Saul sat at the kitchen table with his phone flat in front of him, one hand on the screen and the other resting on the edge of the table where his fingers tapped a slow beat against the wood. Ava stood at the stove with Angel's bottle in a pot of water, her hand on the handle, watching the surface for the first bubbles to break.
Ava's mother walked into the kitchen from the hallway, her purse already on her shoulder and her keys in her hand. She opened her mouth and started to say something to Ava, then looked over at Saul sitting at the table. Her mouth closed. She shook her head once, a small tight motion, and turned and walked out of the kitchen toward the front door. The door opened and shut behind her, the latch catching firm.
Ava looked out of the window above the sink as her mother crossed the yard toward her car, watching her get in and pull the door shut and back out of the driveway. The car straightened on the road and drove off, the sound of the engine thinning until it folded into the distance.
Saul looked up from his phone. "She's gonna throw me out soon."
Ava shook her head, her hand still on the pot handle, her eyes coming back from the window to the stove. "It doesn't matter if she does. She'd rather me not look like a single mama so I think you're pretty safe."
Saul shook his head and looked back down at his phone, his thumb moving across the screen in slow swipes as he scrolled through a list of apprenticeship programs. Trade schools, union programs, entry-level positions that wanted experience he didn't have. He stopped on one listing and read it before swiping past it.
"Do you know anyone who knows anything about being a welder or a plumber or some shit?" he asked.
Ava lifted the bottle out of the pot with two fingers on the cap, steam curling off the plastic, and set it on the counter to cool. "My friend Heather's boyfriend is a welder."
Saul looked up again. "He make good money?"
Ava shrugged, reaching for a dish towel to dry the bottom of the bottle where the water still clung. "He's got an apartment and just bought a truck. Buys Heather all kinds of stuff."
Saul's thumb stopped moving on the screen. He sat with that for a second, turning it over, measuring it against the listings he'd been scrolling through for the last half hour that all wanted certifications or degrees or years of experience before they'd let you in the door. "I think I'm gonna look into one of these trades."
Ava walked over to the bassinet near the edge of the kitchen where Angel lay on his back, his fists up by his ears, mouth working at nothing. She slid her hands under him and lifted, bringing him up against her chest in one careful motion, his head settling into the crook of her neck as his body curled toward the warmth of her. She turned back toward the counter where the bottle waited.
"That would be better than thinking you were going to get rich from selling weed," she said.
Saul's jaw tightened. "Yeah, I know. You don't have to keep reminding me that was stupid."
Ava picked up the bottle and tested the temperature on the inside of her wrist, tilting it until a drop ran across her skin. She wiped it with her thumb and adjusted Angel in her arms, shifting him from her shoulder down into the bend of her elbow so his face was turned up toward her. "Yes, I do, because it was stupid and you need to remember that it was."
"Okay, okay," Saul said.
She walked over to the table and pulled the chair out across from him with her foot, the legs scraping against the tile, and sat down with Angel cradled in her arm, bringing the bottle to his mouth. He found the nipple and latched, his jaw working in quick, steady pulls, one hand pressing against the side of the bottle and the other curled against Ava's chest.
"I can talk to Pat, Heather's boyfriend, if you want," Ava said, watching Angel's face as he ate. "See what you need to do to be a welder."
Saul nodded. "Yeah, that's cool."
Ava nodded back, her chin dipping once as Angel's pulls slowed and then picked up again, his eyes half open and unfocused, fixed somewhere past her shoulder. She adjusted the angle of the bottle and settled deeper into the chair, her free hand coming to rest on Angel's stomach where his shirt had ridden up, her palm covering the warm skin there.
Saul watched the two of them for a moment, Ava's fingers spread across their son's belly, Angel's mouth still working at the bottle. Then he looked back down at his phone and started scrolling through the listings again, slower this time, his thumb stopping on each one long enough to read it through before moving on.
Mireya brought the latte to her mouth, the cup warm against her fingers where the cardboard sleeve had slid down and took a sip as Frankie leaned forward across the table with both elbows planted and her eyes locked on Mireya's face. The table sat tucked near the window where the sun came through at an angle that caught the steam rising off their drinks and turned it gold for a second before it disappeared. Sena sat with her back against the wall, one hand around her own cup, the other resting in her lap, her legs crossed at the ankle under the table.
"You text Javon back?" Frankie asked.
Mireya set the cup down and turned it once on the table, the cardboard sleeve catching on the surface. "Text him back about what?"
Frankie sucked her teeth. "Girl, whatever the fuck he be texting you about so he can stop bothering me in class."
Sena's mouth pulled at one corner. "Sounds thirsty."
Mireya nodded. "Oh, yeah. Definitely. I told his ass that I'm busy and don't have time to be playing phone tag."
"And of course, he can't take no for an answer," Sena said.
Frankie held up a finger toward Sena, her eyes still on Mireya. "I ain't hear not one no in what she just said."
Mireya shook her head. "I didn't. Didn't say no to him either. Motherfucker just keeps asking to come to my apartment because of his roommates and I ain't letting his ass in my apartment."
Frankie tilted her head, one eyebrow climbing, her straw still between her teeth. "You saying that like he care if you got dirty draws on the floor when he just trying to dig you out."
"Nothing is dirty about my house," Mireya said, her voice flat.
Sena nodded, her cup halfway to her lips, a small smile forming around the rim before she took a sip. "She does keep it pretty clean for someone with a four-year-old."
Mireya gestured at Sena with her open hand, palm up. "See, from an impartial source."
Frankie shook her head, her hair shifting across her shoulders, and picked up her own drink, taking a long pull through the straw before she set it back down and pressed her palm flat on the table.
"Well, can you just please text that nigga back so he can stop being all up in my face talking about 'Frankie, what your girl on? What your girl on?'" She scrunched her face up, her voice pitching higher in the impression, her neck moving side to side before she dropped it back flat. "Like ew."
Mireya picked up her phone from the table and held it up, the screen facing Frankie, her thumb hovering over the lock button. "I'll text him right now just so you can be spared." She paused, mouth curving as she looked at Frankie over the top of the phone. "Or you can just give him some pussy so he's satisfied."
Frankie's hand came up. "Bitch, please. He don't like Black women. You can send Sena his way if you don't want him."
Sena held both hands up, palms out, her shoulders lifting toward her ears. "I'm good."
Mireya shook her head and looked down at her phone, unlocking the screen and pulling up her messages. She scrolled down through the threads with her thumb looking for Javon's name. Before she reached it, a new text slid in at the top of the screen.
Alejandra. "Mexicana, you want to make some money?"
Mireya's thumb stopped scrolling. She tapped the message open and typed back with both thumbs, the keys clicking soft against the screen protector. "Yeah. Always."
The response came in seconds. "It's a solo thing. I can't do it. You want it? Two businessmen types."
Mireya read it, Frankie and Sena still talking across the table about something she let pass without tracking. She typed back. "Yeah, send me the info."
Three money emojis appeared, and then a second text underneath with an address and a phone number. Mireya liked the message with a double tap, then scrolled back down through her threads until she found Javon's name. She tapped it open, looked at his last three unanswered texts stacked on top of each other, each one a variation of the same ask, and typed. "Wyd?"
She hit send and put the phone face down on the table, leaning forward on her elbows, hands folding together in front of her cup.
Frankie stared at her across the table, chin resting on her palm now, eyes narrowed with amusement. "Took you so long I thought you were over there telling that boy sweet nothings."
Mireya rolled her eyes as Frankie's laugh broke open across the table, Frankie's hand slapping the surface once, and Sena shook her head beside her, the straw still between her lips, her shoulders moving with a breath that was almost a laugh but stayed behind her teeth.
Other parents sat scattered along the hallway in the same plastic chairs, some talking low to each other, some on their phones. A couple sat three chairs down from Tommy, leaning toward each other, the woman's hand on the man's knee as they spoke about something that made her smile and him shake his head.
Laney kept her eyes on her screen. "You gonna have to go to the other side the school to meet with Braxton's math teacher."
Tommy's thumb stopped moving on his phone for a second, then started again. "What are you here for?"
"To meet with Knox's science teacher 'cause you don't know him," Laney said.
Tommy looked over at her, his head turning slow, his eyes finding the side of her face where the hallway light caught the edge of her jaw. "Sounds like you're trying to find the next man you're going to fuck behind my back."
Laney's thumb paused on her screen. Her eyes cut sideways toward the couple three chairs down, measuring their faces for a reaction, looking for the tightening of a mouth or the turning of a head. The woman said something to the man and he laughed, his hand coming up to scratch the back of his neck, the two of them still inside their own conversation without any sign that Tommy's words had reached them.
Laney looked back at her phone. "No, I'm sendin' you to go find another woman who wants to put up with your fuckin' shit."
Tommy's mouth flattened into a line, his jaw shifting once before the words came out level and cold, his eyes still on her profile. "At least I know she won't be a stupid fucking bitch like you."
Laney's thumb pressed hard enough against the screen that the page she was on scrolled past where she meant to stop. She corrected it with a quick swipe, her grip tightening on the phone until the case dug into her palm and kept her voice at the same low pitch it had been in, aimed at him and not at the hallway. "You sure know how to get on my motherfuckin' nerves."
"The feeling's mutual," Tommy said, and looked back down at his phone.
They sat there with the empty chair holding the distance between them, their thumbs moving on their screens in separate rhythms, the fluorescent lights humming overhead and the voices of other parents filling the hallway around them. Down the hall, a door opened and another set of parents stood and walked into a classroom. The couple three chairs down kept talking, kept smiling, the woman's thumb rubbing a circle on the man's knee.
A door opened beside them. A man stepped out of the classroom, young, glasses pushed up on his forehead, a folder in one hand. He looked down at a clipboard balanced on his forearm and then up at them.
"Mr. and Mrs. Matthews?" he said. "Y'all are up."
Laney stood first, dropping her phone into her purse and stepping in front of Tommy before he had fully straightened from his chair. She crossed the short distance to the teacher with her hand already extended, her smile arriving on her face. Tommy raised an eyebrow behind her, his jaw tightening around whatever he wanted to say, and let it go. He followed her toward the teacher, his hand coming out to shake the man's a beat after Laney's had already released it, and the two of them walked into the classroom together.
Trell looked at Ant. "You find out where that nigga other baby mama stay yet?"
Ant shifted his weight against the wall, one shoulder rolling forward. "Not yet. I found a couple niggas up there who used to be cliqued up with him and now they fuck with some other niggas down the way. They finding me the lo."
Trell nodded, scratching his chin with the hand holding the dark phones, the stubble scraping under his nails. He looked down at the lit screen, read something, then checked the other phone and thumbed it awake before letting both screens go dark again.
Dez pulled one hand from his hoodie pocket and rubbed the back of his neck. "Why we trying to find his baby mamas?"
Yola leaned forward on the chair, the metal creaking under the shift. "To snatch them hoes up so that nigga got come to the city to find them."
"Exactly," Trell said.
Shad looked from Yola to Trell and then to Ant, his hands pressing harder together between his knees, his jaw working once before he spoke. "Ain't no other way to get to him? We know where he live, right?"
Scotty reached over and slapped his hand onto the back of Shad's neck, his fingers gripping the muscle there and giving it a rough shake. "Don't worry about it, lil' brudda. This gonna put some hair on your nuts. Pop your cherry."
Dez's hand dropped from his neck back into his hoodie pocket. "That just seems like the kind of shit that gonna make this spin out of control."
Ant's head came up off his chest and his eyes locked onto Dez, his arms uncrossing and falling to his sides. "Shut your bitch ass up, nigga. They came at us. They whole fucking families is fair fucking game." His voice stayed flat. "If I want to put their grandma in the ground, I'm gonna put their fucking grandma in the ground."
Yola nodded. "Yep."
Dez looked past Ant to Trell, his chin lifting. "You not worried about them trying to do the same shit to you? Coming down here and grabbing Mireya?"
Trell's jaw tightened. He slid the phones into his pockets, freeing his hands, and took a step toward Dez. "Nigga, I'm not trying to hear this shit right now. We at motherfucking war, nigga."
Ant reached behind his back, his hand finding the grip of his pistol where it sat tucked in his waistband, his fingers curling around it and holding there. Yola and Scotty both nodded, Yola's slow and deliberate, Scotty's sharper, a single dip of his chin.
Dez held his ground near the door, his eyes on Trell's face, his hands still buried in the hoodie. "That's a crazy way to show you care about the chick you be having around all this shit. I keep telling you—"
Trell closed the distance in one stride and drove his fist into Dez's throat. The punch landed center, knuckles against cartilage, and Dez folded forward with a choked sound that cut off before it finished, his hands flying from his hoodie to his neck as his knees buckled and he crumpled to the floor. He hit the linoleum on his side, both hands wrapped around his throat, mouth open, pulling air in short, rasping gulps.
Yola shook his head from the chair. Scotty snorted a laugh, the sound punching out through his nose. Shad stared at Dez on the floor, his hands still pressed between his knees, his body rigid on the edge of the couch.
Dez rolled to his knees, one hand still on his throat, the other pressing flat against the floor to push himself up. He got his feet under him and stood, swaying once before he steadied, his eyes red and wet, his breath still coming in shallow, ragged pulls through his open mouth.
Trell stood close enough that Dez had to look up to meet his eyes. "If you say some shit that ain't you down to go catch a hat then I'm gonna shoot your fucking ass right now, nigga."
Dez stared at him. His hand dropped from his throat to his side, his fingers opening and closing once. He shook his head, slow, and kept his mouth shut.
Trell held his gaze for another second, then turned his back on him and looked at Ant.
"Find where that bitch live."
"Appreciate it, bruh," Caine said.
The bartender tapped the bar once with his knuckles. "Can't have the town's superstar having an empty glass.”
He capped the bottle, set it back on the rail, and moved down to the other end where a couple waited with their hands up.
Dillon sat on the stool to Caine's left, his beer resting between both palms on the bar, condensation running down the glass and pooling at the base. He turned his head toward Jaylen on the other side of Caine and said, "Every time I'm around this motherfucker and someone say some shit like that, I think about the fact I could've transferred and been the king in some place like Loman, Mississippi."
Jaylen leaned forward on his elbows, his own glass halfway gone, his jaw resting in one hand. "But then you'd be in fucking Loman, Mississippi."
Caine picked up his glass and took a slow sip, the whiskey sitting warm on his tongue for a second before he swallowed and set it back down. "Anywhere in Mississippi is a no for me. These last two years about the limit of me living somewhere I gotta think that some of these motherfuckers might put me in a tree."
Jaylen straightened on his stool and pointed at Caine with the hand that had been holding his chin. "You wouldn't have to worry about that shit if you would stop fucking everybody girlfriend and everybody daughter."
Caine's mouth pulled up at one corner. "You saying that shit like these hoes don't be throwing themselves at me. If you playing baseball and someone throw you a 72 mile per hour pitch down the middle of the plate, you gonna crack that shit, right?"
Dillon rotated his beer glass a quarter turn on the bar, watching the foam slide inside. "Some of them you can just watch pass by."
"I do," Caine said. "Whenever it's an ugly or fat bitch. I send her y'all way. My guy Jaylen love them chunky bitches."
Jaylen sucked his teeth, the sound cutting through the noise from the jukebox playing at the far end of the bar. "I ain't never hit nothing over 150."
Caine lifted his glass again and held it near his mouth, looking at Jaylen over the rim. "150 in whatever that shit is that the Europeans use."
Dillon's laugh broke open first, his shoulders folding forward over the bar, his beer sloshing against the glass when his elbow hit it, and Jaylen followed a second later, shaking his head even as the laughter forced its way out of him before he picked up his drink and took a pull to cover the grin he gave up trying to kill.
Dillon took a breath that pulled the last of the laughter out of his chest and looked at Caine, the amusement still sitting in his face but the tone shifting underneath it as he turned his beer glass one more time on the wet bar. "So, what your agent saying about the schools that's looking at you?"
Caine set his whiskey down and rested both forearms on the edge of the bar, his fingers lacing together around the base of the glass. "He just keep telling me it's all the P4 schools basically. Except Georgia."
Jaylen's head turned. "Why the fuck Georgia don't want you?"
"They got that Keys dude," Caine said. "Don't think they need someone else."
Dillon shook his head, his thumb dragging through the condensation ring his glass had left on the bar. "Fuck all that shit. I know them motherfuckers talking stupid money."
Jaylen leaned back on his stool, one arm draping over the backrest of the empty seat beside him. "Stupid money to put that nigga in a 360 deal of death."
Caine snorted a laugh. "I got six figures here so seven definitely."
Jaylen's eyebrows climbed. "Fuck is you gonna do with millions of dollars? You don't need that shit."
Caine looked at him, his glass in one hand. "Fuck you mean I don't need that shit? Bitch, we all need millions of dollars."
Jaylen and Dillon both laughed, Dillon reaching for his beer and Jaylen grabbing his glass off the bar with both hands, and the three of them lifted their drinks and knocked them back together, the glasses hitting the wood in a ragged line of thuds as they set them down empty.






