American Sun

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Caesar
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American Sun

Post by Caesar » 06 May 2026, 21:35

Tekitl / Tequitl

Mireya lay on the pool lounger with her sunglasses on and her thumb at the side of her mouth, the nail resting against her bottom lip. Sunlight fell straight over the house, too high for the umbrella two loungers down to throw shade anywhere near her. Heat pressed into the concrete around the pool and rose back up in waves that bent the air just above the deck.

Alejandra sat on the edge of the pool with her feet in the water, ankles crossing and uncrossing, the surface breaking around her calves in slow ripples. Liana sat next to her with her knees pulled up, phone balanced on top of them, scrolling with one finger. Hayley and Bianca shared a lounger on the other side of the deck, Bianca sitting behind Hayley with a comb and a handful of hair, working a braid from the crown down. Hayley's head tipped forward each time Bianca pulled a new section. Mari sat under the umbrella with her legs crossed and her hands folded in her lap. Jaslene lay on the lounger next to Mireya, close enough that their arms touched from shoulder to elbow, her skin warm where it pressed against Mireya's.

Hayley looked around the backyard and shook her head. The pool, the fence, the back of the house rising two stories behind them with its windows catching the sun. "I still can't believe your baby daddy got you a whole house with a pool and you're acting like it ain't shit."

Mireya kept her thumb at her mouth. "It ain't mine. It's his mama's. She moved to the other one."

Bianca's fingers kept working. She pulled strands tight and the braid climbed neat and even along the back of Hayley's head. "Girl, you living in it. That makes it yours until somebody tells you different."

Alejandra kicked water, the splash arcing out and breaking across the surface. "Mexicana been out here living better than all of us for years and still showing up to work every night. That's dedication."

Liana moved her feet out of the splash and tucked them under her. "That's stubbornness."

Jaslene snorted a laugh beside Mireya, her shoulder shifting against Mireya's arm.

Mireya pulled her phone out from under her thigh and held it above her face. She opened her messages, scrolled past threads she didn't open, and started a new text to Sena. Her thumbs moved.

Hey. Can we talk?

She stared at the screen for a moment, the cursor blinking after the question mark. Then she hit send and set the phone face up on her stomach, the screen dimming against her skin.

Alejandra looked back over her shoulder at Mireya, tilting her head so the water dripped off her ear. "¿Qué te pasa? You been quiet, Mexicana."

Mireya pushed her sunglasses up onto the top of her head. The light hit her full and she squinted for a second before her eyes adjusted. She looked at Jaslene. Jaslene held her eyes, silent.

Mireya sat up on the lounger and swung her legs over the side so she faced them. Her feet hit the warm concrete. She put her palms flat on the cushion on either side of her thighs and looked across the pool deck.

"I'm pregnant."

Bianca's hands stopped in Hayley's hair. The braid hung loose where she'd been pulling the next section, the strands separating between her fingers.

Alejandra's feet went still in the water.

Hayley turned her head, the unfinished braid swinging against her neck. "Bitch, what?"

"About sixteen weeks," Mireya said.

Alejandra pulled one leg out of the pool and turned her whole body on the edge. "¿Y no nos dijiste nada?" Her voice pitched up on the last word. "You've been out here working on the pole pregnant, Mexicana?"

Mireya shrugged, one shoulder lifting and dropping. "I didn't know what I was doing about it."

Liana leaned forward, her phone forgotten against her knee. "Who's the daddy?"

"Caine," Mireya said.

Bianca finished tying off the braid she'd been working on, her fingers moving through the final loop and pulling the elastic tight. "At least it's for the nigga with the money and not some random off the floor." She smoothed the tail of the braid against the back of Hayley's neck and sat back. "And that's why he put you in this big ass house."

"He knows?" Hayley asked.

Mireya nodded.

"And he’s good with it?"

"Yeah."

Bianca looked over at Jaslene, a grin spreading across her face, slow and wide. "Jas, how you let somebody knock up your girl?"

Jaslene sucked her teeth. "Cállate."

Alejandra laughed and pulled herself the rest of the way out of the water. She stood and walked over to Mireya, her feet leaving wet prints on the concrete. She stopped in front of her and looked her up and down, tilting her head one way, then the other, her eyes moving from Mireya's face to her stomach and back up.

"You ain't really showing yet," Alejandra said. She put her hands on her hips. "But you need to start using that shit. I knew a girl in Houston who was charging triple when she was showing. Had dudes on a waitlist, Mexicana." She held the word. "A waitlist."

Liana shook her head from the pool edge.

Hayley's mouth opened and closed. "That's insane."

Alejandra held her hands up, palms out, water still dripping from her wrists. "I'm just being a good business advisor. Feria is feria."

Jaslene's voice came flat from the lounger. "O podría dejarlo."

Mireya reached over and found Jaslene's hand on the cushion between them. She squeezed it. Jaslene's fingers closed around hers and squeezed back, her thumb pressing once against the side of Mireya's palm.

"Not right now," Mireya said.

Jaslene held on but kept her mouth shut. Her thumb stayed where it was, resting against the bone of Mireya's wrist.

Mari, who hadn't said anything since they'd all sat down, shifted under the umbrella. Her hands were still folded in her lap, her posture straight, her eyes steady. "She's right, though."

Mireya looked over at her.

Mari held her gaze. The shade from the umbrella cut a line across her collarbone. "You know why I'm saying it."

"I know," Mireya said. "And I already told you I can't."

Mari leaned back in her chair, her fingers lacing tighter together, and looked out past the pool toward the back fence.

Mireya's phone buzzed against her stomach. She picked it up and tilted the screen toward her face, shading it with her hand. Sena's name sat at the top of the thread. One word underneath the text she'd sent.

Ok.

Mireya stared at it and her jaw tightened, the muscle pulling along the side of her face. She locked the screen and set the phone face down on the lounger beside her thigh.

Alejandra clapped her hands once, the sound cracking over the deck. "Alright, so are we celebrating or what? Somebody get the pregnant bitch some water and pour me another drink."

Hayley tucked one leg under herself and leaned forward. "We should do something for her. Like a dinner."

"I'm down as long as Ale ain't cooking," Bianca said.

"My food is fine," Alejandra said.

Liana set her phone on the concrete beside her and crossed her arms. "Last time you cooked, we all had the shits for two days."

"That was the shrimp," Alejandra said, pointing at Liana. "Not me."

Mireya lay back on the lounger and pulled her sunglasses down over her eyes.

~~~


Sena lay on her back with her legs bent, the sheet twisted at her calves, her chest rising and falling in long pulls. The low sound of buzzing filled the room, steady, mechanical. Her eyes were locked onto the ceiling above her.

She took a deep breath and held it. Her shoulders came up off the pillow, her eyes squeezing shut, her jaw locking. The breath sat heavy in her lungs for three seconds, four, before she let it go in a hard push through her mouth. Her chest dropped. She took a few labored breaths after it, each one catching at the top before it released.

The buzzing stopped. Nothing filled the space now except the sound of Cassidy moving around in the living room on the other side of the wall, cabinet doors opening and closing, the faucet running for a second and cutting off. Sena stared at the ceiling and let the sounds wash past her without following them.

She closed her eyes. Opened them. Then she reached down and tossed the vibrator toward the edge of the bed where it landed on the comforter with a dull thud. She sat up, swung her legs over the side and stood.

~~~

The blinds were angled so the light came through in thin bars that striped the carpet and the arm of the couch where Sena sat.

Celia sat across from her with her legs crossed at the ankle, legal pad balanced on her knee, pen resting against the spiral binding.

"You haven't been as forthcoming today as you normally are," Celia said. "Is there something bothering you?"

Sena shrugged, her shoulders lifting and dropping against the back of the couch. "There's a lot bothering me. That's why I come here in the first place."

Celia smiled. "Well, I won't argue with you there. It just seems as though there is something specific today." She tilted her head a fraction. "Would you like to talk about it?"

Sena's fingers picked at the seam of the couch cushion beside her thigh. She pulled at a thread, rolled it between her thumb and forefinger, then let it go.

"Mireya kissed me the other day."

"Oh. How'd that happen?"

"She lives in a new house. One Camila's father bought." Sena looked at the window, the parking lot striped through the blinds. "I was there, babysitting. She came home from work, said she was going swim, got naked."

"To swim?" Celia asked.

Sena nodded. "That's pretty much how she comes home from work."

"And you said she cleans buildings?"

"Yeah."

"Sorry. Go on."

Sena's hand went back to the seam of the cushion. "Anyway, I got into the pool, too. She swam over, told me I could look at her and then kissed me."

"How did that make you feel?"

"I kissed her back, but then I stopped."

Celia uncrossed her ankles and crossed them the other direction. "Why did you stop?"

"You know why I stopped."

Celia held her gaze. "I'd like to hear you say it."

Sena pulled her legs up onto the couch and wrapped her arms around her knees. Her chin rested on top of them, her body drawn into itself, the posture making her smaller against the cushions. "Because it felt like Alex."

Celia nodded once. "Tell me what specifically felt the same."

"The whole thing." Sena's voice flattened out. "She told me she was straight. To my face. Then she's getting naked in front of me, staring at me while she's on a stripper pole, pulling me into the pool and kissing me. That's what Alex used to do. Run hot, get me hooked, then act like I was the one who made it weird."

Celia wrote something on the pad then set the pen back against the binding. "You're describing a pattern. But I want to ask you something separate from that." She let a beat pass. "Do you have feelings for Mireya?"

Sena's jaw tightened. She turned her head toward the window, her eyes finding the parking lot through the blinds, the heat shimmer rising off the asphalt outside.

"Yeah, I do." Her voice dropped. "That's the problem. I want her. I think about her all the fucking time. When she texts me, when I'm babysitting Camila, when I'm in my bed at night."

"Is that what was happening before you came here today?"

Sena kept looking out the window. The clock filled the space between them for five ticks, six.

"It's okay, Sena," Celia said. "There's nothing wrong with that."

"I know there's nothing wrong with wanting someone." Sena's arms tightened around her knees. "What's wrong is wanting someone who's going to use you to figure out their shit and then throw you away when they decide they're not about it."

Celia set the legal pad on the small table beside her chair and folded her hands in her lap. "We've talked a lot about what Alex did to you. The things she said. The way she came back after and you let her. I hear you drawing that line between then and now." She paused, her fingers lacing together. "But I want you to sit with something for a moment. Has Mireya actually done anything that Alex did? Beyond being a woman you're attracted to who you're not sure about?"

"She's pregnant." Sena's head turned back from the window, her eyes hard. "She tells me she's straight then kisses me in a pool naked. How is that not the same thing?"

"Because Alex called you disgusting and told you no one would ever want you." Celia's voice stayed even, the words landing without force. "Has Mireya said anything like that to you?"

Sena shook her head. Her chin pressed harder into the top of her knees.

"So, what you're afraid of isn't what Mireya has done," Celia said. "It's what she might do."

"It's what they always do." Sena's fingers dug into her own forearm where it crossed her shin. "Every straight girl who wants to play with a lesbian until she gets bored or is done experimenting."

Celia let that sit. The clock ticked. A car started in the parking lot outside, the engine turning over and catching.

"What do you want from Mireya, Sena? If you could have exactly what you wanted."

Sena stared out the window for a long time. The bars of light on the carpet had moved another inch.

"I want her to pick me." Her voice cracked on the last word and she swallowed against it. "Not as some side thing she does when she's bored or lonely. I want her to actually want me the way I want her."

"Have you told her that?"

Sena shook her head. "I slammed her door and left."

"That's not the same thing as telling her what you need."

"I know." Sena loosened her grip on her forearm. The skin where her fingers had been pressing was white, the blood rushing back in. "But every time I think about saying it out loud, I hear Alex's voice in my head telling me I'm stupid. And I can't do that again. I can't hand someone that and watch them crush it."

"I understand that." Celia leaned forward in her chair, her elbows coming to rest on her knees. "But I want you to notice something. You let Alex back in after everything she said to you. You chose the pain of having her over the pain of losing her." She held Sena's eyes. "You already know you can survive the worst version of this."

Sena dropped her head against her knees. Her hair fell forward and covered her face. "That's not comforting."

"It's not meant to be. It's meant to remind you that you're making a decision about Mireya based on what Alex did to you. Those are two different people."

"They feel the same."

"I know they do. But you know feelings aren't always accurate."

Sena kept her head on her knees. She lifted her head. Her eyes were red, the rims wet, her mouth pulled tight. "So what, I just tell her I'm scared and hope she doesn't destroy me?"

"You tell her what you're afraid of. Not what you want from her. What you're afraid of." Celia straightened in her chair. "And then you let her respond to that. Then you'll have something real to work with instead of a projection."

"And if she says the same shit Alex said?"

"Then you'll know." Celia held her gaze steady. "And you won't have to sit in your room wondering anymore."

Sena stared at her for a moment, the red still sitting in her eyes, her jaw working once before it stilled. Then she turned and looked back out the window.

~~~


Caine walked through the tunnel at the Coliseum with Coach Riley beside him, their cleats and shoes echoing off the concrete. The noise of the crowd filtered down toward them, muffled by the walls, reduced to a low hum that vibrated in the floor. The tunnel smelled like old concrete. paint and something metallic that had been baked into the walls by decades of sun.

Riley walked with his clipboard in his hand, his polo tucked clean, his stride unhurried. He didn't look at Caine when he spoke. "This is as close to a real environment as you're going to get before August. Use it. I want to see you command that huddle from the first snap like you've been here four years."

Caine nodded.

Riley turned a page on his clipboard, glanced at it, and flipped it back. "A couple things. When you get into those empty sets, I want to see you manipulate the safeties with your eyes before you throw. Don't just read your progressions, move people." He looked over at Caine. "That's what separates you from the other guys we've had here."

"Yes sir."

"And don't be a hero. You take what the defense gives you. You don't need to impress anybody out there." Riley's voice stayed even. "The job is yours, just remind us why we went down to Georgia to make it happen."

"I hear you, Coach."

Riley stopped walking. They'd reached the mouth of the tunnel, the sunlight cutting a hard line across the turf ahead of them, the green so bright it looked painted. The noise from the stands sharpened, voices separating from the general hum into distinct pockets of sound.

Riley put his hand on Caine's shoulder pad, his grip firm, his eyes holding Caine's for a beat. "One more thing. Have some fun out there. This is the Coliseum. Enjoy it."

"That ain't gonna be a problem."

Riley nodded once, released his shoulder, and walked off toward the coaching staff gathering on the sideline. Caine watched him go for a second, then stepped out of the tunnel onto the field.

He looked up at the stands. A modest crowd filled the stadium, families with kids in USC gear, recruits sitting in clusters with their hosts, media scattered through the press box and along the sideline with cameras and phones.

He pulled his helmet on and jogged toward the sideline.



Caine walked to the line.. Cam and Derron split wide to the right, Dean in the slot between them. Xavier on the opposite side of the field, Zay in the backfield. The defense shifted before the ball was set, Mike pointing across the front seven, walking the Nick linebacker down toward the line and barking adjustments.

Caine read the look. Single high safety, cover three shell with the Nick showing blitz. He stepped forward and pointed at Mike.

"Lee! Lee!"

The Nick backed off. Malachi over Cam loosened his cushion. Caine settled back into his stance.

"Three, three. Go hit!"

Willi snapped the ball clean. Caine caught it, his fingers finding the laces as he dropped back one step, two, three. His eyes went to Xavier first, running the curl on the near side. Angel sat right in the window. He came off it. Cam broke inside on the dig across the middle, two steps ahead of Malachiwho had given him too much room at the snap. Caine planted his back foot and put it on him in stride, the ball arriving chest high as Cam turned upfield.

Cam caught it and got twelve more before Rashaun came off his angle and pushed him out of bounds at the new line of scrimmage. Twenty yards. Cam pointed back at Caine as he jogged toward the huddle.



Caine stood in the shotgun, empty set. Five receivers spread across the formation, no back beside him. The defense showed two high safeties and a four man rush.

"Two, two, go! Hit"

He took the snap and the pocket collapsed from the right side. Kona got walked back into his lap, Alonzo dipping under his outside hand and closing fast. Caine slid left, keeping his feet under him, his eyes staying downfield. Derron sat down in a zone hole between Mike and George, fifteen yards out, his hands already up.

Caine flicked the ball to him sidearm, the release coming from below his hip. The ball covered the distance on a line and hit Derron in the chest. First down.

Derron held the ball up with one hand before tossing it to a manager standing near the sideline.



First and goal from the eight. Caine took the snap from under center and opened to his left, holding the ball out to Zay. The running back hit the mesh point and Caine pulled the ball back into his stomach, watching the linebackers bite hard toward the line of scrimmage.

He rolled to his right, the cleats digging into the turf as he got outside the tackle. Xavier ran a fade to the back corner of the endzone, Walter trailing him by half a step, his hips turned the wrong direction. Caine set his feet and lofted it over the corner's outside shoulder, the ball hanging with enough touch to clear the defender and drop into the back of the endzone.

Xavier went up and pulled it down with one hand, his left arm extended above Walter’s reach, his right foot dragging the turf and his left foot coming down inside the pylon. Both feet in.

Caine pointed at him as the offense mobbed Xavier in the endzone.



Caine stood in the gun at his own thirty-five. The defense packed the box, daring him to throw underneath.

He took the snap and went through his reads. Cam ran a comeback on the boundary and the corner was all over it. Derron's route hadn't developed yet. Xavier had a safety sitting on top of him in the middle of the field. Nothing was there.

Caine tucked the ball against his forearm and took off up the middle. He hit the gap between the two linebackers before either of them could close, his shoulders turning sideways to split the space. Rachaad broke down in front of him at the fifty. Caine planted his right foot and slid to the turf, giving himself up at his own forty-nine.

Cam ran over from his side of the field and smacked the top of Caine's helmet with his open palm. "That's my fucking quarterback."



Caine took the snap and his eyes went left first, moving the safety. Alonzo came off the edge unblocked, the corner blitz arriving a half second ahead of the pocket collapsing.

Caine stepped up between the guards, feeling the rush close behind him. He planted his back foot and threw the deep ball down the right sideline, his arm coming through clean, the ball climbing on a tight spiral.

Derron had a step on his man at the twenty-five. He tracked the ball over his right shoulder, adjusting his angle without breaking stride. The ball dropped into his hands at the five. Rashaun reached for his hip and got nothing. Derron walked into the endzone untouched.

Caine held his arms out at his sides as he walked down the field.


Caine stood on the field with his helmet off and a towel around his neck. Sweat had dried on his forehead and left a salt line along his hairline. A half circle of reporters stood in front of him, recorders held out, phones angled toward his face, a cameraman off to the side with the lens trained on him.

"Caine, how does it feel to get out here in the Coliseum for the first time after coming from a Sun Belt program at Georgia Southern?"

Caine looked at the reporter who'd asked it, a man with a press badge clipped to his belt and a notebook open in his hand. "It's the same game. The field the same size, the ball the same size. The only difference is the stadium and the caliber of the guys around me." He shifted the towel on his neck. "But I been playing against good competition my whole life. Ain't nothing changed for me."

Another reporter stepped forward, a woman with a recorder in her hand. "You seemed really comfortable with the playbook already. How much time have you spent with Coach Huard this offseason?"

"A lot. Coach Huard been on me since I got here. The playbook is thick but the concepts ain't too far off from what I was running in Statesboro. It's just more tools in the toolbox."

A man near the back of the group cleared his throat. He had his phone held low, reading from a note on his screen. "Caine, I want to ask you about a photo that was circulating on social media this past week. You were pictured with some individuals who are known to be affiliated with the Tree Top Piru gang in Compton. As someone who's the face of this program, do you have any concerns about those associations?"

The other reporters shifted. A couple of heads turned toward the man who'd asked it. The cameraman adjusted his angle.

Caine stared at the reporter. His hands stayed at the ends of the towel. He let the silence sit for three seconds before he spoke.

"No, I ain't got no concerns." His voice was level. "But anybody asks the other quarterbacks in this conference about their affiliations when they're taking pictures with Klansmen at their lake houses? Politicians on some neo-Nazi stuff? Notre Dame in Indiana. Let me know when y'all ask they quarterback about who he in pictures with." He pointed at the reporter with one pinky, his arm low. "I'm a Black Latino from the Lower Ninth Ward in New Orleans. I been around hood dudes my entire life. Now, I'm supposed to act like it's a problem? Nah."

The reporter opened his mouth to follow up. Caine kept going.

"This who I am. It's who I was when I was in high school. It's who I was in Georgia. It's who I'm gonna be." He let the words land. "By the way, y'all know USC in South Los Angeles, right? You ain't gotta go far to find no Crips or Bloods. If Cam and Rachaad had been in that picture without me, nobody would've asked about it because they ain't the quarterback." His eyes moved across the group. He measured each face. "But I ain't gonna apologize for being the first USC quarterback that ain't some surfer from Orange County."

The group was still. A few of the reporters looked at each other. The woman with the recorder lowered it a fraction, then raised it back up.

Another reporter stepped in, his voice pitched to break the tension. "Caine, looking ahead to the fall schedule, what's the expectation for this team?"

"We gonna be ready and we gonna win." Caine's voice came flat and final. "Ain't nothing less acceptable at USC."

He pulled the towel off his neck and walked off the field toward the tunnel.

~~~


Autumn lay on her back in Nasir's bed with one arm behind her head and the other resting on her stomach. The sheets had bunched at her waist and her legs stretched past them, bare against the mattress. Sunlight came through the blinds, laying a thin stripe across her collarbone and the pillow beside her.

Nasir was next to her, propped up on his elbow. His fingers traced lazy circles on her hip, his thumb following the line where her skin met the waistband of her underwear. His breathing had settled back to normal. Hers had been normal for a while.

She stared at the ceiling for a moment. His dresser had a pair of sneakers on top of it and nothing else. The closet door hung open and she could see three hangers with nothing on them and a pile of clothes on the floor underneath. A glass of water on the nightstand had been there long enough for the condensation to pool on the wood.

She sat up and Nasir's hand dropped from her hip. She swung her legs off the side of the bed and leaned down, her fingers finding her shirt on the carpet where it had landed inside out. She turned it right and pulled it over her head, her hair catching for a second before she worked it free. She stood, stepping into her jeans and working them up over her hips. The denim was warm from sitting in the stripe of sun on the floor. She buttoned them and reached for her bra, threading it through the neck of her shirt and clasping it behind her back without taking the shirt off.

Nasir watched her from the bed, the sheet pulled to his chest now, one hand behind his head. "You leaving already?"

"Yeah." She smoothed the front of her shirt with one hand and checked the hem where it met her jeans. "I got some things to take care of."

She sat on the edge of the bed and leaned down for her shoes. She slid her feet into them one at a time, pushing her heel in with her finger.

Nasir sat up behind her, the headboard creaking against the wall. "Alright. Just hit me up whenever you want to come through again."

Autumn finished with her shoes and turned to look at him over her shoulder. "That's actually what I wanted to talk to you about." She turned her body the rest of the way so she faced him. "You cut, nigga. Putting you off the roster."

Nasir's eyebrows pulled together. "What you mean?"

"It's just the last time."

"What I do?"

Autumn shook her head. "You ain't do nothing. It's just run its course."

Nasir sat up more, the sheet falling to his waist, his back straightening against the headboard. His hand rubbed across his chest once. "You can't just cut a nigga off with no explanation. We been doing this for months."

"And now we're not." Autumn stood from the bed and crossed to the chair by the door. She picked up her phone from the nightstand and checked the screen, her thumb clearing two notifications before she dropped it into the purse.

"At least tell me what changed," Nasir said.

"Nothing changed." She slung the purse over her shoulder and turned back to him. "It's just time."

Nasir shook his head against the headboard, his jaw working. "That don't make no sense. You said I was the best you ever had."

Autumn snorted a laugh, her head tipping back a fraction before she leveled her eyes at him. "I said you were my best eater right now. Don't upgrade yourself."

Nasir held his hands up from the sheets, palms open. "Okay, so if I am, why would you cut that off?"

She looked at him and adjusted the strap of her purse on her shoulder.

"Because I can find another one by the end of the day." She let that land. "It's been fun, Nasir."

He dropped back against the headboard, his head hitting the wood with a soft thud. His hands fell open on the mattress beside him. "That's cold."

"You're going to be alright." She turned and walked out of his bedroom, her shoes hitting the hardwood in the hallway.

"You gonna regret this shit," he called after her from the bed.

Autumn pulled his front door open, the sunlight from outside flooding the entry and warming the side of her face. She stepped through it.

"Nigga, please."

She closed the door behind her and walked to her car.

~~~


Mireya straddled the man with her hands on his shoulders, her knees pressing into the cushion on either side of his thighs. The VIP room was small, carpeted, lit by a strip of LED running the perimeter of the ceiling that turned everything a low amber. A half-finished drink sat on the side table beside them, the ice melting down into the brown. Bass from the main floor came through the walls in a steady pulse that she matched with her hips, rolling them in slow circles, her weight shifting from one knee to the other with each rotation. Sweat had started at the small of her back and along her hairline. The oil on her skin caught the light each time she leaned forward.

The man's hands sat on her thighs. His thumbs pressed into the muscle there, working in small circles of their own that followed her movement. He watched her body, his eyes tracing down from her face to her chest to her stomach, the path unhurried, repeating itself each time she rolled forward. His ring finger caught the light when his hand shifted, a gold band thick enough to see from across a room.

His hand moved from her thigh to her midsection. His palm pressed flat against her lower belly. His fingers spread across the skin. The touch was different from everything else he'd done, slower, deliberate.

Her hips kept their rhythm, her spine loose, her shoulders rolling back on the return. Her eyes dropped to his hand on her stomach and stayed there for a beat before she brought them back to his face.

"You pregnant?" he asked.

She smiled, rolling her hips a little slower, letting the circle widen. "Maybe. That bother you, papi?"

He shook his head, his hand staying where it was, his thumb pressing gently against the skin below her navel. "Nah. My wife looked like that early on. You carrying it low. Not really showing yet."

Mireya put her hand over his on her belly, her fingers lacing between his, holding him there. "Your wife's a lucky woman."

He laughed, the sound sitting low in his chest. His eyes were still on his own hand under hers. The wedding band pressed cold against Mireya's fingers where they laced with his. "She don't do shit like this for me no more. Not since the second kid."

Mireya leaned forward, her weight shifting onto her knees, her chest pressing closer. Her mouth came near his ear, close enough that her lips moved against the skin when she spoke. The bass changed tracks on the other side of the wall, something slower, and she adjusted her rhythm to it. "That's why you got me, baby."

His breathing changed. The rise and fall of his chest shortened, the inhales coming sharper. His thumb stroked across her stomach, slow. It traced a line from one side of her belly to the other. "I'm not trying to be weird about it," he said. "It's just, you know. There's something about it."

Mireya pulled back enough to look at his face. She ran her fingers along his jaw, her thumb settling under his chin, tilting his face up toward hers.

"Tell me what you want, baby. I'm right here."

The man shifted under her, his hips adjusting on the cushion, his hands finding her thighs again and then moving back to her stomach. "How much for the full thing? With you being pregnant and all."

Mireya kept her hand on his face, her hips still moving, the circles smaller now, tighter. Her knees pressed harder into the cushion. "Tell me what that looks like for you."

"I want to fuck you." His voice dropped. "But I want you to keep talking about it. The pregnant shit. Tell me it's mine. Let me feel on your belly while I'm hitting it." He swallowed. "That whole thing."

Mireya held his eyes. Her thumb rubbed at the corner of her own mouth, slow, her gaze steady on his face. She let the bass fill the space between them for two beats, three.

"I can do that for you, papi." Her hand dropped from her mouth back to his shoulder. "How much you got on you?"

The man reached to his left where his jacket sat bunched on the cushion beside them. He pulled his wallet from the inside pocket and opened it, his thumb working through the bills, counting them out against the leather. His hands were less steady now than they'd been at the start. "I got five hundred on me."

Mireya shook her head slowly, the smile spreading, her hand sliding from his shoulder down to his chest where she pressed once with her palm. "I'll take that, baby."

"Yeah?" His shoulders dropped, the tension leaving them. He closed the wallet and set it on top of his jacket. "Awesome."

~~~


The club hit them with bass and heat the second the doors opened. Bodies packed the floor three deep from the entrance, the light cutting blue and white across faces and shoulders in strobes that made everything move in frames. The air tasted like cologne, liquor, and the particular warmth of too many people in a room built for fewer.

Cam led the way in, Derron beside him, the two of them pushing into the crowd shoulder first. Cam held his arms out wide, his voice carrying over the music. "Dogs in the house! Let's fucking go!"

Alonzo, Angel, and Rachaad came behind them. Jade, Simone, and Brooke moved through the gaps the group opened, heels clicking against the floor between bass hits. Caine walked with Autumn at his side, her arm looped through his, her stride matching his without hurrying.

Their section was up a short set of steps roped off from the main floor. Bottles already lined the table, glass catching the strobes, condensation beading down the sides. Derron slid in first and started pouring shots before anyone had sat down, his hands moving between bottles and glasses, lining them up along the edge of the table and pushing them toward the group.

Jade sat down next to Simone on the far end of the booth. Brooke took a spot near Angel and Alonzo, her purse dropping between her feet. Rachaad leaned against the edge of the booth with one foot planted on the floor, his arm stretched along the top of the seat back.

Caine sat down and Autumn slid in next to him. Her thigh pressed against his, the fabric of her dress warm where it met his jeans. Her hand settled on his thigh, her fingers resting against the inseam.

Cam passed shots down the line, glass clinking as they exchanged hands. He held his up, the liquid catching the strobe for a second before it went dark again. "To putting belt to all these niggas in the fall."

Alonzo lifted his glass. "Especially them busted ass UCLA niggas."

They threw them back. The burn hit fast. Cam slammed his glass down on the table and hissed through his teeth. Derron set his down without a sound.

Autumn placed her glass on the table and turned it once between her fingers. "Y'all always this loud?"

Cam pointed at her with the hand still holding the empty glass. "This is calm. Wait until the season start."

Autumn shook her head. Caine picked up one of the bottles and poured her another drink, tilting the glass at an angle. He handed it to her. She took it, her fingers brushing his around the glass, holding for a beat before she pulled it away and brought it to her mouth.

Derron leaned forward on the table, both forearms flat, his eyes on Caine. "You know that ball was underthrown."

Caine looked at him. "I put that shit on your back shoulder exactly where it was supposed to be."

"Nigga, it was behind me."

"And you still caught it, so what's the problem?"

Alonzo laughed from across the section, his drink raised halfway to his mouth. Cam sucked his teeth and reached for another bottle, already pouring the next round. Angel said something to Brooke that made her cover her mouth with her hand. Simone leaned toward Jade and the two of them started talking with their heads close together.

More drinks went down. The bottles on the table got lighter, the glasses stayed wet. The music shifted from whatever had been playing when they walked in to something heavier, slower, the bass dropping low enough to press against their ribs. The floor filled up below their section, bodies pressing closer together, the strobes giving way to a steady wash of purple and blue that turned the whole room into one moving thing.

Jade leaned over to Autumn and said something in her ear, her hand cupping the side of her mouth to block the noise. Autumn's eyes cut toward Caine. A smirk pulled at her mouth.

She stood up and reached her hand down to him. "Come on."

Caine took her hand and stood. She turned and pulled him down the steps onto the floor, threading them through the crowd until she found a space. She turned her back to him and pressed against his chest, her shoulder blades flat against him, her hips already finding the beat. His hands went to her hips. His fingers wrapped around the curve of them, thumbs pressing into the fabric of her dress.

She started to move and he matched her, his grip tightening on her waist as she rolled against him. The bass came up through the floor and into their bodies and she rode it, her back arching, her hips circling slow and deliberate. She reached back and put her hand on the side of his neck, her fingers sliding along his jaw, her nails grazing the skin below his ear.

"I knew you could dance," she said over her shoulder.

"Girl, I'm Black and Latino. This in my soul."

She turned her head enough that her mouth came close to his, close enough that he could feel the warmth of her breath when she spoke. "You needed the right partner, though."

Caine pulled her closer, one hand sliding from her hip to her stomach, his palm flat against her through the dress. His chin dropped to her shoulder, his mouth near her ear. "Something like that."

She ground slower into him, letting the beat carry them. The crowd pressed around them on all sides but the space they occupied was theirs. His other hand moved to her thigh, palm flat against the fabric of her dress where it had ridden up. She didn't stop him. Her hand tightened on his neck, her fingers curling into the short hair at the base of his neck.

She turned fully in his arms so they were facing each other, her chest against his, one arm looping around his neck. Her other hand pressed flat against his chest, her fingers spread over his sternum. She looked up at him. The strobe caught the line of her jaw, the gloss on her mouth, the dark of her eyes.

Caine looked down at her. His hand rested at the small of her back, his fingers pressing into the fabric there. The music kept going around them, bodies kept moving, but neither of them was following it anymore.

"I'm giving you a chance, Caine." Her eyes held his. "Don't fuck it up."

"You ain't gotta worry about that."

She pressed up on her toes and kissed him. Her lips met his and stayed there for a few seconds, the pressure soft, her hand tightening once on his chest before she pulled back. She took his hand and turned, walking them through the crowd and back up the steps to the section.

Cam saw them coming and threw both arms out. "About time, fuck nigga!"

Caine shook his head as he sat back down. Autumn slid in next to him, closer than before, her body turned into his. Her head leaned against his shoulder and she reached for her drink on the table, her fingers wrapping around the glass, her other hand finding his thigh again and settling there.
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Post by djp73 » 07 May 2026, 09:16

Jas not going to like this Sena stuff. Maybe that’s how Caine ends up a single father?
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Post by Caesar » 07 May 2026, 20:28

djp73 wrote:
07 May 2026, 09:16
Jas not going to like this Sena stuff. Maybe that’s how Caine ends up a single father?
Both Jaslene and Mireya have a pretty free definition of "relationship." Jaslene does have a man basically living with her after all.
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Post by Caesar » 07 May 2026, 20:28

Walan / Ixtli

Kevin Hargrove stood at the head of the conference table with his arms folded across his chest, the printout in front of him, two pages stapled together, the text highlighted in yellow where the quotes ran. He'd read it four times before the others arrived and had stopped finding new ways to interpret what it said.

Lincoln Riley leaned back in his chair to Hargrove's left, one ankle crossed over the opposite knee, his hands resting on the armrests.

Across the table, Marcus Tolliver from athletics communications had his laptop open, tabs stacked along the top of the browser, each one a different platform. Social media reactions. Media coverage. Message board threads. He scrolled through one of them with his index finger on the trackpad, his jaw working a piece of gum. Next to him, Dana Whitfield, senior director of communications, scrolled through her phone with her thumb, her reading glasses low on her nose, her mouth pressed into a line that hadn't moved since she sat down. At the far end of the table, Jordan Peale had a legal pad in front of him with notes already written on it in tight handwriting that ran to the edge of the margins. He held his pen loosely between two fingers and turned it end over end against the pad.

Hargrove tapped the printout with two fingers.

"We need to address this before it becomes the story of the offseason."

Riley stayed where he was. "There's nothing to address. A reporter asked a loaded question and my quarterback gave an honest answer."

Hargrove's hand flattened against the printout. "Lincoln, he compared boosters and donors to Klansmen on camera."

Riley shook his head. "That's not what he said. He said nobody asks other quarterbacks about their affiliations when they're photographed with people who have certain views. He drew a parallel. He didn't call anybody a Klansman."

Dana looked up from her phone. She pulled her glasses off and set them on the table next to her coffee cup.

"It doesn't matter what he actually said. It matters what the headline says. And right now the headline is 'USC's New Quarterback Compares Booster Events to Klan Rallies.' That's what's circulating."

Marcus turned his laptop around so the table could see the screen. The brightness caught the overhead lights and he tilted it down a few degrees.

"Social media is split. He's getting killed on with older alumni and boosters. But the general public, especially younger demographics, they're overwhelmingly on his side. He's trending nationally. The clip has twelve million views across platforms in eighteen hours."

He scrolled through one of the tabs. Comments stacked on comments, quote tweets, reposts, reaction videos already cut and reposted with captions. The engagement counters on each post ran into six and seven figures.

Dana shook her head. "That doesn't help us with the people who write checks."

Hargrove nodded, his chin dipping once. "That's my concern. I've already gotten calls this morning from three major donors asking what we're going to do about it." He unfolded his arms and placed both palms flat on the table, leaning forward on them. "Three calls before I finished my coffee."

Riley leaned forward, his elbows finding his knees, his hands clasping between them. "What are we going to do about it? Because if the answer is making him apologize, that's not happening. I'm not asking my starting quarterback to walk back something he believes because it made some donors uncomfortable."

Hargrove met Riley's eyes across the table and held the look. "Nobody's saying he has to apologize. But we need to manage this."

Nobody answered right away. Marcus closed his laptop halfway. Dana picked her glasses back up and folded them, sliding them into the breast pocket of her blazer. The air conditioning pushed through the vents above them and the fluorescent panels hummed at a frequency just low enough to sit beneath the silence.

Jordan stopped turning his pen. He set it down on the legal pad and straightened in his chair.

"Can I say something?"

Hargrove gestured toward him with an open hand.

Jordan picked the pen back up and pointed it at the printout without touching it. "I've been looking at this from the brand side and I think we're looking at this wrong. Caine's demographic appeal is off the charts. He's bilingual, he's from a nontraditional background, he's got a story that connects with communities we've never been able to reach. If we try to sand down his edges, we lose the thing that makes him marketable in the first place."

Dana turned in her chair to face him. "Jordan, we're not talking about marketing right now. We're talking about donor relations."

Jordan held up one hand, the pen between his fingers. "I understand that, but the donors who are upset are going to be upset regardless. They were upset when we recruited players from Compton and Watts, too." He flipped back a page on his legal pad and ran his finger down the margin. "What I'm saying is there are new pipelines here. Brands that specifically want athletes who are outspoken, who have authenticity. Nike, for example, they're already in business with him. You think they're upset about this? This is exactly what they want."

Marcus opened his laptop back up and nodded. "He's not wrong. The engagement numbers are insane. If we position this correctly, Caine becomes the face of a new era for the program. Not just on the field."

Hargrove looked at Riley. His fingers drummed once against the tabletop, the sound flat on the polished wood.

"What's your read on him? Is he going to keep doing this?"

Riley sat back in his chair. He ran his tongue across the inside of his cheek and let the question sit before he answered it.

"He's going to be himself. That's what I recruited him to do. He's not a problem. He's a twenty year old kid from New Orleans who doesn't know how to be anybody else." He paused, his hand lifting off the armrest and turning palm up, a gesture that opened and closed in the same motion. "And I'd rather have that than some polished media-trained robot who can't lead a team."

Hargrove pulled the chair out from behind him and sat down. He ran his hand over his face, his palm dragging from his forehead down past his jaw, his fingers pressing against his closed eyes for a second before falling away.

"Alright." He looked at Dana. "Draft something. Not an apology. A statement from the program about supporting our student athletes and their right to speak on their own experiences. Keep it broad."

Dana nodded, already reaching for her phone.

Hargrove pointed at Jordan. "And put together a deck on those new pipelines you're talking about. If we're going to take heat for this, I want to see what the upside looks like."

Jordan pulled the cap off his pen with his teeth and wrote something at the top of a fresh page. "I'll have it by Friday."

Hargrove looked around the table, his eyes moving from face to face. "Anything else?"

Nobody spoke. Marcus closed his laptop all the way. Dana slid her phone into her pocket. Jordan capped his pen and tucked it into the spiral of his legal pad.

Hargrove nodded once.

"Then let's move on before somebody else decides to ask our quarterback a stupid question."

~~~


Ramon pulled into the lot and parked at the far end where the asphalt cracked along a seam and weeds pushed through in thin yellow stalks. The refinery stacks rose behind the strip across the road, silver columns against a sky that had gone white with haze, the flare tips burning off gas in pale tongues that bent with whatever wind moved up there. The air tasted like sulfur and heated metal even through the closed windows.

E.J. and Bodie were already there, leaning against Bodie's truck two spots over, E.J. with his arms folded and one foot propped on the bumper, Bodie with a toothpick pinched between his front teeth and his hands in his pockets. They pushed off the truck when Ramon's door opened.

E.J. walked over and dapped him up, pulling him in by the hand and slapping his back once before stepping back.

"You look tired as fuck, nigga."

Ramon rubbed the heel of his palm across his eye. "I been driving since five."

Bodie came around the front of the truck and dapped Ramon, the toothpick shifting to the other side of his mouth. "Y'all ready? Pat waiting on us."

Ramon nodded, rolling his neck once, the vertebrae popping in a chain. "Where we going?"

"He got a spot off Gulfway. A car wash. It's close enough to walk."

E.J. reached down and adjusted the pistol on his waistband, pulling the hem of his shirt over it until the fabric fell straight. The grip left a faint impression through the cotton but nothing that read from more than a few feet. The three of them started walking, cutting across the lot and onto the sidewalk that ran along the strip. A beauty supply store had its door propped open with a milk crate, a woman inside visible through the glass talking on her phone with a box of extensions under her arm. A tire shop two doors down had a compressor running, the hiss and thud of it carrying across the pavement.

They reached the car wash. Two bays with the roll-up doors open, neither of them running, the tracks inside dark with standing water and soap residue that had dried into white streaks on the concrete. A vacuum station ran along the side wall, three units mounted on a metal post, the hoses coiled and hanging. Pat was in a plastic chair near the vacuum station with his legs spread wide and his elbows on his knees. Two of his guys stood behind him, one on each side. Ramon recognized the one on the left as Eddie, stocky through the shoulders, a gold chain resting flat against the collar of his polo. The other one was younger, early twenties at most, his hands in the front pocket of his hoodie, his eyes already tracking the three of them as they crossed the lot.

Pat saw them coming and stood up from the chair, pushing it back with his calf. He walked over to meet them at the edge of the lot, his stride unhurried.

"Ramon, right? Duke's people."

Ramon nodded once. "Yeah. Appreciate you meeting with us."

Pat looked at Bodie, then back at Ramon. "Bodie vouched for you so I'm here. But I'ma be honest, I don't know y'all like that. I knew Trell. I knew Peanut before him. I don’t know you niggas."

Ramon kept his hands at his sides, his weight even on both feet. " We ain't asking you to trust us overnight. We just looking to do business."

Pat sucked the inside of his cheek, studying Ramon's face. "What kind of business? Because the product pipeline been fucked since Trell went down and I been going through Houston for my shit."

"We ain't here about product. We got that handled. What we need is poles."

Pat's eyebrows went up. He turned his head and looked back at Eddie, who stood with his arms folded, his expression flat. Pat turned back to Ramon.

"Guns."

Ramon nodded.

"Duke want to get a pipeline set up. Trell used to move them but that shit dried up with him. We know y'all close enough to the border and y'all had connections with the cartels."

Pat sucked his teeth, the sound sharp between his front ones. "Peanut had them connections. Not me. When Peanut died, them eses stopped picking up the phone for us."

Eddie stepped forward, his arms unfolding, one hand coming up with a finger extended. "That ain't exactly true. Gustavo's people still come through. It's just Julio's side that went to shit after Trell died because Julio was the one dealing with Trell directly."

Pat held his hand up without turning around. "I'm talking, nigga."

Eddie stepped back. His jaw shifted once and his arms folded again, the gold chain catching light where it pressed against his collar.

Pat looked at Ramon, his eyes narrowing. "I might know somebody. But I need to know what y'all moving and how much before I put my neck out. I ain't bringing cartel problems to my doorstep for some lil' niggas from New Orleans moving a couple pistols."

Ramon held the look. "Respectfully, OG, we ain't talking about a couple pistols. The whole set. Rifles, switches, whatever they can get across. We don’t play in the kiddie pool, nigga."

Pat chewed on that. His tongue moved behind his lower lip and his eyes went from Ramon to Bodie and back. He was still for a few seconds, his hands loose at his sides, his weight settling into his heels.

"Let me make some calls. I got a cousin in Laredo who still talk to some people. But this shit take time and I ain't rushing it because y'all in a hurry."

"We ain't in no hurry," Ramon said. "I just need to let my big bruddas know that the shit in motion."

Pat nodded, one dip of his chin. "The door's cracked. That's all I'm giving you right now."

He held his hand out. Ramon took it.

"Bodie got my number," Pat said. "When I know something, I'll reach out through him."

"Appreciate it."

Pat nodded toward Eddie and the younger guy and the three of them turned and walked off toward a truck parked behind the car wash, their shapes cutting across the concrete and disappearing around the corner of the building.

Ramon, E.J., and Bodie stood at the edge of the lot. The vacuum station ticked behind them as the metal expanded in the heat. Across the road the refinery stacks pushed their flares into the haze, the flames pale against the white sky.

E.J. rubbed the back of his neck. "I wonder how that nigga Trell got him to make decisions faster."

Ramon watched the corner where Pat had gone. "Probably some weird shit."

Bodie spat his toothpick out onto the pavement, the wet end catching the light for a second before it rolled into a crack. "This Texas, bruh. No one move fast here."

Ramon nodded. The three of them started walking back toward the lot.

~~~


Caine had his feet on the coffee table, his ankles crossed, the takeout plate beside him with the foil peeled back and a few grains of rice stuck to the cardboard where the sauce had dried. The television was on but muted, a rerun of something playing in colors that moved across the floor without sound. Light came through the windows and pressed flat against the hardwood, catching the edge of the marble island in the kitchen.

Autumn was on the other end of the sectional with her legs stretched across the cushions between them, her feet close enough to his thigh that the toe of her sock brushed the fabric of his joggers when she shifted. She scrolled through her phone with her thumb, the screen reflecting off her face in a pale glow, her other hand resting on her stomach.

Caine looked over at her. "What was you like as a kid?"

Autumn kept scrolling. "Why?"

"Because I want to know."

She locked her phone and set it on her stomach. Her eyes went to the ceiling and stayed there for a moment, her jaw working once before she spoke.

"I was a lot. My daddy's words, not mine."

Caine turned his head on the back of the couch to face her. "A lot how?"

Autumn shifted on the cushion, tucking one arm behind her head, her elbow pointing toward the window. "I was an only child with a father who was never home and a mother who analyzed everything I did for a living. So I learned how to perform early."

"What that mean?"

"Like, I knew when to be the perfect daughter. Dinner with my dad's political people, I was polished. Knew how to shake hands, when to speak, when to shut up. I could read a room by the time I was ten."

Caine's thumb pressed once against the side of his knee. "I don’t know if that’s a lot. Had your ass trained sound like."

Autumn looked over at him, her eyebrows lifting. "That's actually a really good way to put it." She paused, her finger tracing the edge of her phone on her stomach. "My daddy is a political fixer."

Caine shook his head. "That explain a few things about you."

Autumn snorted a laugh, her nose wrinkling. "What's that supposed to mean?"

"You always sizing motherfuckers up. Like you trying to figure out what they want before they even talk. Trying to see what buttons to press to get them to do what you want them to do."

Autumn stared at him.. She sat up, pulling her legs off the couch and folding them under her, her weight settling forward on the cushion.

"See, that's the shit that throws me off about you. You say things like that and I forget you're twenty."

"I can’t be perceptive?" He let his head rest against the back of the couch, his eyes steady on her. "Tell me more though. What were you like any other time?"

Autumn looked down at her hands in her lap, turning one palm over and studying it.

"Lonely, honestly. Baldwin Hills is nice. Beautiful houses, nice cars, good schools. But everybody's parents were doing something. My daddy was in Sacramento half the time, DC the other half. My mama had her practice. I spent a lot of time by myself."

"Shit, I had the opposite problem. I couldn't get five minutes alone. Mi mama, mi abuelita. Had about 12 of us living in that house. Cousins, aunts, uncle. Everyone in my business."

Autumn's head tilted. "That sounds nice."

"Nah. That shit fucking ass. You know how hard it was to get some pussy when it’s buku people in the house? I used to have to go in the shed."

Autumn laughed. She pulled her hair over one shoulder and ran her fingers through it, working out a tangle near the ends, the strands catching on her rings before sliding free.

"I think that's why I wanted to be like my daddy so bad. Because when he was home, everything stopped for him. My mama stopped working. The phone stopped ringing. He just, commanded the room without trying. That’s what I want.”

"Yes?"

Autumn nodded, her fingers still in her hair. " I like being in charge. I'm good at it."

Caine reached over and took her foot, pulling it into his lap. His thumb pressed into the arch and moved in a slow circle, working into the muscle. Autumn watched his hand for a moment, the pressure of his thumb drawing a line from the ball of her foot down toward the heel. Then she laid back against the arm of the couch, her head settling into the crook of her elbow.

"Nobody's ever asked me that before."

"Asked you what?"

"What I was like as a kid. Most guys just want to know what I'm like right now."

Caine kept his thumb working along the arch, his grip loose around her ankle, his eyes on the muted television and then back on her.

"I told you I’m different."

Autumn stared at him. The light through the windows had shifted since they'd been talking, the rectangles on the floor longer now, reaching further into the room. Her chest rose once and settled.

"Dangerous, maybe."

He looked over at her. "What you mean?"

"You throw me off. I never know if you bullshitting or not."

"Feeling’s mutual."

Autumn let her head rest against the arm of the couch, her eyes on him.

~~~


Mireya had her bag on the chair next to her and a coffee in front of her that had stopped steamingShe sat with one elbow on the table and her chin resting on the heel of her hand, her eyes across the university center.

Sena sat across from her. Earbuds in, one leg bouncing under the table, her eyes on her laptop screen. Her fingers moved across the keyboard in short bursts, pausing, then starting again. The light from the screen caught the underside of her jaw and the bridge of her nose.

She hadn't looked up since Mireya sat down.

Mireya glanced at her. Sena's mouth held its line, her attention locked on whatever she was reading, her posture pulled forward and away, everything angled toward the screen. Mireya looked away and pulled her phone out, her thumb moving through her feed. She glanced again a few seconds later. Sena's leg kept bouncing, the vibration carrying through the table just enough to move the surface of the coffee in its cup. A strand of Sena's hair had come loose from behind her ear and hung against her cheek. She tucked it back without looking up.

Mireya turned back to her phone. The overhead lights cast everything in that flat wash that made the whole room feel the same temperature and the same hour regardless of what was happening outside. She scrolled past a reel, past a story, past a photo someone had tagged her in from weeks ago that she'd already seen. Her thumb slowed and she glanced up one more time. Sena's fingers had stopped on the keyboard, her hand resting flat on the keys, but her eyes stayed on the screen. Mireya looked back down.

Frankie dropped into the chair at the end of the table, her backpack hitting the floor with a thud that made the salt shaker rattle against the napkin dispenser. She blew air through her lips and let her head fall back, her braids swinging over the top of the chair.

"Y'all look like somebody died."

Mireya snorted a laugh. "Just tired."

Sena pulled one earbud out but kept her eyes on her laptop.

Frankie leaned back in her chair, stretching her arms above her head, her knuckles cracking as she laced her fingers and pushed them toward the ceiling. She dropped her hands into her lap and looked between the two of them.

"Damn, for real though. Did somebody die? Because this energy is fucked."

Mireya waved her off. "We're fine. Long week."

Frankie sucked her teeth and let it go. She pulled her phone out, checked something, put it back.

"Did y'all get your HESI scores back?"

Mireya nodded. "Yeah."

"And?"

Mireya picked up her coffee, brought it to her mouth, and took a sip. The coffee was cold and she swallowed it without reacting, setting the cup back on the table and turning it once in her hand before letting go. "I passed."

Frankie slapped the table, her palm landing flat on the laminate. "Bitch, me too. What'd you get?"

"87."

Frankie's eyebrows went up. She leaned back in her chair, her hand still flat on the table. "That's crazy good. I got an 82 and I thought I was doing something." She turned toward Sena, one arm draped over the back of her chair. "What about you, Sena?"

Sena closed her laptop halfway, the screen angling down until the light from it cut off. "I passed. 98."

Frankie leaned forward, her mouth opening before the words caught up. "Ninety-girl? Girl, what the fuck."

Sena shrugged, her hand resting on the edge of her laptop. "I studied a lot."

Frankie looked at Mireya. "You hear this bitch? Studied a lot. Like she didn't just smoke the whole fucking curve."

Mireya looked at Sena. The corner of her mouth pulled up.

"That's really good, Sena. You killed it, but we knew you would."

Sena glanced at her. The look lasted a second, maybe less, her eyes meeting Mireya's and then pulling back to the screen. "Thanks." She opened the laptop again, her fingers finding the keyboard.

Frankie shook her head, still grinning. "I swear to God, Sena, when we get into HSC you gonna have to tutor the rest of us."

Sena's mouth twitched at one corner but she kept typing. "I'm not tutoring anybody. Y'all can study on your own."

"Cold," Frankie said. She crossed her arms over her chest and looked at Mireya. "You believe that? We been riding together this whole time and she gonna leave us for dead once we get in."

Mireya pushed her chair back and stood up. "I'll be right back."

She walked across the enter toward the food counter along the far wall, her stride unhurried, weaving between a guy balancing a tray on one hand while texting with the other and two girls who had stopped in the middle of the floor to look at a phone screen together, their heads tilted at the same angle. The food counter ran behind a glass partition, pastries and wrapped sandwiches and fruit cups arranged on shelves behind the sneeze guard. A woman in a visor restocked a tray of muffins, sliding them into rows with her gloved hand. Mireya stood behind one other person in line, her weight on one hip, her eyes moving across the shelves. When the person ahead of her stepped to the register, she leaned forward and pointed at something on the second shelf. The woman behind the counter pulled it out with tongs and set it on a napkin. Mireya paid, tapping it against the reader, and picked up the napkin.

She came back to the table and set the pastry down next to Sena's laptop without a word. The edges were golden brown, sugar crystals pressed into the top, the napkin already going translucent where the butter soaked through. She dropped back into her chair and pulled her phone out.

Sena looked at the pastry. Then at Mireya.

Mireya was already scrolling, her thumb moving down the screen, her face giving nothing. Her eyes stayed on her phone.

Sena looked back at the pastry. Her hand came off the keyboard, slow, and pulled the napkin closer to her. The pastry slid across the table an inch. She broke a small piece off the corner, the sugar crumbling onto the napkin, and put it in her mouth. She chewed, her eyes drifting back to the screen, the napkin resting against the edge of her laptop where she'd placed it.

Frankie’s eyes moved from the pastry to Sena's face to Mireya's phone and back again, her chin dipping, her mouth pulling flat. She drummed her fingers once on the table, then clapped her hands together.

"Okay, we need to celebrate. Let's go out this weekend. Bourbon, Frenchmen, wherever. We earned it."

Mireya set her phone down. "I'm down."

Frankie looked at Sena.

Sena shook her head, her eyes on her screen. "I can't. I got stuff going on this weekend."

"Shit like what? Studying for something we already passed?"

Sena put her earbud back in, her thumb pressing it into place. "Just stuff, Frankie."

Frankie held her hands up. "Alright, alright." She dropped her hands to the table and tapped it twice. "Just me and you then, Mireya."

Mireya nodded but her eyes stayed on Sena for a beat longer. Sena's face held its expression, her attention on the laptop, her fingers moving across the keys, her posture angled forward and closed. Her other hand reached over and pulled another piece off the pastry.

Mireya turned back to Frankie.

"Yeah, just let me know when and where."
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djp73
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Post by djp73 » 08 May 2026, 05:43

Caesar wrote:
07 May 2026, 20:28
"We ain't here about product. We got that handled. What we need is poles."

Pat's eyebrows went up. He turned his head and looked back at Eddie, who stood with his arms folded, his expression flat. Pat turned back to Ramon.
Pat: :pause:
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Post by Captain Canada » 08 May 2026, 10:11

I know Sena is going to fold, but I'm glad she's not involving herself with the mess that is Mireya Rosas.

Of course, Caine involving himself in more than he probably should
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Post by Caesar » 08 May 2026, 20:45

djp73 wrote:
08 May 2026, 05:43
Caesar wrote:
07 May 2026, 20:28
"We ain't here about product. We got that handled. What we need is poles."

Pat's eyebrows went up. He turned his head and looked back at Eddie, who stood with his arms folded, his expression flat. Pat turned back to Ramon.
Pat: :pause:
:ruok:
Captain Canada wrote:
08 May 2026, 10:11
I know Sena is going to fold, but I'm glad she's not involving herself with the mess that is Mireya Rosas.

Of course, Caine involving himself in more than he probably should
She in deep with Mireya already. It'll be a good growth oppo.

Caine: :whatido:
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Post by Caesar » 08 May 2026, 20:45

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Post by Caesar » 08 May 2026, 20:45

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Post by Caesar » 08 May 2026, 20:45

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