she felt him come into the room. Her shoulders eased and she smiled, the same small, tired curve she got at the end of long days. She pushed her hands against her knees and stood. Before she stepped away, she leaned down, hand going automatically to Mireya’s hair. Her fingers smoothed over the top of Mireya’s head, then she bent and kissed that spot, whispering, “Good night, mija.”

Mireya tilted her head just enough to meet the touch, eyes on the TV.

Sara crossed the room to Caine. He dipped his head toward her without thinking so she didn’t have to reach too far. She cupped his cheek once and kissed him there.

“You played good tonight, mijo,” she said.

He smiled, one corner of his mouth kicking up a little higher. “Had my fan club in the stands.”

Sara swatted at his arm, a light hit that said she heard the joke and accepted it. Her smile stayed as she turned away. She headed for the bedroom, hand catching the door as she stepped through. The wood clicked soft when she closed it over.

The living room felt smaller with the door shut and the night pressed up against the windows. Caine walked around the end of the couch and dropped down next to Mireya. The cushion dipped under his weight. His arm slid along the back of the couch and settled around her shoulders without him having to think about where it went.

Mireya leaned into him in the same easy way, her body finding the familiar angle against his side. Her head brushed his shoulder, hair faintly smelling of the shampoo she used when they stayed over. “Did she fight going to sleep?” she asked.

He nodded, eyes still on the TV even though he was not really seeing it. “Yep. She never wants to sleep when she’s here.”

“Because she feels like she’s missing out on time with you,” Mireya said.

The words sat between them. Caine didn’t say anything for a moment. The TV cycled through another set of highlights. The glow shifted over their faces. Somewhere outside a car drove past, music thudding low under the hum of the building.

“I could transfer after this season,” he said finally. “LSU might want me. Tulane. I’m playing good enough, you know?”

Mireya turned her head to look at him. The light from the TV caught the faint shadows still hiding under her eyes from the week she’d had. “Don’t come running back because you think you fucked up, Caine,” she said. “I’m not going to have you blaming Camila because you make a choice you don’t really want.”

“No, I just—” he started.

Mireya shook her head once, a small sharp motion. “It’s not worth the argument right now.”

He held her gaze for a second, then nodded. His hand flexed once against her shoulder and went still.

On the table in front of them, his phone buzzed against the wood. The screen lit up and flashed with a stack of new messages. Names slid by in quick lines, little demands and jokes from people pulling at him to come out, hit the bars, stretch the night a little longer.

Mireya glanced down at it. “You want to go?” she asked.

Caine shook his head and looked at her instead of the phone. “You want to?”

She let out a small breath and shook her head. “It’s been a long week.”

“You good?” he asked.

“Just midterms and work, nothing crazy,” she said.

He nodded once. The phone buzzed again and then went quiet when the screen dimmed. The announcer on the TV shifted into another game. Outside, some drunk voices echoed faintly from the parking lot and faded. The apartment settled into that thin quiet that came when everybody else had gone to bed and there was nothing left to do but sit with whatever was still moving around in your head.

Time stretched. Mireya’s weight rested warm against his side. Every so often his thumb dragged a slow line over the curve of her upper arm through her shirt. Her eyes stayed on the TV without really tracking the plays.

After a while, she moved. She slid forward just enough to break his arm from around her, then swung one leg over his lap, careful in the way she lowered herself. She settled on his thighs, facing him fully now. The couch cushion sank deeper under them both.

Caine’s hands found her hips without searching. His fingers spread over the denim there, holding her steady. Up this close he could see every small shift in her expression, the way her mouth pressed and released.

She lifted her hands and framed his face, palms warm against his jaw. His eyes came up to meet hers. For a second neither of them spoke.

“Do you love me, Caine?” she asked.

He nodded, the movement small under her hands. “You know I do.”

Her thumb brushed once along his cheekbone. “¿Para siempre?” she asked.

“Sí, para siempre,” he said.

She leaned in until her forehead rested against his, breath mixing with his in the small space between them. Then she closed that space and kissed him.
Image
Image
Image
Image
User avatar

redsox907
Posts: 3886
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 24 Nov 2025, 01:51

Caesar wrote:
23 Nov 2025, 22:33
“Stepping out of your place, more like.”
SO READY FOR THAT TOMMY PACK

Curious what Mireya is doing with that. Quick to look like she's hedging her bets just in case Ramon decides to tell Caine anyways, but not sure if it's all that. At the end of the day, the stripper business aside, Caine is probably her best friend. And vice versa. I mean Jaslene and the girls know her, but not the same way. Just my .02.

I could see Caine at Tulane and getting the starting spot, but not sure if you want back in with Tulane after WoTR

Also, Julio making it sound like he knows Peanut got taken care of by Trell. The way he talked about the kid....the conversation seemed easy but at the same time layered. Like Lalo and Eddie weren't acting of their own volition
User avatar

djp73
Posts: 11551
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 13:42

American Sun

Post by djp73 » 24 Nov 2025, 07:16

Caesar wrote:
23 Nov 2025, 22:33
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 13941
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 24 Nov 2025, 22:44

redsox907 wrote:
24 Nov 2025, 01:51
Caesar wrote:
23 Nov 2025, 22:33
“Stepping out of your place, more like.”
SO READY FOR THAT TOMMY PACK

Curious what Mireya is doing with that. Quick to look like she's hedging her bets just in case Ramon decides to tell Caine anyways, but not sure if it's all that. At the end of the day, the stripper business aside, Caine is probably her best friend. And vice versa. I mean Jaslene and the girls know her, but not the same way. Just my .02.

I could see Caine at Tulane and getting the starting spot, but not sure if you want back in with Tulane after WoTR

Also, Julio making it sound like he knows Peanut got taken care of by Trell. The way he talked about the kid....the conversation seemed easy but at the same time layered. Like Lalo and Eddie weren't acting of their own volition
So much murderous desire with you

Maybe she just wanted a little reassurance from the one man who she knows loves her unconditionally

:hmm:

The kid line was supposed to reference how Cass was smoothing those disagreements out. But could be Julio knows. We'll have to see how that pans out.
djp73 wrote:
24 Nov 2025, 07:16
Caesar wrote:
23 Nov 2025, 22:33
Like Mike
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 13941
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 24 Nov 2025, 22:45

Drown Me in the Blood

The projector washed the wall in cool light, the click of the remote the only thing breaking the low hum in the room. Team-issued tees and hoodies, rows of shoulders. Slides, socks, and a few beat-up sneakers tucked under chairs. Caine sat midrow with a notebook he was not really using, the edge of his thumbnail pressed into the spiral. The room held that Monday quiet teams only get after a win, the kind where even jokes land softer and everyone sits a little taller.

Aplin let the clip roll through the route one more time. Motion across the formation, the defense sliding late, the safety peeking wrong. Caine’s drop, the ball on a line to Josh, and then the freeze on him turning back to the rusher, shoulders up, palms out, the small shrug the internet had chewed on all weekend.

“And here,” Aplin said, voice dry, “we have hall of famer Michael Jordan throwing touchdowns for our team.”

Laughter rolled across the room. Caine held it in until the last second, then shrugged again without looking around. More laughter. A knuckle rapped the back of a chair. The mood stayed loose, that kind of loose you earned when you were 7-1, ranked and the media had started to pay attention, when Texas State sat on the week ahead and didn’t scare anybody in this room.

Aplin clicked ahead, ran two beats of the play again, then killed the screen. “Alright,” he said. “Five minutes. Be back ready to break into groups.”

Chairs scraped. Slides whispered on the floor as bodies stood to stretch. The door sighed with people drifting out for water. The smell of coffee and cleaner hung under the AC. Caine stood, rolled his shoulders, and slipped the notebook into his hoodie pocket. He could feel the week shaping itself already, lift and practice, the hours cut into pieces he could step through without thinking.

“Caine,” Coach Aplin said, not loud. “Hang back a sec.”

Caine waited near the front while the room thinned. The projector fan wound down. The air settled. A stray laugh faded in the hall. When it was quiet enough that they didn’t have to lean in, Aplin crossed his arms. His face stayed easy but focused.

“You been getting any calls about jumping in the portal at the end of the season?” he asked.

Caine shook his head once. “Nah. I got some messages on IG and shit, but I don’t answer it. Could just be some kids fucking around.”

Aplin nodded, lips pressing and easing. “Have you given any thought to it? Transferring?” He tipped his chin. “I know the foundation’s been talking to you.”

Caine kept his eyes up. “I’d be lying if I said I haven’t. You know, with my kid and all.”

Aplin held both hands up like he was waving off a blitz. “You don’t have to convince me, son.” His tone stayed level. “I just want to know where your head’s at. I know the foundation’s trying to put something together for you to keep you here and you know we want you here.” He let a breath out. “But we can’t compete with the big boys. That’s just the reality of the game these days.”

Caine shifted his weight, not in a hurry to move. On the wall the frozen image of his shrug had given way to the blank input screen.

“You’ve already had a hell of a season,” Aplin said, uncrossing his arms long enough to rub his palm on his sleeve, then folding them again. “And I know the talk won’t get quieter if we keep winning.”

Caine’s mouth ticked. “Well, I ain’t expecting to start losing no time soon, Coach.”

Aplin laughed for real then, short and warm. He reached out and patted Caine on the shoulder. “You and me both, son.”

~~~

The Cane’s ran bright and loud. Fluorescents hummed. The counter bell tapped each time a red tray slid up with a number flag stuck in sauce cups. Fryers hissed behind the sneeze guard. People moved in a slow loop between the sticky napkin station and the ice machine that coughed half-moons into paper cups.

Mireya sat in a booth under a window that gave a broken view of a sunburnt parking lot. A basket of tenders sat open, sauce half full, Texas toast shining with butter. Jaslene’s knee touched her knee under the table and stayed there. It read as casual to anyone looking.

“Okay, while you were out playing Georgia girl,” Hayley said, shoulders leaned in, “Brooke and C.J. was on some fucking stupid shit.”

Alejandra raised her straw and took a slow pull, eyes bored and amused at the same time. “Always. Drama follows them, pinche gueritas.”

“For real,” Hayley said. “One of them stole my fucking money. I almost beat their fucking asses.”

Mireya tore a corner off toast and dipped. Salt and sweet hit the back of her tongue. “How you know it was one of them? You could’ve dropped it.”

Hayley shook her head, ponytail brushing her collar. “It was just us, Bee, Mari, them, Khadijah and Jessica on Saturday. Khadijah and Jessica don’t steal. So that leaves their asses.”

Jaslene knocked her elbow into Alejandra’s arm, a grin already building. “Unless you finally made her pay for all the ice cream she steals from you, puta.”

Alejandra snorted and did a small queenly shrug. “Please. I been docking that out her party cut for months, pues. She’ll stop when it hurts.”

Hayley rolled her eyes but she laughed. “Joke’s on you. I already knew, bitch. That’s why I keep eating it.”

Their laughter stacked and spread. A toddler banged a tray two booths over and a woman said his name without looking up from her phone. Mireya let the laugh sit in her mouth a second longer than the others, then it slipped away.

“Hold up,” Mireya said. “You said almost. You should’ve just beat them bitches.”

“It was only like fifty,” Hayley said.

“So?” Mireya said. “It’s fifty more than they should be taking from me.”

“From us,” Alejandra said, pointing a fry at the middle of the table. “De nosotras.”

Jaslene looped her arm across Mireya’s shoulders and pulled her in. “Mírala. She go to the boonies one weekend and comes back actin’ country, mami.” Her nails grazed the side of Mireya’s neck, light and slow. “You think everything a fight now, huh.”

Mireya rolled her eyes but she didn’t move. Jaslene’s fingers traced once more along the line where neck met shoulder and settled there.

The bell at the counter tapped again. Order numbers cracked through the noise. Mireya felt eyes before she found them. In the line, Jordan stood between two boys she recognized. When he saw her, he stopped pretending to read the menu and walked over.

“What a coincidence we end up at the same place eating?” he said. “I could finally take you out since you always so busy.”

Mireya opened her mouth. Alejandra got there first, palm flipping a neat little wave. “No, amigo. Do better than chicken fingers, ¿sí?”

Jordan didn’t blink. “Well, I tried to get her to go somewhere nicer.”

“How much you spending on that date, papi?” Jaslene asked. She propped her chin on her hand and watched him from under lashes. Her other arm stayed where it was on Mireya.

“Isn’t it the conversation that’s most important?” Jordan said.

Jaslene tipped her head. “Nope.”

Mireya felt Hayley’s stare bouncing between them and up to Jordan. The corner of Mireya’s mouth lifted, not wide, just enough to show she had heard all the angles. “I’ll figure something out.”

“I’m gonna hold you to that,” Jordan said. He tapped the edge of the table twice with his knuckles, then slid back to the counter.

“Leave that one where you found him, mami,” Jaslene said, voice low, close to ear.

Alejandra flicked her napkin into the basket. “He broke. You can smell it.”

“I think he’s kinda cute,” Hayley said. She shrugged and didn’t apologize for it.

Alejandra sucked her teeth and gave her a look. “You would.”

They cracked up again. The toddler’s tray banging turned into a whine that turned into silence when a fry hit his hand. The ice machine hiccupped and someone cursed under breath at a sticky lever. Outside a bus sighed at the curb and pulled off. Heat poured in when the door opened for a delivery guy hauling a box of cups on his shoulder.

Mireya wiped sauce from her finger with the rough side of a napkin. She set the napkin down and tapped the table once with the tip of her nail.

“Alright,” she said. “I know it’s Monday, but I need y’all to come to work with me. I gotta catch up.”

Alejandra spread her hands, rings catching the light. “Can’t, chicita. I got things to do. Later.”

“Me too,” Hayley said. She slid out of the booth with the dancer’s grace.

Jaslene shifted and let her arm slip down from Mireya’s shoulders to her waist before she sat back, still touching. “I got you, nena.”

Mireya smiled at her, leaning into her touch.

~~~

The knock landed flat against the quiet street. Trell stood on the porch, shade pooling under the live oaks, the chain heavy in his hand. The Jesus piece filled his palm, thick gold crowded with small stones. Even under trees the face caught stray sun and threw it back in hard pinpoints. He let it swing once and caught it, metal clicking against his knuckles as he looked past the glass to the hall.

Locks turned. The door eased open. Cass stood there in a silk robe, the belt pulled tight like she had just made a knot with one hand. Cool air rolled out around her. Her eyes went to the pendant first and then up to him without any hurry.

“It was that nigga Junebug,” Trell said. He lifted the chain so she could take it.

Cass’s eyebrow rose a notch. “The pimp nigga?”

He nodded once and tilted his chin toward the inside. She stepped back, the robe brushing her calf, and let him in. The door clicked shut behind them. The entry gave to a living room that wore a darker color than the last time he came through. Trim cut a clean line at the baseboards. A different lamp sat where a plant used to be. The air held that hotel kind of cold that made skin tighten along the forearms.

Trell crossed to the couch and stopped. He turned back to her and slid his phone from his pocket. “Look.”

She came close enough that the chain tapped her wrist as it hung. He opened a video. Ant’s sleeve filled the first second. The picture shook through a tight hallway in Junebug’s grandmother’s house and into a back room with a safe crouched in the corner. The key hit metal. The door swung open. On top of bills and a dusty watch box, a face of gold looked back. The camera leaned. Ant’s hand reached in and lifted the piece.

Cass kept her eyes on the screen until the angle tipped to the floor. She held the phone another beat after it ended, then spoke. “How y’all know he did it? Why he did it?”

“He robbed P,” Trell said. “Kept them bitches full of that shit so they keep sucking dirty dick.”

Cass turned the pendant over. The back wore tiny screws at the edges and a flat stamp near the curve of the crown. Light from the window ran over her shoulders and broke on the chain. “Who did it?”

“Me,” Trell said. “Beat that nigga to death. He ain’t deserve anything less.”

She stared at him a moment. The room’s cold hummed. Somewhere a truck idled on the street and then faded out. Cass handed the phone back and the screen printed the clean of her palm for a second before it dimmed.

She turned for the kitchen. “You hungry?”

“I can eat,” he said.

She moved ahead of him past the dining doorway. The table sat with two placemats and a small bowl of lemons. The floor changed from soft carpet to tile with a faint grit where someone had missed a sweep. Trell stopped at the line and let her lead the room. He set the chain down in his other palm and weighed it again because the thing wanted to be heavy.

Cass reached the table and tossed the chain down. It hit with a blunt sound and spun once. The face caught light and went dead as it settled. She didn’t look at it again. She crossed to a drawer and pulled it open with the back of her finger. A napkin slid inside the slot and stuck there crooked. She shut it with a quiet push.

The fridge sat high and clean at the end of the run of counter. Magnets held a child’s crayon drawing and a takeout menu with a number written in pen. He let the small details hold still in front of him.

Cass glanced back once to make sure he was where she expected him. He was. He stood in the doorway with his shoulders square to the room and his hands empty. The phone lay dark in his pocket. The chain lay bright and still on her table.

Cass’s robe shifted when she lifted her arms. The silk whispered once. She pushed a stray hair behind her ear with the back of her wrist and crossed to the fridge. Her bare feet made soft sounds on the tile that matched the measured way she moved through her house. She set her hand on the handle and held it a second like she was thinking through what lived behind the door.

Cass curled her fingers around the handle and pulled it open.

~~~

The copier in Laney’s office hummed and then went quiet, the last sheet slipping face down into the tray. She stacked the permission forms and squared the edges with the side of her hand.

The doorknob turned. Tommy stepped in without knocking. He filled the doorway like he always did after walking the halls, jaw set from moving through small problems and the people who brought them. He didn’t sit. He came to the edge of her desk and planted a hand on the wood. She looked up at him and let her face smooth.

They stood inside the soft hum of the building. Somewhere down the hall a child laughed and then a worker’s voice went low. Tommy’s breath lifted and fell. He said, “Come outside. We need to talk.”

Laney pushed the chair back without a scrape. “Alright,” she said, voice even. She slid the forms into a folder, clicked off the lamp, and rose. She fell in step behind him. His shoulders squared the hallway. She kept her eyes on the carpet where years of feet had pressed the nap flat.

They pushed through the front door into the heat. It met them all at once, thick and close. The porch boards held the day’s warmth. Out in the yard Mr. Charlie had the riding mower’s hood propped open. The metal shone dull under the sun. His hands were blackened at the knuckles. He leaned over the engine and tinkered, a small socket turning with a dry click.

He turned at the sound of them. He tipped his cap. “Mr. Tommy. Mrs. Laney.”

Tommy gave him a short nod. “Mr. Charlie.”

Laney set a small smile in place for the man. “Hey,” she said.

Tommy stopped at the far edge of the porch, well past the open doors of the church and where the daycare windows wouldn’t carry a voice. He rested a hand on the rail and kept his eyes on the yard. The oak threw a broken patch of shade across the grass. A wasp worried the corner post. Laney stood a step behind him, not at his shoulder. She folded her hands in front of her and waited. Her mind spun tight, a thread pulled fast. He knows. He’s about to say it. She held her mouth still.

He waited so long she almost let the words go just to end it. She held. Tommy drew a breath that lifted his back. “Nevaeh can’t be around the house anymore,” he said. “Not in the camper with Blake, not anywhere else. I won’t have it.”

The pressure behind her ribs eased by a hair. She didn’t show it. She fixed her eyes past him to the parking lot and kept her voice flat. “Why?”

“Because she’s on drugs.”

Laney wet her lips. “So’s Blake.”

Tommy looked a little over his shoulder, not all the way. “Blake is my brother.”

“Nevaeh was like a sister to me.” Her vowels came softer.

He shook his head once. “Was and like. Neither of those things are true anymore.”

“She’s tryin’ to get him to go see his child,” Laney said. “That’s all she’s pushin’. Get him to show up and do right.”

Tommy drew a breath that sounded tired at the end. “That’s not Blake’s child. She doesn’t know whose child that is because she’s always out letting anyone with five dollars fuck her so she can get her next hit.”

Laney’s fingers tightened once, then let go. Her throat felt hot. “That ain’t true. Josiah looks just like Blake.”

He turned fully then. The porch glare hit his eyes and made him squint. “I’m not arguing with you about this, Delaney. I’m telling you she’s not welcome around my house and my sons. That’s final. You can tell her next time you see her.”

Her jaw worked. She set it, gave him the smallest nod. “Okay.”

Silence held a beat and then he cut it. “You need to go get Braxton something for the science project he has due.”

“What is it he need?” The question came out steady.

“I don’t know, Laney. That’s for you to figure out.” He stepped off the porch and went down the three boards without touching the rail. Gravel crunched under his shoes. He crossed the lot to his truck and pulled the door open. The engine turned over and settled into a low idle. He checked his mirrors and eased out, tires whispering over dust. He didn’t look back.

Laney stood where he had left her. The heat pressed the back of her neck. She watched the truck turn onto the road and go. Her thumb rubbed her wedding ring.

~~~

The room was dim except for the blue wash from Caine’s phone. He lay on his back with the screen above his face, thumb moving slow, catching the same clips and screenshots over and over. People argued in the comments about who knew him first, who called the breakout, who put him on their list in June. Somebody posted an old photo from the Superdome and wrote that the state title had told them everything they needed to know.

Rylee was stretched across his stomach, her ribs rising and falling against him. She rolled onto her side and her hair slid across his skin. “Can I just say it’s annoyin’ as hell that everybody spends all day talkin’ ‘bout you?”

He laughed through his nose and kept scrolling. “Sounds like you a little jealous there.”

She rolled back to her stomach and propped her chin on her forearm. “If I had a dick and could throw a football, I’d be better’n you, so you should count yourself lucky I ain’t so folks can blow you up online.”

“I count myself lucky you don’t got a dick.” He tilted the phone enough to see her out of the corner of his eye.

She popped his knee with her palm. “As if I wouldn’t be pullin’ whether I was trans or not.”

He dropped the phone closer to his chest and looked straight at her. The screen light picked the shine off her cheek. She raised her eyebrows. “What? I would.”

“I ain’t saying nothing,” he said, mouth tugging. “I’m staying on the right side of the cancel mob.”

“This is Georgia, Caine.” She snorted. “Ain’t nobody cancellin’ you for sayin’ you wouldn’t want a trans woman.”

He let the phone drift back up. The timeline jumped to another think piece about arm strength and poise and some cut-up of his last game stitched to bounce tracks. The bed sheet was warm on his legs. “I gotta think about when I hit the portal, though.”

Rylee slid up higher, her weight shifting off his stomach. She settled with her head on his chest, ear over his heartbeat, hair spread across his shoulder. “You really gonna transfer?”

“I’m thinkin’ about it.” He let the words sit and watched the cursor blink in an open DM he hadn’t answered. “’Bout seventy-five percent sure I’m gonna at least enter and see what happens.”

She traced a small circle on his side with her fingertip. “Where you wanna go?”

“Wherever gonna give me a scholarship and a bag.” He turned the phone and flicked away another message he didn’t want to open.

“I’d go to UGA,” she said. The way she said it was easy, like naming a gas station off the highway. “They win. You’d look good there.”

He huffed, not quite a laugh. The AC kicked on in the vent overhead, thin and steady. “Think I wanna go home,” he said. “But that’s just LSU and Tulane to choose from.”

The name sat between them. Her hand stilled at his ribs. She looked up at him, then away, then reached for his wrist before she changed her mind and went for the phone instead. She slid it from his fingers and tossed it onto the bed near his hip. It bounced once and landed face-down.

“Alright,” she said, drawing the word out, her voice softer but still twanged, “Enough crisis talk for tonight.” She shifted, bringing her knee over his thigh and setting her cheek back on him. “You go do that in the mornin’ when I leave.”

~~~

The AirBnB’s backyard lights put a thin white skin over the pool, bugs cutting through it, tapping the surface and sticking. The water held heat from the day and gave it back slow. Mireya drifted on her back with her hair spread and her face tipped to the dark. Chlorine bit the back of her throat each time she let herself sink a little and rise again. The fence hummed with a neighbor’s AC unit, steady and tired.

Trell sat on the side of a lounger with a heavy glass cupped in his hand. The bourbon smelled sharp and sweet. He watched her with his chin lifted a little, the way he seemed to always be watching her.

“You know it’s about to be too cold for you to keep doing this, huh?”

Mireya slid her hands through the water and turned her head. “We live in Louisiana. It’ll only be cold for a day or two.”

He smiled without showing teeth. “I said it last time. You look like you really enjoy it. The swimming.”

“It’s not the swimming.” She curled a knee and let herself angle toward him. “It’s the pools. Clean, quiet, I’m not sharing this with anyone.”

“I get that.”

She stroked to the wall where he sat and put her elbows on the tile. Water ran off her shoulders in thin lines. She tipped her face up to him. “So, I know you don’t live in the traphouse and you clearly aren’t homeless so why do you keep telling me to come to these AirBnBs instead of your house?”

Trell’s mouth tugged. “I ain’t decide if I trust you like that yet.”

“Why wouldn’t you?”

He snorted, short and amused. “’Cause you might be trying to set up me. Sent by the opps.”

Mireya laughed, the sound catching in her chest. “If I was trying to set you up, it would’ve happened by now.”

“You got a point.” He took a sip, ice clinking once against the glass. He let his eyes go back to the flat sheet of water, then returned to her. “How was your trip to not-Atlanta?”

She smirked and pushed off, letting the water take her weight. The night air pressed warm on her face. She floated and stared at nothing, her body loosening in the quiet. He wanted an answer and she held it just past him.

“That’s not helping the whole trust thing,” he said.

“I’ll take that.”

Trell stood, the lounger creaking under the loss of him, and walked the edge of the pool. His sneakers whispered on concrete. He tracked her with a patient look.

“I need your help with something.”

“What?”

“I need someone to find out where Dez and Boogie’s heads at. I’ve been throwing a lot of shit at them lately. Dez? I’m not worried about Dez as much. Boogie? Well, you know what happened.”

She stopped moving and let her feet drop until she could scull in place. The water tugged at her ribs. She turned so she was facing him, still out toward the middle. “And how I’m supposed to do that?”

“Fuck ‘em.” He said it as if he were pointing out a street sign. “Suck their dick. You know how to get men to talk.”

The words didn’t cut, though. It was what it was. “Why me?”

“Because I know you not gonna fold on me from taking a lil’ dick. Right?”

She lifted her eyebrows once, a quick flash. Then she nodded and fell back to float again. The night sky had no stars she could see. The pool light drew a soft ring around her body and made the rest of the yard feel farther away. Praise lived inside the ask, crooked and blunt. It still warmed, the way a heater clicks on in a cold room.

“You’re the only one around me that can do this,” Trell said, walking. “Ant doesn’t have the tact to deal with something like this. He’s all gas no brakes. You helped me out with them Mexicans so I figure you could help me out here.”

She breathed out and let her hands drift wide. Her legs made lazy scissors and brushed the deeper chill near the drain.

“You know you can,” he went on. “You’re good at this shit. Manipulating niggas. Like you’re playing chess and they’re eating crayons.”

She turned her head toward him again, afloat, eyes half-closed. “Is that flattery I hear?”

He shook his head, the glass bouncing a small circle of amber. “No, mami. I’m just telling it how it is.”

She watched him one beat longer. He looked back, steady, the bourbon catching the light. She felt the praise again under his words, crude and honest, and the part of her that stayed wound tight loosened by a notch.

“Hm.” She rolled her shoulders under the water, let the pool close over her ears until the world narrowed to a muffled thrum, and went back to swimming.

Soapy
Posts: 13835
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 25 Nov 2025, 07:31

Caesar wrote:
23 Nov 2025, 22:33
their grip short and firm
:ayo:
User avatar

redsox907
Posts: 3886
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 25 Nov 2025, 11:42

Caesar wrote:
24 Nov 2025, 22:45
Jaslene’s knee touched her knee under the table and stayed there. It read as casual to anyone looking.
#soxstradamous :smart:
Caesar wrote:
24 Nov 2025, 22:45
“I don’t know, Laney. That’s for you to figure out.”
Gonna keep hoping for that Tommy pack

Weren't you just giving Caine credit for not running back to Rylee? :pgdead:

Not moving off my Trell is a cuck line. Now he's asking her to fuck and suck his crew off? :dead:

ALSO

getting the vibe that Cass handled problems the same way Mireya makes money :hmm:

something definitely happened between Trell and Cass
User avatar

Captain Canada
Posts: 6194
Joined: 01 Dec 2018, 00:15

American Sun

Post by Captain Canada » 25 Nov 2025, 16:47

Guy immediately goes back to the easier sister. Dude's really a sicko :drose:
User avatar

djp73
Posts: 11551
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 13:42

American Sun

Post by djp73 » 25 Nov 2025, 20:13

Not sure what I think Caine is going to do school wise next year :hmm:
Leaning toward a transfer though.
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 13941
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 26 Nov 2025, 12:52

Soapy wrote:
25 Nov 2025, 07:31
Caesar wrote:
23 Nov 2025, 22:33
their grip short and firm
:ayo:
You out here giving people limp wrist handshakes, brodie?
redsox907 wrote:
25 Nov 2025, 11:42
Caesar wrote:
24 Nov 2025, 22:45
Jaslene’s knee touched her knee under the table and stayed there. It read as casual to anyone looking.
#soxstradamous :smart:
Caesar wrote:
24 Nov 2025, 22:45
“I don’t know, Laney. That’s for you to figure out.”
Gonna keep hoping for that Tommy pack

Weren't you just giving Caine credit for not running back to Rylee? :pgdead:

Not moving off my Trell is a cuck line. Now he's asking her to fuck and suck his crew off? :dead:

ALSO

getting the vibe that Cass handled problems the same way Mireya makes money :hmm:

something definitely happened between Trell and Cass
Women can't be friends round this man.

Tommy is just making sure she knows her place like any good husband as it says in the bible.

Image

He didn't ask her to do that. :pgdead:

Good eye.

:curtain:
Captain Canada wrote:
25 Nov 2025, 16:47
Guy immediately goes back to the easier sister. Dude's really a sicko :drose:
Image

All he did was give Rylee what she's been asking for.
djp73 wrote:
25 Nov 2025, 20:13
Not sure what I think Caine is going to do school wise next year :hmm:
Leaning toward a transfer though.
In due time, we shall find out :curtain:
Post Reply