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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 20 Feb 2026, 04:17

Communis Causa

The duffel hit his shoulder on every other step. Caine had the strap caught between two fingers, keeping it from swinging wide. His shirt still clung at the back from practice, damp enough to pull when he moved his shoulders.

He had the key out before he reached the step. It went in clean, one turn, and he pushed the door with his forearm.

Cool air rolled out first, the apartment holding against the heat. Then the TV came in under it, low, cartoon voices. Mireya and Sara sat together on the sofa, angled in toward each other a little. Camila was wedged between them with her legs tucked under her, chin tilted up at the screen. A bowl sat on the coffee table, something half-eaten, a spoon leaned against the rim.

The door swinging brought both women's heads around at the same time. Sara's face opened up, her whole expression easing. Mireya's mouth pulled at one corner, slow,.

Mireya leaned down toward Camila and tipped her chin in his direction. "Look, mi amor. Your daddy's home."

Camila's head came around fast. For a half second she just stared at him, eyes wide. Then she was off the couch. Her feet hit the floor and she came across the room at a dead run, arms already out, and crashed into his legs hard enough to make him take a step back. She had her arms locked around his knees and her face pressed into his thigh.

Caine laughed. He dropped the duffel off his shoulder, letting it hit the floor beside him, and bent down. He caught her under the arms and brought her up in one motion. She grabbed his face with both hands, palms flat against his cheeks, and held on.

"Feliz cumpleaños, mi vida." He could feel her grip tightening. "How do it feel to be four?"

Camila giggled and pressed her palms together, squishing his lips out. "I'm vieja!"

He reached up and got both her small wrists, peeling her hands off his face. She let him, fingers curling around his thumb when he took hold. "Vieja? If you're old, what's that make me?"

Camila's eyes went wide, certain about this. "Mucho! Mucho! Mucho viejo!"

Caine shook his head and carried her over to the couch. She had both arms looped around his neck now, chin over his shoulder, looking back toward the TV. Sara and Mireya moved without being asked, each shifting toward their armrest and opening the space between them. He sat, and the cushion took his weight. Camila immediately rearranged herself, turning sideways and pressing her back into his chest, her legs swinging out across Mireya's lap. He let her find her position, one arm settling loose around her middle.

He leaned over and kissed Sara on the cheek. She brought her hand up and covered his for a second, warm and steady, before he straightened. He turned and kissed Mireya. She tipped her face just slightly toward him, the pillow shifting when she moved. Then her attention drifted back to the screen.

"She didn't want everyone over?" he asked. He kept it low, Camila already fixed back on the cartoon.

Mireya shook her head. Her thumb moved in a small slow arc along Camila's ankle. "She said just us."

Caine smoothed his hand over Camila's curls, fingers spreading along the back of her head. She was warm from sitting between them. He kept his palm there, weight light, and watched the cartoon without really watching it. Colors moved across the screen. Something small and bright was being chased by something bigger. Camila's toes flexed once against Mireya's thigh.

"You didn't want a big party, mi vida?"

Camila shook her head, eyes still on the screen.

"Alright then," Caine said.

Sara reached over and set her hand against his arm, fingers closing once and releasing. "We'll cook something after you get cleaned up." She looked at him. "Because you stink, mijo."

Mireya made a sound in her throat, a short sharp thing she caught behind closed lips, shoulders shaking once. "As if she's gonna let him out of her eyesight long enough for him to shower."

Caine looked down at Camila, still locked onto the screen, Mireya's thumb still moving that same small path over her ankle. "¿Celoso?" he asked.

Mireya rolled her eyes. She adjusted her position on the cushion, tucking one foot up under herself. "If that's what you want to call it."

Caine shook his head once and settled back into the cushion. Camila was solid and warm against his chest, her breathing already gone slow and even. One of her hands found his forearm and rested there.

The cartoon kept going. Sara shifted beside him, reaching for the remote on the end table. She turned it up one notch and set it back. Mireya's thumb kept moving over Camila's ankle, the same small path.

~~~
The laptop was the loudest thing in the room. Sydney had it turned low enough that the voices coming out of the laptop balanced on the tray table sounded thin and distant, but she'd left it on anyway because the alternative was just the beep of the monitor and the hum of the overhead light and her mother's quiet in the chair beside the bed.

The fluorescent light overhead made everything look worse than it was. On Sydney it showed up as pale, washed out, the color gone from her face. Her hair was greasy, pulled into a knot at the back of her head that had stopped being intentional sometime yesterday. She'd asked one of the nurses about dry shampoo. The nurse had said she'd look into it and hadn't come back.

Her mother kept her arms folded in her lap, watching the same show in the same detached way. She'd brought food that morning in a container that Sydney had eaten half of. Neither of them had said much since.

Two knocks at the door. Her mother glanced toward it. Sydney looked up from the screen.

The door opened and Stasia's face appeared in the gap, that slight smile already in place. She pushed it the rest of the way open and stepped into the room with a vase of flowers held in both hands, something pale and softly arranged.

Sydney's eyes went wide.

"I hope I'm not interrupting," Stasia said, "but I was passing by and thought I'd come check on you."

Her mother unfolded her arms and turned from the laptop. Her eyes ran over Stasia once, quick and thorough. The flowers. The clothes. The easy, unhurried way the woman stood in a room she had no obvious reason to be in.

"Who this?" she asked.

Sydney shifted against the pillows, adjusting the thin blanket across her legs. "My boss."

Her mother's expression didn't open. She looked at Stasia again. "Ai cho phep anh lam dieu do o noi lam viec?" she said, the words flat, carrying exactly the edge she intended.

Stasia's smile didn't move. She turned toward the woman. "Sau gio lam viec," she said.

The woman's eyebrows rose. She blinked at Stasia twice and went still, jaw working.

Sydney looked at her mother and kept her voice even. "Má, can you go see if you can find me something to eat?"

Her mother stood slowly, eyes still on Stasia. She didn't say anything directly to either of them. She moved toward the door with the careful deliberateness of someone making clear they were leaving on their own terms, and she said something low in Vietnamese under her breath as she passed Stasia. The door swung shut behind her.

Stasia stayed near the doorway for a moment, the vase still in her hands. Then she crossed to the window sill and set it down, shifting the vase left an inch and then touching two of the stems to straighten them. Sydney watched her without speaking.

Stasia walked around the foot of the bed to the chair her mother had vacated. She sat down and reached out, taking Sydney's hand in both of hers, fingers settling over her knuckles. "How are you feeling?"

Sydney let out a breath. "Like shit." She glanced toward the window, then back. "I just want to go home, but they keep saying I need another day of observation."

Stasia's thumb moved across the back of Sydney's hand, slow. Her expression pulled into something that wasn't quite a smile. "Those drugs do a number on your system."

Sydney dropped her head back against the pillows and looked up at the ceiling. "Yeah."

The monitor beeped steady into the quiet.

"I know when you're laid up like this," Stasia said, "you start wondering who's fault it is." Her thumb kept moving over Sydney's hand. "I hope you don't put that blame in the wrong place."

Sydney turned her head on the pillow and looked at Stasia. "What?"

Stasia reached up with her free hand and cupped Sydney's cheek in her palm, fingers warm. She held it there. "Sweet girl." Her eyes stayed on Sydney's face. "I just want you to focus on getting better. We're going to pay for everything, okay?"

Sydney looked at her. She searched her face, the steadiness of it, the way the smile sat there neither cold nor fully warm, just present and certain.

Stasia held her gaze a beat longer. Then she let her hand fall from Sydney's cheek, released her other hand, and stood up from the chair. "Give me a call when you're discharged," she said. "We'll sort everything out then."

Sydney nodded.

Stasia smiled at her. She turned and walked out of the room, the door opening on the hall noise for a moment before closing again, her heels clicking steady and then fading down the corridor.
~~~
The fan overhead made one slow revolution and then another, barely moving the air in the office. Laney sat with her chair tipped back, ankles crossed on the edge of the desk, eyes on the ceiling. The blades turned. The chain pull swung in a small arc with each rotation and tapped the housing.

A 21 Savage song came from her computer, low enough that it was more feeling than sound. The office had been like this for the better part of an hour, just her and the fan and the music.

She turned the ring on her finger. Pushed it up toward the knuckle, then back down to the base. Up. Back down. The gold caught the light coming through the blinds and threw a thin stripe across her palm.

Two knocks on the glass.

Laney pulled her feet off the desk and leaned forward, turning in the chair. She put two fingers between the blinds and spread them. Marianne stood on the other side of the window in the full sun, squinting against it, one hand lifted to wave her out.

Laney let the slats fall back together and pushed up from the chair.

She went down the hallway and out through the front door. The heat outside came at her all at once, dry and pressing. Marianne stood on the porch with her arms crossed over her chest, face fixed in a frown.

"Yes?" Laney said.

Marianne's jaw shifted. "Did you let that..." She stopped. Started again. "That boy come here today?"

Laney raised an eyebrow. "I don't know what you talkin' 'bout."

Marianne lifted one hand and pointed across the lot. Caine's Lexus sat in the shade at the far edge of the parking area, nose facing out. Then she turned and pointed past the fence, out toward the pasture. "Mr. Charlie just seen him. Two women and a child walking out there."

Laney looked toward the pasture. From the porch she couldn't see them, just the open field and the wooden fence and the tree line at the back. "Probably his mama, his daughter and his daughter's mama," she said.

Marianne's chin came up. "We told him not to randomly come here."

Laney reached into the pocket of her dress and pulled out her phone. She tapped the screen, looked at the date. Put it back. "It's his daughter's birthday," she said. "She likes lookin' at the horses."

Marianne made a sound, something low and unimpressed. "Of course you would know all of this." Her eyes cut toward the lot and back. "I'm going to tell him to leave."

"You'd only be hurtin' that baby doin' that," Laney said.

Marianne's shoulders came up. "Mr. Charlie said one of those women is dressed like a harlot. Seems to me that they are hurting that child plenty enough on their own."

Laney nodded once. "Don't mean we gotta add to it, mama."

Marianne stared at her. Down the road somewhere a truck engine turned over and then faded. Marianne lifted one finger and pointed it at her. "You stay in your office until they leave."

Laney kept her face still. "Okay," she said. "Anythin' else?"

Marianne dropped her hand and waved it once in a short dismissive arc. She turned her attention toward the parking lot.

Laney turned and went back inside.

She pulled the front door shut and stood in the quiet for a second, hand still on the push bar. Then she walked back to her office and pulled the door partway closed behind her. She sat down at the desk. The fan ticked. The song on the computer had rolled to the next track.

She tapped her fingers on the desk. Four fingers, slow and rolling, the sound soft against the wood. She stopped and pulled her phone out of her pocket.

She opened the photos app and moved past the regular albums. Past the camera roll. Past screenshots she'd been meaning to delete for months. She navigated to the hidden folder stored in iCloud.

The thumbnails loaded one row at a time. Her and Caine. She scrolled up through them slowly, thumb moving, pictures rolling by.

She stopped on one. Stayed on it a moment. Moved on.

She reached the bottom of the folder. The delete option sat at the end of the last row. She let her thumb hover over it.

She backed out of the folder.

She set the phone face down on the desk. She leaned back in the chair and looked up at the ceiling, at the fan turning slow and steady overhead.
~~~
Sound came through the front of the house from outside, the low back and forth of a transaction running, words traded quick, footsteps on the concrete, then quiet that stretched out before another set of voices started up.

Trell sat in the armchair with one leg crossed over the other, beer held loose at his knee. The chair had a rip in the arm that somebody had taped over once and then left, the tape going yellow. He looked at the ceiling for a moment, then tilted the bottle up and took a slow pull.

"We're gonna slow down for a bit here," he said. "We been doing a lot of expanding but been bleeding numbers at the same time."

Ant reached over to the coffee table and grabbed a chicken wing from the open box. Grease had darkened the cardboard around the edges. He tipped his beer back, swallowed, and then took a bite from the wing, tearing the meat clean. He worked through it unhurried, chewed, and pressed a paper towel to his mouth before he answered.

"We could always get a few more bodies in the camp." He set the stripped bone back in the box and picked up a fresh wing, turning it over in his hands. "I told that nigga Ramon that he need to change teams."

Trell's eyes dropped from the ceiling. "What he say?"

"Shot me down." Ant pulled the meat off the second wing in one motion. "Ain't even wanted to hear it."

Trell snorted, the sound low and brief. "That's what happens when a nigga been in some shit since he was a lil' nigga." He turned the bottle in his palm, thumb dragging over the label. "He probably more loyal to that shit than his own people."

Ant dropped the bone and wiped his hands on the paper towel, wadding it up. "That's the kind of niggas we need." He tossed the ball of paper toward the box, missed, left it. "Not niggas like Boogie."

"You ain't wrong." Trell uncrossed his leg and planted his foot flat on the floor, shifting his weight forward until his elbows found his knees. He stayed there, forearms resting on his thighs, looking down at the coffee table. "But I think for now, we just consolidate what we got."

Outside, two voices started up. One sharp, one sharper. Neither of them moved. They just listened long enough for their ears to sort it out. The voices peaked and fell and peaked again, then tapered down to nothing.

Ant reached back into the box. He turned another wing over, inspecting the size of it before he said anything.

"While we doing that, it might be a good idea to get rid of that nigga Dez." He bit into it. "He a snitch just looking for an opportunity."

Trell's eyes went to the window. "You probably not wrong about that either." He picked up his beer and finished what was left, then set the empty bottle on the table with a soft knock. "That's a tomorrow problem, though."

The argument outside went another level up. Two voices climbing over each other. Then a single shot. Shouting opened up after. Footsteps scattered fast in different directions.

Ant was moving before the echo finished. He crossed the room in a few steps, hand already on the door, and pulled it open. He leaned out just far enough to get a look at the block, then pointed to the nearest man on the sidewalk. "Get the work and get the fuck out of here before the jakes come."

The man nodded, quick and more than once, already moving.

Ant watched a beat longer. Then he stepped back inside and slammed the door hard enough that the frame held the sound for a second after.

He crossed back to the sofa and dropped into it, the whole thing shifting under him. He reached for his beer and found it, took a drink, and settled his arm along the back of the cushions.

Trell leaned back and shook his head. "You need to move, my nigga."

Ant let the beer hang from two fingers beside his knee. "Can't keep an eye on them niggas if I lived somewhere else."

Trell looked at him for a second, just looked. Then the laugh came. He reached down and picked up a fresh beer from the table and raised it once.

~~~

Camila was out cold, sprawled across the middle of the bed with her arm thrown to the side, mouth parted, one sock still on and one somewhere in the sheets. The room was dim, just the streetlight coming in around the edge of the curtain. It had been a full day. Horses, presents, cake. She'd spent the last hour on her feet telling everyone about the horses, then crashed before they made it through the door.

Caine sat on the edge of the mattress, back to her. His elbows found his knees, just looking at the wall. He pressed his palms together, rubbed them slow, then hung his head. His hand went up through his dreads, fingers working until they found the band at the base and pulled it free. The locs fell around his face, and he let them, sitting with his head down and his hands clasped and the quiet of the room pressed in around him.

Mireya came out of the bathroom. She stopped in the doorway, hand resting on the frame, and watched him. Him sitting with his head bowed, the locs falling, the set of his shoulders.

Then she looked behind him at Camila. At the peace in her face, the way her chest rose and fell without any of the tension that lived in it sometimes when she was awake. Her small hand was open against the pillow.

Mireya's throat tightened.

She looked down at the floor. It came on her the way it always did when she wasn't ready for it, without a knock. Jordan's voice in her head, cold and certain. Dirty fucking gutter slut. She blinked and pressed her tongue to the roof of her mouth and told herself to put it down.

Caine looked up. Then he turned and looked at her.

"Ven acá," he said.

She walked over but she didn't sit on the bed next to him. She sat on the floor beside his legs instead, back against the side of the mattress, knees pulled up in front of her. Caine raised an eyebrow, watching her settle. She just brought her head to rest against the side of his leg and closed her eyes. The carpet was thin under her. The mattress was firm against her back. She stayed there and breathed.

"You know we're fucking up her childhood," she said. Her voice was quiet enough not to cross the room.

Caine looked down at her, then back at Camila. He exhaled through his nose. "I know," he said. "That's the problem with being babies raising a baby."

Mireya snorted, a small involuntary sound. "Mi mama would say the problem is us, not our age."

"Fuck Maria," Caine said.

Mireya's head came up a little. "Estás hablando de mi madre."

"As if you feel any different about her," he said.

"Yeah, but I can say that."

Caine laughed, a low sound. He shook his head once.

The room held the quiet again after. Mireya stayed where she was, her cheek against his leg. She looked at nothing, or she tried to. It came back at her anyway. The words he'd used. The look on his face when he said it, like it had been waiting in his mouth for a while. Like it was already there before the argument started. She thought about Camila sleeping behind her, the open hand on the pillow.

She moved. She pulled back and turned so she was kneeling between his legs, looking up at him. Caine noticed her eyes before she could do anything about them. She saw the shift in his face, the attention sharpening.

"¿Qué pasa?" he asked.

Mireya took his hands in hers. Her fingers closed around his. "I just want you to know that I love you." She kept her eyes on his face even as they started to burn. "Despite everything. I love you so much, Caine."

Caine looked at her for a beat, then back at her eyes. "I love you, too, but what's wrong?" He squeezed her hands once. "Someone do something to you?"

Something moved across his face, a tightening in the jaw, a shift in his eyes. She watched it pass through him, the anger at the idea of it. She shook her head quickly, twice. "No, no, no. Nothing's wrong." She pressed his hands in hers, steadier now. "It's just with how everything's been over the last couple years. I want you to know. To remember that."

Caine looked at her. His face had settled but his eyes were still watching her. "You don't need to remind me of that," he said.

Mireya reached up. She cupped the back of his neck and pulled him down to her, and kissed him. Slow. When she pulled back she ran her fingers under her eyes, catching what was already there.

Caine took her wrists gently and drew her up. She let him pull her into his lap. She curled into him, her face against his chest, and let his arms come around her.

"Te amo tanto," she said, into his chest, the words gone soft. The tears came down her face without any sound. "Tantísimamente."

Caine pressed his lips to the top of her head. He held them there. His hand came up and settled against her hair, fingers spreading once and going still.

"Yo también," he said. "Para siempre."

Soapy
Posts: 15530
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 20 Feb 2026, 07:02

After the first scene, I was prepared to leave a positive comment...

but then...
Caesar wrote:
20 Feb 2026, 04:17
Mireya took his hands in hers. Her fingers closed around his. "I just want you to know that I love you." She kept her eyes on his face even as they started to burn. "Despite everything. I love you so much, Caine."
:viola:
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Captain Canada
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American Sun

Post by Captain Canada » 20 Feb 2026, 09:46

So damn messy.
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redsox907
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Post by redsox907 » 20 Feb 2026, 15:29

Syd bout to get fed to the gators with a swiftness, she mad dumb if she thinks Stasia just going to pay for her hospital stay on an OD and then go back to work

I don't think its a coincidence that both of Caine's and Mireya's relationships imploded around the same time, pushes them closer together. Trell not withstanding honestly.

I could see Caine trying to transfer closer to home after this season, but how would Mireya handle her getting slutted out from coast to coast with Caine always watching :hmm:
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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 21 Feb 2026, 12:31

Soapy wrote:
20 Feb 2026, 07:02
After the first scene, I was prepared to leave a positive comment...

but then...
Caesar wrote:
20 Feb 2026, 04:17
Mireya took his hands in hers. Her fingers closed around his. "I just want you to know that I love you." She kept her eyes on his face even as they started to burn. "Despite everything. I love you so much, Caine."
:viola:
She can't tell her baby daddy she love him?????????????
Captain Canada wrote:
20 Feb 2026, 09:46
So damn messy.
:whatido:
redsox907 wrote:
20 Feb 2026, 15:29
Syd bout to get fed to the gators with a swiftness, she mad dumb if she thinks Stasia just going to pay for her hospital stay on an OD and then go back to work

I don't think its a coincidence that both of Caine's and Mireya's relationships imploded around the same time, pushes them closer together. Trell not withstanding honestly.

I could see Caine trying to transfer closer to home after this season, but how would Mireya handle her getting slutted out from coast to coast with Caine always watching :hmm:
She fine as long as she keeps her mouth shut.

:hmm:

He did suggest that after the first season and Mireya shot it down
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Post by Caesar » 21 Feb 2026, 14:04

Officio Tenetur

The shed door was cracked open, warped wood catching on the frame. Through the gap, the backpack sat on the bench in the half-dark, canvas gray and still against the old wood. Saul stood outside it with his arms folded over his chest, watching the bag like it might do something on its own.

The heat came down flat and heavy on the backyard. It sat on the concrete, sat on the dry grass, sat on the back of his neck. The lawn had gone yellow in patches near the fence where nothing grew right anyway, and the narrow strip of shade thrown by the shed didn't reach him.

Footsteps came across the yard behind him.

He turned his head. Zoe came around the side of the house, slides slapping against the bottoms of her feet, one hand lifting to pull a lick of hair out of her mouth. She glanced past him toward the shed, took in the cracked door and the shadow inside, and slowed but didn't stop, closing the last of the distance until she was standing beside him.

She looked at the backpack sitting on the bench inside the shed. She gestured toward it with a wave of her hand. "Remember when I took your virginity in there?"

Saul snorted. "I wasn't a virgin the first time we fucked in the shed."

Zoe raised an eyebrow, slow and deliberate. "So, you were just that bad at getting a bitch off?"

Saul held her gaze for a moment, jaw working once. He shook his head. "It was the first time I fucked, but not for everything."

Zoe laughed. "That was crazy."

He caught what she meant and sucked his teeth. "You know what I meant."

She let it go and turned her head back toward the shed. Her chin tipped toward the backpack. "You might want to start moving that if you plan to meet Kay's deadline."

Saul unfolded his arms and pushed his hand through his hair, fingers dragging back across his scalp. "That's why I need your help. I don't know how to move six, seven fucking pounds of weed in a few weeks."

Zoe crossed her arms over her chest. She looked at the shed for a beat, eyes moving from the backpack to the warped door frame to the dark interior, then back to him. "Maybe you should've thought about that before you decided that trying to be Pablo Escobar was the best way to get money for your kid."

Saul ran his hand through his hair again and let his arm drop. "I ain't call you over here for a lecture. I just need you to put me in touch with your ex down in Houma."

"No."

He raised an eyebrow. "What do you mean no? It's your boyfriend that's putting me in this position."

Zoe's arms stayed folded. Her weight settled onto one hip. "Nigga, I ain't make you come ask about Kayjuan. You did that shit on your own."

"And you helped me." Saul's eyes stayed on hers. "So, I'm asking for help now."

Zoe shook her head. Her gaze moved to the shed doorway, sitting there for a second on the backpack, then came back to him. "You know what niggas like Treg expect if someone like me starts showing up every couple weeks asking for favors?" She let a beat pass before she finished it. "Pussy. And I ain't trying to fuck anyone because I have to."

Saul stood with that. He brought his hand up and slid it slow down his face, palm dragging over his mouth and chin before it fell. He let out a long breath through his nose. "So, what the fuck am I supposed to do?"

Zoe lifted a shoulder. "Call your cousin. I'm sure he got contacts in the city."

Saul's jaw shifted. He looked away from her, past the open shed door and past the fence. His thumb pressed into the inside of his wrist once, then stopped. "I ain't trying to piss Caine off."

Zoe looked at him, head tilting a fraction. "Better than pissing Kay off."

Saul didn't say anything back. He turned his head and looked through the cracked door at the backpack on the bench, the gray canvas sitting quiet and still in the dark of the shed.

~~~

Caine took the snap and dropped back, feet finding the turf in their rhythm, heels down first then up as he settled into his drop. His eyes moved left first, tracking Josh on the outside as he came out of his break. Josh had coverage draped over him, Siaki staying on his hip. Jeremiah ran a drag underneath, Eli reading it right, staying in the lane and taking it away. Femi throttled down on the right hash and Kylen shaded over to close it off.

Caine let it all develop. He felt the pocket holding and kept his feet moving, climbing slightly, shoulders square. Javier had been running the seam from the start of the play and now he was through it, coming free over the middle of the field, Kylen caught too far to one side to get back. Caine stepped into it and threw, arm coming over the top, weight transferring forward, the ball leaving his hand on a line that arced and dropped perfectly into Javier's stride.

Javier got both hands on it and hauled it in, body adjusting under the ball as it came down. He ran another four steps past where the catch was made, cleats hitting the turf, letting momentum carry him out, then slowed to a jog and turned back toward the line of scrimmage, ball held loose at his side. He flipped it underhanded to the nearest manager without looking.

Coach Fatu stood on the hash with his arms crossed over his chest, sunglasses on, watching the play finish. He uncrossed his arms just long enough to point at Caine, finger leveled.

"You don't have to go all Brett Favre on us, Guerra."

Caine laughed. He pulled the glove off his left hand and adjusted it back on, pressing the velcro down across his wrist. "I'm just making sure that y'all know who y'all fucking with out here, coach."

Fatu's mouth shifted into a grin. He shook his head once, the sunglasses catching the light. "Don't let me get in your way then."

Caine turned and walked back to his spot in the shotgun. He worked through his cadence, calling it out loud. Behind the defense, Coach Bailey was already barking adjustments, pointing to the boundary corner, telling his safeties to tighten their alignments.

Caine called for the snap and caught it, stepping back and then bouncing on his toes, weight shifting on the balls of his feet. He felt the line give on both sides. August and Kebba shoved through the edges into the backfield, both of them working against their blockers, hands fighting for leverage, driving upfield.

Caine started his motion early, arm coming forward, throwing over Carlos' outstretched hand. The ball skipped through the small window above Carlos and dropped straight into Josh's hands at the sticks, Josh pulling it in and getting his feet down before the sideline cut him off.

Caine whistled. He brought his hand down by his side and then up toward his face and blew across his fingers, slow. His eyes found Josh downfield, already getting up, ball tucked.

August came lumbering back past him, big frame still moving from the rush, breathing audible through his mouthpiece. His palm came down on Caine's helmet, the slap ringing out across the shell. August didn't slow down or look back. "Run that shit back," he said, already moving on.

Coach Fatu stepped back onto the hash, voice carrying over the defense resetting. "Alright, alright. That was a good one, but let's keep our focus, huh?"

...

The practice had moved down the field by the time Fatu wandered the sideline to where Aplin stood watching the team work through the period. Aplin had his arms crossed over his chest, eyes out on the field, tracking the secondary as they passed off routes in coverage. Fatu came up beside him and they stood there together for a moment, watching without talking, the sounds of the practice washing over them.

Then Fatu said, "Caine plays like this and we're gonna have to take his phone and computer from him so he isn't distracted by five million people calling him trying to make sure that he jumps into the portal at the end of the season."

Aplin snorted. The sound came out short and genuine. He shifted his weight. "Or we could just tell the foundation that they need to squeeze some more money out of those stones so we keep him."

Fatu kept his eyes on the field. Carlos jammed Josh at the line and Josh fought through it, getting into his route late, the timing breaking down. "You think that's likely?"

Aplin let out a laugh. "Not unless he tears his ACL in a couple weeks," he said, eyes still out on the field, "and I'd prefer he not get hurt, so we better make sure we're doing a damn good job recruiting."

~~~
Mireya swung her car into the parking space, killing the engine. She flipped the rearview mirror down, working her hand through her hair before grabbing her bag and getting out.
Her heels clicked sharp on the concrete as she came around the front of the car, sunglasses pushed up onto the top of her head. She crossed the sidewalk toward the stairs and went up them without slowing, knuckles rapping twice on the door before she pushed it open.

"Soy yo."

The apartment was warm and smelled like reheated food. Carmen and Elena sat at the kitchen table, At the stove, a figure Mireya had clocked the moment she stepped inside spooned leftovers onto a plate with her back turned. Maria looked over her shoulder when she heard the heels on the floor. Her eyes moved from Mireya's face to her shorts to her bare legs and back up again to the top that left little to the imagination. The scowl was already there. Mireya walked past her.

She bent and kissed Carmen on the cheek. "¿Cómo estás, tía?"

Carmen smiled, the skin around her eyes crinkling. "Could be better."

Elena's eyes dropped to Mireya's legs and she tilted her head, mouth pulling at the corner. "Trying to be sexy with the summer, eh?"

Mireya laughed, the sound easy. "Sexy in any weather."

"Pareces una maldita puta." Maria's voice came from the stove, flat and certain. "Todo a la vista del mundo para que lo vean y lo compren."

Mireya didn't turn around. "Fuck you."

"Mireya." Carmen's voice came down hard.

The silence held for one beat. Maria set down her spoon and turned fully, arms crossing over her chest. "Why haven't you let me see my granddaughter for her birthday?"

Mireya turned to face her. "We were in Georgia."

"Claro." Maria's mouth curved into something that wasn't a smile. "Con una otra puta, Sara, ¿no?"

Elena pushed back from the table, both hands rising. "Hey." Her voice came out careful, measured. "Why don't we just take a little break on the insults, huh?"

Mireya's eyes stayed on her mother. Her chin tipped up a fraction. "You have no one to blame but yourself. Camila odia estar contigo porque eres una perra."

Maria took a step toward her, one finger coming out. She pointed it at Mireya's face, steady and deliberate. "I keep telling you that you only have so much more time to have my granddaughter around criminals before I go to CPS."

Mireya's hand shot out and shoved her. Maria's back hit the stove, the burner grate rattling, her elbow catching the edge of the counter. She caught herself but barely.

"¡Mireya, ya basta!" Carmen was on her feet now, the chair scraping loud behind her.

Maria laughed, a sound with no warmth in it. She straightened, smoothing her shirt back down, eyes moving over Mireya slow. "Look at you. Convertirse en un animal como ellos. Una animal violenta. No me extraña que te vistas como una perra en celo esperando que la cojan."

The Tupperware container was on the counter beside the stove. Mireya grabbed it and swung it hard. It connected with the side of Maria's face and popped open on impact, sending food across the stove, the wall, the floor. Maria stumbled back into the wall, one hand going to her face.

Then she screamed and launched herself forward.

Her hands went around Mireya's neck. The weight of her body drove Mireya back and the chair Elena had been sitting in caught the backs of Mireya's legs. Both of them went over it, crashing to the floor together, Maria on top of her, knees pinning, hands still clawing. Carmen and Elena screamed from somewhere above them.

Mireya got her arm free and threw her elbow back, catching Maria across the forehead with the point of it. Maria's grip went loose. Mireya rolled and got to her feet, breathing hard, and turned back around.

"Come on, bitch."

Maria shook her head once, eyes clearing. Then she charged.

She hit Mireya chest-first into the counter behind her. The impact knocked the wind out of Mireya's lungs, her back bowing against the edge of the laminate. She shoved her mother back with both hands, grabbed a fistful of her hair, and started swinging. Her fist connected twice, three times against the side of Maria's head before Maria got enough leverage to swing them sideways.

Carmen's voice came from near the hall, high and cracked. "¡Policia! Come quick! Please! ¡Dios mío!"

Elena stepped forward with her hands out, trying to get between them, and caught a flailing arm across the chest that knocked her sideways into the refrigerator.

Maria used the moment. She got her hands on Mireya's arm and the back of her neck and swung, the two of them spinning around the kitchen until Mireya's hip caught the edge of the table. The table tipped. Then it went all the way over, everything on it going with it, dishes and cups shattering against the floor, Mireya going down to the floor in a heap.

Maria stood over her, chest heaving, hair gone wild on one side, a red welt already rising at her temple. She stared down at Mireya.

"¡Ya no más!" Carmen's voice, broken open.

Mireya got up slow, one knee, then the other, then standing. She looked at her mother. She looked at the kitchen around them, the food on the walls, the overturned table, Elena against the refrigerator with her hand on her sternum. Carmen at the hall with her phone pressed to her ear, shaking.

She ran back in.

Elena barely got out of the way. Mireya hit Maria at the counter again, driving her back into the stack of pots beside the sink. Metal clattered and fell, two of them bouncing loud off the floor. Mireya got her other hand into her mother's hair and pulled, swinging her hand wildly, and Maria screamed, and Mireya screamed back at her, the words tearing out of her throat.

"¡Te pinche odio, perra! ¡Te pinche odio!"

...

The two of them came down the stairs in handcuffs, a cop holding each of them by the arm. A cluster of neighbors had formed on the sidewalk and in the doorways of nearby units, people leaning out, whispering. Carmen and Elena stood at the apartment door above, watching.

Maria's head hung, eyes on the steps beneath her feet. Mireya's was level. Her heels were gone, both of them having broken somewhere in the kitchen, and she walked down in bare feet, the concrete rough under her soles. Her lower lip was cut. Three parallel lines ran red across her cheekbone where her mother's nails had caught her. She felt all of it and let her face be still.

At the bottom of the steps the cops steered them in separate directions toward the cruisers parked at the curb. As the distance closed between them for a moment, Mireya turned her head and spat on the pavement near Maria's feet.

"Puta perra."

The cop walking Maria spun toward her, face tight. "You want another fucking charge?!" He pointed past Mireya to the woman officer at her elbow. "Keep her in line, Rodriguez."

Rodriguez took Mireya's arm and walked her the last few feet to the cruiser. She pulled the door open. "Watch your head."

Mireya ducked and got in. Her wrists ached where the cuffs pressed. Outside through the window she could see the neighbors still watching, Carmen's shape still visible in the doorway upstairs. Rodriguez reached for the door.

"Wait."

The officer paused, hand on the top of the door frame.

Mireya looked up at her. "¿Hablas español?"

Rodriguez gave a small nod.

"¿Puedo llamar a la otra abuela de mi hija?" Mireya's voice was even. "Para que pueda ir a recogerla a la guardería."

Rodriguez glanced over her shoulder toward the other cruiser, then leaned down toward the open door. "Before we go to booking, I'll let you call, okay?"

Mireya nodded once. She leaned her head back against the seat and closed her eyes.

Rodriguez shut the door.
~~~
ATL had been on for a while and Ramon had already seen it enough times that it ran in the background more than anything else. He sat with his back deep in the couch cushions, feet up on the coffee table, his pistol sitting beside the remote.

His phone sat in his palm. He turned it over once, twice, set it face up on his knee. A text came in from one of the BGs, a number. He looked at it, thumbed a reaction, and locked the screen. Two more after that in the next few minutes. He read them both without moving from where he was, checked the totals in his head, and set the phone back on his thigh.

The knocking hit hard and fast. Ramon's head came up. He leaned back and reached a hand toward the blinds, two fingers splitting them enough to see the driveway. Nina's car wasn't there.

He leaned forward, picked up the gun from the coffee table, and stood. He moved to the door without hurrying, weight easy on each step, and put his eye to the peephole.

Asia.

He sucked his teeth. He tucked the gun into his waistband and unlocked the door.

She pushed past him the second it opened, shoulder cutting through the gap before he had fully stepped back.

"Ain't got no fucking manners, huh?" he asked.

She wasn't listening. Her eyes moved around the room fast, checking the kitchen doorway, the hall. "When Nina gonna be home?"

Ramon raised an eyebrow, looking at her. "You high right now?"

"No, nigga." She turned back toward him. "I'm just asking where Nina at."

He got his first clear look at her face when she turned around. The blood under her lip had dried to a dark crust, cracked at one corner. The smear across her upper lip had dried too, brown-red at the edges where her nose had bled. Under her left eye, the skin had already started to darken and puff, not fully closed yet but getting there.

Ramon snorted. He turned and walked back to the couch, pulled the gun from his waistband, and set it back on the coffee table. He dropped into his seat and propped his feet back up.

"A nigga beat your ass and ran off on you, huh?"

Asia crossed her arms over her chest. The thin jacket she had on sat wrong on her shoulders, sleeve twisted near the elbow. "You supposed to be my gangster ass little brother," she said. "You don't seem too bothered by that."

Ramon hit play on ATL. The movie picked back up. He glanced over at her without turning his head all the way. "What he look like?"

"He was white. Fat. Kinda old."

He looked at her then, a full look. "That's it?"

Asia threw her hands up, the motion sharp. "I ain't exactly ask for his fucking ID, nigga."

Ramon turned back to the TV. "Well, got buku old fat crackers out here," he said. "I ain't going shoot all of them. You just gonna have to take that L."

Asia paced. She crossed from the hallway door to the end of the coffee table and back again, once, twice, shoes quiet on thefloor. Then she stopped. Her hand came up and one finger pointed at him, steady. "I'm tired of this shit," she said. Her voice had something different in it, something that wasn't the usual angle of it. "I'm gonna go get clean. Get me a job doing hair like I wanted to when I was little."

Ramon said nothing for a beat. His eyes stayed on the movie. "When you was little and you wasn't on that shit."

"I just fucking said I'm gonna go to rehab, motherfucker.".

Ramon lifted both hands, palms out. He held them there for a second, then let them drop back to his lap.

Asia shifted her weight, the edge of fight going out of her posture by a fraction. "Can you text Nina and see when she gonna be home?"

Ramon gestured toward the armchair with a vague wave of his hand. "Just sit down," he said. "She at some vigil for a lil' nigga who got shot. I don't know when that shit gonna end."

Asia sucked her teeth. She turned toward the door, one hand reaching for the frame. Then she stopped. Her fingers let go of the wood and she turned back, crossed the living room, and dropped down into the armchair. The cushion gave under her. She settled her arms on the rests and let her gaze drift toward the TV.

~~~
Sara pushed up from the couch and moved toward the door, one hand trailing the back of the couch for a second before she let go. She pulled the front door open.

Nicole stood in the doorway with her purse over one shoulder and her keys still in her hand. She looked at Sara's face, and took it in.

"When you said you had something you wanted to talk about," Nicole said, "I thought it was something mundane." She looked at Sara a moment longer. "But I guess I should've brought the wine."

Sara exhaled, long and through her nose. "It's about Mireya."

Nicole's head tilted, just slightly. "Your granddaughter's mother, right?"

Sara nodded. She pulled the door back and stepped aside, waving Nicole in, then pressed it shut behind her. She moved toward the kitchen table and Nicole followed, keys dropping into her purse. Nicole pulled the nearest chair out and sat, dropping her bag on the floor beside her feet. Sara took the seat across. She put both hands flat on the table, looked down at them, then lifted them and set them down again.

She said, "Mireya got arrested earlier."

Nicole nodded. She settled herself fully into the chair and looked at Sara and waited.

"What for?" Nicole asked.

Sara lifted one shoulder, let it fall. "I don't know the charge. She got into a fight with her mother." She glanced toward the living room. From where she sat she could see the arm of the couch and one of Camila's socks on the floor near the coffee table leg, the little thing abandoned there when she'd been put down for her nap. "She called me. Said she was going to jail and to go pick up Camila."

"First time offender?" Nicole asked.

"Yeah." Sara's fingers pressed into the table edge. "As far as I know."

Nicole's shoulders dropped a fraction, the thinking-through-it movement. "If neither of them went to the hospital, it'll get pled out." She turned one palm up. "Judges don't want to deal with family spats like that. It clogs the docket. The DA's gonna want rid of it fast."

Sara's mouth pressed into a thin line. Her eyes went back to the living room, to the dark hallway where the bedroom door sat almost shut. "What I'm worried about is Maria making it a thing," she said. "Trying to use it to take Camila from her."

Nicole's head moved, a small shake. She reached up and tucked a loose braid back behind her ear. "Judges don't like that either. They were fighting each other." She paused. Her eyes held Sara's, steady and direct. "The only person that could really set something like that in motion is Caine. Unless Camila was there?"

"She was at daycare."

"Then no." Nicole folded her hands on the table, knuckles even. She let a beat pass, let it land clean. "We don't do family law, but from where I sit? You don't have anything to worry about there. A judge's not going to penalize a mother for fighting her own mother when her child wasn't present. That's not how it works."

Sara let out a breath. Her elbows came to the table and her face dropped into her hands, palms pressing flat against her closed eyes. Her fingers spread up into her hair and she sat like that for a moment, very still.

"That woman," she said, muffled, "is fucking insufferable."

"Sounds like it," Nicole said, dry.

Sara stayed still a second longer, hands still in her hair, the kitchen holding its quiet around her. Then she lifted her head. She pressed the heel of her palm under each eye once, smoothing the skin there. She looked at Nicole across the table, then at the wall behind her, then at nothing. Her chair scraped back from the table.

"I'm going to get the wine."
~~~
The bench was hard and the air in the holding cell smelled like sweat chemical underneath it. Mireya sat in the corner with her back against the wall, legs straight out in front of her, and watched the woman across the cell sob. The woman's crying was loud, both hands pressed over her face, shoulders shaking while she repeated over and over that she hadn't done anything.

Against the opposite wall, Maria sat with her arms crossed over her chest. Her head was up but her eyes were somewhere past the bars. Mireya looked at her and looked away.

A commotion at the cell door brought her head around. Two officers dragged a woman in through the bars, both of them working to keep hold of her while she kicked and threw her weight sideways, trying to shake loose. She screamed something that might have been words. The smell of alcohol rolled off her in waves, moving through the cell each time her body lurched and kicked, sharp and sour and thick. One of the officers got the upper hand. The woman went down hard on the floor, still fighting, and the cell door clanged shut behind them.

Mireya turned her head forward again.

Down the same bench, maybe eight feet away, a woman sat with her arms resting on her knees, built like she spent a lot of time not worrying about what other people thought. She had been watching Mireya for a while. Now she caught her eye, and her mouth curved slow, and she blew her a kiss across the space between them.

Mireya kept her face still. She let her gaze move past the woman and put it back on the crying woman across the cell, who had started to slow down some.

Footsteps came toward the bars. A corrections officer stopped outside, a slip of paper in one hand, and looked in. "Rosas?"

Mireya pushed herself up off the bench. Across the cell, Maria uncrossed her arms and stood too.

The officer looked between them. She looked back down at her paper. "Mi-ree-a." She tried it again. "Me-ray-ya." Another pause, another look at the slip. "My-re-ya." She lifted her eyes. "M-i-r-e-y-a."

Mireya looked at her mother for one long beat. Maria looked back at her, expression unchanged, arms still half-raised from when she'd started to stand. Mireya turned away from her and walked to the cell door.

"That's me," she said.

The officer looked at her. "You made bail."

She pushed a key into the lock and turned it, the mechanism clicking over. She pulled the door open and motioned for Mireya to turn around. Mireya turned, putting her back to the officer, and felt the cuffs go on. The metal was cool for a second and then it was just pressure. The ratchet clicked twice, then stopped.

She turned her head over her shoulder. Maria stood where she'd been, still on her feet, watching. Her arms came back across her chest. Her face gave nothing. Mireya held her eyes until the officer walked her away from the door.

...

The air outside hit her first, warm and heavy, and she stopped just past the door and closed her eyes. She stood there for a second with the plastic bag hanging from her hand, her heels and her phone and whatever else they'd bagged at intake shifting around inside it. Behind her the jail sat with its light spilling out, and ahead of her the parking lot stretched under the orange wash of the lot lights. She opened her eyes.

Trell was leaning against the side of his car at the edge of the lot, one ankle crossed over the other, hands in his pockets. He was looking at her.

Mireya walked toward him. The lot was quiet, just the hum of the lights and the distant noise of the city past the perimeter fence. Her feet, clad in thin slippers given to her by the jail, found the pavement and she walked anyway, the asphalt still warm from the day.

When she reached him, he didn't say anything. He reached out and took her chin between his thumb and forefinger and turned her head one way, then the other. His eyes moved over her face, taking in the nail marks on her cheekbone, the cut at her lip, the faint swelling under her eye. He was unhurried about it. Then his hand dropped.

He pushed off the car and moved to the passenger side, pulling the door open.

Mireya stepped in. She settled into the seat and he closed the door behind her, the sound solid and final in the quiet lot. Through the windshield she could see the fence, and past the fence the street, and past the street the city sitting dark and ordinary under the sky. She pressed her mouth into a line and kept her eyes there.

~~~
The streets were empty. Stoplights cycled green to yellow to red over intersections nobody was crossing, the signals changing just to do so. She moved through them without thinking about it, one turn pulling the next out of her hands before her head caught up. The radio was off. The AC pushed lukewarm air across her knees. She didn't feel it.

Her thoughts had gone quiet sometime after she left the house, after she checked on the boys, after she called Jesse and told him to sleep on the couch at her house in case they woke up. That was the last thing she remembered deciding. After that, her body just went.

She only knew what she'd done when she was already standing in front of his door with her knuckles coming down on it. Hard. Fast. The sound split the quiet and she kept going, kept her hand moving, the knock becoming something else. Her knuckles started to ache somewhere in the middle of it and she didn't stop.

A minute passed. Maybe more.

The door opened.

Caine stood there in basketball shorts, no shirt, hair loose around his face. His eyes moved over her once, reading what was there, then settled on her face and stayed.

"What are you doin' here, Laney?"

She looked at him. She could feel the thing that had been building the whole drive sitting right behind her sternum now, pressing forward. She shoved him. Both palms flat against his chest, everything she had in her arms behind it. He stepped back to keep his footing, surprised enough that his foot had to reach for the floor to catch him. She pushed through the doorway past him and let the door go behind her. It hit the frame hard.

She turned and pointed at him, finger level with his chest.

"I got my ass beat and you just move the fuck on like I ain't matter at fuckin' all to you, huh?!"

The words came out hot and ragged at the edges.

Caine pushed a hand up through his hair. His jaw tightened once then let go. When he spoke his voice came out measured, careful. "Laney, you gotta go. I'm not trying to get in more shit behind this."

She laughed. The sound came out short and without warmth. She let her hand drop. "Oh, look." Her head tilted. "Another fuckin' man tellin' me what to do." Her arms crossed over her chest, fingers pressing into her own sleeves. "What is it with you motherfuckers?"

"I'm not the married one here." Caine's voice stayed even. "You are. Ain't no who moved on and who didn't. Shit blew up. That's what happens with affairs."

Something behind her eyes shifted. Her chin came up. "Fuck you, Caine." Her voice steadied, went flat and hard. "Fuck you. Fuck Tommy. Fuck my daddy." She took a step toward him, her weight shifting forward onto the balls of her feet. "You ain't even check on me."

"You know why."

She stared at him for a beat. Then her fist came forward and caught him in the chest. The sound of her knuckles smacking skin echoing through the apartment. "No, I don't know why." Her voice went up. "Why don't you tell me?"

Caine's hand came up, palm out, open. "Don't fucking hit me, Laney."

She hit him again. Same spot, harder, her weight behind it this time. "Or what?" She held his eyes. Her chin was up. "What the fuck you gonna do?" She stepped in closer. "You gonna hit me? Go ahead then." Her voice dropped. "Fuckin' hit me."

She went for his face. He caught her wrist. His hand closed around it before she connected, his grip firm enough to stop her arm where it was. Her wrist sat in his hand and neither of them moved.

"Go on then." Her voice had gone low. "You a big man. Do it."

He pulled her in, closing the distance between them. His voice came down low.

"I committed a fucking felony for you." He let it sit for a beat. "You know that, right? Risked going back to fucking jail for you. My fucking freedom. For you."

She didn't pull away. She stayed where she was, close enough that she could feel the heat coming off his skin. Her jaw worked once. "Yeah." Her voice had gone softer. "And where that got us? Soon as shit went sideways you go fuck every willin' bitch on campus from here to Tallahassee."

She swung her free hand. He caught that one too, his other hand coming up fast, fingers wrapping around her second wrist. The room held them like that, the two of them close, her wrists in his hands.

"Fucking stop it."

She looked at him. The anger was still there, right at the surface of her eyes. She leaned up and kissed him. He kissed her back, his hands releasing her wrists, moving to the hem of her shirt. She raised her arms and let him pull it over her head.

...

She stood with her back to him, the room quiet around her, pulling her jeans up over her hips and fastening them. The window let in a thin strip of dark from the street below. Her hands worked steadily, fingers finding the button, the zipper pull.

"Are you goin' to transfer?"

She asked it without turning around.

Behind her on the sofa, Caine shifted. She heard the cushion. "Yeah," he said. "Probably so. Gonna be too much money on the table to pass it up a second time."

She bent and picked her shirt up from the floor, shook it once to straighten it, and pulled it over her head. Her hair caught for a second and she worked it free. She smoothed the fabric down over her stomach with both palms. "And you done wore out your welcome."

Caine snorted, low and brief. "That, too."

She turned and looked at him. He was stretched out on the sofa, one arm behind his head, watching her with his eyes easy. She held his look for a moment.

"This got an expiration date then," she said, "if you want it still."

He held her eyes. A beat passed. "Yeah, I want it."

She nodded once. Her chin dropped slightly, voice settling. "Only here. I'll figure it out."

"I ain't ever at the church no more anyway," Caine said.

She took that in. "Right," she said, the word barely above a murmur, said more to herself than to him.

She walked over to where he lay and leaned down, one hand resting light against the side of his face. She kissed him, slow. When she pulled back she didn't go all the way. She rested her forehead against his, just for a moment, the two of them still in the quiet of the room. Then she straightened. She picked her keys up off the floor beside him and headed for the door, her steps unhurried.

"I gotta get back before Jesse start askin' questions."

Caine didn't say anything. He just watched her go.
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Post by redsox907 » 22 Feb 2026, 04:16

lots happening in that one

Saul gonna get connected with Trell to move the weight and eventually find out about Mireya :curtain:

Nicole's right, without Camila there they can't use it as grounds for unfit parenting, but it could escalate Maria to filing that report she threatened. I doubt she has anything concrete on her now tho. But, also. Mireya probably ain't going to use her cousins to watch Camila anymore, doubt they want that drama around lol

Hope Asia gets clean. Not leaving the house was a step in the right direction.

Laney fucking stupid. You got your ass beat for your decisions, not cause of Caine lol. If it wasn't Caine, it'd eventually be someone else. How long before she slips up again and gets another mollywhooping :smh:
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Post by Captain Canada » 22 Feb 2026, 11:45

About time Mireya beat her bitch ass mama's ass up.

I can understand Laney breaking and going back to Caine, I just don't understand where that can possibly go. But, I guess we'll find out
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Post by Caesar » 23 Feb 2026, 00:00

redsox907 wrote:
22 Feb 2026, 04:16
lots happening in that one

Saul gonna get connected with Trell to move the weight and eventually find out about Mireya :curtain:

Nicole's right, without Camila there they can't use it as grounds for unfit parenting, but it could escalate Maria to filing that report she threatened. I doubt she has anything concrete on her now tho. But, also. Mireya probably ain't going to use her cousins to watch Camila anymore, doubt they want that drama around lol

Hope Asia gets clean. Not leaving the house was a step in the right direction.

Laney fucking stupid. You got your ass beat for your decisions, not cause of Caine lol. If it wasn't Caine, it'd eventually be someone else. How long before she slips up again and gets another mollywhooping :smh:
This man just really wants someone connected to Caine to find out about Mireya where she can't get out of it with a little MAD like she did Ramon :pgdead:

Maria filing a report saying that Mireya is a bad mother while being a mother who was arrested for *checks notes* fighting her daughter would be crazy to present to CPS. Single cousin. Twas just Elena. Mireya was never close to any of the other Rosas so probably not.

A lot of people in Ramon's orbit turning their lives around? :hmm:

Hold on. Weren't YOU with Soapy on saying Caine was ruining all these women's lives?!
Captain Canada wrote:
22 Feb 2026, 11:45
About time Mireya beat her bitch ass mama's ass up.

I can understand Laney breaking and going back to Caine, I just don't understand where that can possibly go. But, I guess we'll find out
How Mireya was feeling when she said "Come on, bitch." Image

:curtain:
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Post by Caesar » 23 Feb 2026, 00:14

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