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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 25 May 2026, 20:43

Kamana / Celia

Sara pulled into the driveway and put the SUV in park, the engine ticking under the hood as she turned it off. She sat with her hands on the wheel for a beat, her thumbs resting against the leather where the stitching ran in a ridge along the top, the light catching the dust on the dashboard.

A yawn pulled through her jaw and up into her temples, her eyes closing, her shoulders lifting then dropping with it. She ran her hand through her hair, fingers pulling through the strands where they’d fallen loose from the clip she’d put in before she left the hospital.

She stepped down onto the concrete and the humidity pressed against her arms and the back of her neck before she’d closed the door. She reached back into the SUV for her purse on the passenger seat, her fingers finding the strap and pulling it toward her across the leather as she pushed the door shut with her hip.

She was halfway up the driveway when Jabari came out his front door and crossed the strip of grass between the properties, his stride easy, his feet carrying him to the edge of her concrete.

He held a hand up. “Hey, it feels like I ain’t seen you in a lil’ minute.”

Sara nodded, another yawn catching her before she could answer, her hand coming up to cover her mouth while the purse strap slid down her shoulder an inch. She caught it with the crook of her elbow. “It’s been a long couple of weeks. My second granddaughter was born. But she came early. Been in the NICU.”

The ease in Jabari’s face pulled back, his brow drawing down, his weight planting on both feet. “Damn, Sara. I’m sorry to hear that. How’s she doing?”

“Thank you. She’s fighting. That’s all we can really ask right now. That and praying for the Virgin Mary to cover her, you know.”

“Absolutely, but with you as a mawmaw, I already know she got it in her blood.”

Sara rolled her eyes. “You make me sound so old when you call me that.”

Jabari held his hands up. “Aged like a fine wine.”

“Flattery don’t get you nowhere.”

He dropped his hands and shifted his weight onto one foot, crossing his arms, his forearms settling against each other. His eyes moved over her face, and he nodded toward the house behind her.

“Was that your boy I saw over here the other day? Tall guy with dreads?”

Sara nodded. “Him and his girlfriend I’m guessing.”

Jabari’s eyebrows furrowed, the lines between them deepening. “Different girl from the one having the baby?”

“Yeah. He met her in LA apparently. After he’d gotten Mireya pregnant.”

His mouth pulled to one side and he sucked his teeth once. “Hopefully he’s smart enough to wrap it up.”

Sara snorted a laugh. “Something tells me she’s too smart to get knocked up when she doesn’t want to.”

“God’s time ain’t always our time though.”

Sara’s thumb found the seam of the purse strap and pressed along it. “No, it’s not.”

A car passed on the street behind them, the tires hissing on the asphalt.

“How about you?” Jabari said. “How are you holding up in all of this?”

“I’m tired, but I’m not the one going through the worst of it so I’m okay.”

“You still need to make sure you’re good. You no good to that baby if you falling out.”

Sara’s hand tightened on the purse strap, her fingers pressing into the canvas. “You’re not wrong but I worked enough long hours in hotels to know how to manage.”

“Well, let me know if you need anything.”

She looked at him across the few feet of concrete between them, the weight of the last two weeks sitting behind her eyes, in the set of her mouth and in the pull across her shoulders.

“Do you want to come in?”

Jabari raised an eyebrow. “Yeah. What you need?”

Sara turned to the door, her keys already in her hand from the ignition, and slid one into the deadbolt. The lock turned and she pushed the door open, the cool air from inside pressing past her. “Just shut up and come in.”

A grin pulled at the corner of his mouth. He followed her through the door, his footsteps falling into pace behind hers on the hardwood, and the door swung shut behind them.

~~~


Autumn came through the entrance at Canal Place with her phone pressed to her ear, her bag over one shoulder, her stride slowing a half step as the air conditioning cut through the warmth she’d carried in from the street. The atrium opened ahead of her in tiers of glass and polished stone, storefronts lining both sides, a few shoppers moving between them.

“I never realized how little I could do this spur of the moment shit until this last week.”

Nadine’s voice came through the speaker even and measured. “I wouldn’t have advised a client of mine to pick up and fly across the country like you did. It was a little rash.”

“A little?”

“I’m hedging. Most people could talk themselves into doing either if they sat with it long enough.”

Autumn walked into a boutique off the main corridor, the racks spaced wide enough to move between, the fabrics running from linen to silk along the wall display in a gradient that caught the overhead lighting at different sheens. She trailed her fingers along the shoulder of a dress hanging at the end of the nearest rack, the cotton cool under her fingertips, and kept walking past it toward the back of the store.

“I think you used to say to me that there wasn’t a playbook for life, and you couldn’t plan everything.”

Nadine laughed. “I did say that. That doesn’t mean you get to use my own words against me. I’m sure there was plenty of your daddy in your decision.”

“I wanted to know what I was dealing with. It’s one thing to be told. It’s another thing to see for yourself.”

“And what is that you are dealing with?”

Autumn moved deeper into the boutique, her fingers brushing the edge of a display table stacked with folded tops, her eyes passing over them without stopping. A saleswoman near the register looked up and Autumn gave her a nod.

“His baby mama is with a woman.”

Nadine let a beat pass on the other end of the line. “Can’t say I was expecting you to say that.”

“I don’t think he knew either. Seemed like only his mama knew.”

“What do you make of that?”

“All things considered, it makes me feel as though she ain’t exactly going to be running back to him anytime soon.”

“Perhaps. What do you make of her? The mother?”

Autumn stopped at a rack near the fitting rooms and pulled a blouse out by the hanger, holding it at arm’s length, her eyes running down the seams. “She’s intense on some shit. I thought it was just because of what happened, but nope. That’s just how she is.”

“Caine was like that when I met him the other day.”

Autumn sucked her teeth and pushed the blouse back into the rack, the hangers clicking against each other as it settled. “Psh. He was all aw shucks, yes ma’am, no ma’am.”

“You can see it in his eyes.”

Autumn pulled another top from the rack and checked the tag, her thumb pressing the fabric back to read the size. “He has me staying there. At his baby mama’s house.”

Nadine’s laugh came through the speaker sharp enough that Autumn pulled the phone a half inch from her ear. “You agreed to that? My daughter?”

“It’s a nice house.”

“Why?”

Autumn shrugged, her shoulder lifting and dropping. “I don’t know. I just feel like now’s the make or break for this whole thing and if I’m going to invest in it, then I’m going to invest in it.”

She put the top back and moved along the rack, her fingers finding the hangers and pushing them one at a time, the metal scraping against the bar.

“That’s a way to think about it. All relationships are gambles,” Nadine said.

“You never drop the psychologist talk.”

“That was mama advice. But I’d say the same thing as a psychologist.”

“Yeah, probably.”

Nadine let a beat sit on the line before she spoke again, the silence carrying the faint sound of something in the background on her end. “How long are you staying out there?”

“Playing it by ear.”

“Hopefully, you’re making the most of it then.”

Autumn stopped at a display near the front window where the light from the atrium came through the glass and caught the colors of the fabrics on the table. She picked up a top off the rack beside it and held it against her chest with one hand, the fabric draping over her fingers, her chin dipping to check where the hem fell.

“If I was doing that, I’d be learning Spanish while I’m down here.”

~~~


Sena came through the front door and dropped her keys into the dish on the side table, the metal rattling once against the porcelain. She pulled her bag off her shoulder and let the strap slide down her arm into her hand.

Cassidy was on the pole in the middle of the living room, her legs wrapped around the chrome at the calf, her body tilted at an angle that looked like it was supposed to be a lean but read closer to a controlled fall. Her phone sat on a tripod three feet from the base, the screen facing her. She lowered herself down the chrome in increments, her arms shaking where they gripped above her head, and her feet found the carpet. Her weight dropped out of her hands and she sat down hard, one leg folding under her, her palm slapping the floor beside her hip to catch the rest of her body.

She stood, pulling at the hem of her tank top where it had ridden up past her ribs and saw Sena at the door.

“Damn, where you been? I feel like I haven’t seen you in a week.”

Sena walked past the tripod and set her bag on the arm of the couch. “I’ve been at Mireya’s mostly. Or at my parents.”

“Mireya. That’s the hot Latina that was in here spinning around on the pole like a pro?”

“Yeah.”

Cassidy reached for her water bottle on the floor beside the tripod, her fingers closing around it and bringing it to her mouth. She took a long pull and wiped the back of her hand across her lips. “I thought y’all just went to school together, not stay for a week at her house close.”

Sena ran her hand through her hair, the strands catching between her fingers as they pulled through, and a laugh pushed through her nose. “Uh, yeah. She’s my, uh, girlfriend?”

Cassidy’s hand stopped on the water bottle. She looked at Sena for a long beat, her eyes narrowing a fraction, her mouth pulling to one side before the rest of her face caught up.

“Damn. You’ve been hiding that you’re into girls from us this whole time?”

Sena shrugged. “I guess.”

“Well, I only seen her once but she was fucking hot so I’d definitely start batting for the other team if she tried to pick me up.”

Sena rolled her eyes and gestured toward the pole, her hand sweeping from the base plate to the ceiling mount. “I’m gonna leave you to that. I just came to get some more clothes before going back to Mireya’s.”

Cassidy held her hands up. “Don’t let me keep you from your hot lesbian sex with your hot lesbian Latina. But I’ll just say that I’m pretty jealous.”

Sena shook her head as she turned down the hall toward her bedroom, Cassidy’s laugh following her until she pushed the door open and stepped inside.

She set her bag on the bed and crossed to the dresser. The top drawer slid open under her fingers, and she pulled two shirts from the stack, folding them once against her forearm before she tossed them onto the comforter beside the bag. She opened the second drawer and pulled a pair of leggings out, pressing the fold flat before adding them to the pile.

Her phone vibrated in her pocket. She pulled it out and tilted the screen toward her, her thumb resting against the edge of the case.

Alex.

The text sat on the lock screen in a gray bubble: when can we hang out

Sena let a breath out and tapped the notification. The thread opened to the last few messages between them, short and spaced further apart. She typed back that she’d been busy, her thumb moving across the keyboard in two short passes.

The three dots appeared at the bottom of the screen almost immediately.

with your girlfriend?

She typed back: Yeah. I’ll see if I have some time next week.

She sent it and waited. The dots appeared again, held for a beat longer this time before the message came through.

I miss you, Sena.

She stood in the middle of her bedroom with the phone in her hand, the screen bright against her palm, the pile of clothes on the bed behind her. Her thumb hovered over the keyboard. The cursor blinked in the empty text field at the bottom of the screen.

She pressed the side button and the screen went dark. She slid the phone back into her pocket and walked to the closet, pulled a pair of jeans off the shelf, and carried them to the bed.

~~~


came down the corridor toward the NICU, Mireya at his shoulderThe fluorescents ran in a long unbroken strip above them and the tile carried their footsteps back in overlapping echoes that thinned as they moved.

“Where does Autumn live? In LA?”

Caine looked over at her. “This area called Baldwin Hills.”

Mireya nodded as she stepped around a wheelchair parked against the wall with its brake locked and its seat folded up. “Sounds fancy as fuck.”

“It’s pretty nice on some shit. Ain’t like you ain’t living in some nice shit, too, though.”

“I ain’t say I was feeling inferior to her, Caine. I just asked a question.”

Caine held his hands up. They passed a nurses’ station where a woman was writing something on a whiteboard mounted to the wall behind the desk, her marker squeaking against the surface in short strokes.

“That shit with Sena serious?”

Mireya nodded. “Yeah, it’s serious.”

“Didn’t know you were into women like that.”

Mireya looked at him. A smirk pulled at the corner of her mouth. “What’s wrong? ¿Te da miedo que haya estado pensando en el coño todos estos años mientras me follabas?”

Caine laughed. “I ain’t worried about that. Just because you decided you like pussy, too, don’t mean you ain’t love this dick.”

Mireya snorted a laugh as they came to the NICU door. Tanya saw them through the glass and crossed to open it, the lock buzzing as the door swung wide.

They scrubbed in at the station inside the entrance, the steps compressed now into something their hands moved through without thinking. Faucet, soap, lather worked between the fingers and under the nails and up past the wrists. Caine dried his hands on the paper towels and pulled a gown off the rack, sliding his arms through and reaching behind his back for the strings. Mireya tied hers at the front, her fingers working the knot by feel, her eyes already on the unit beyond the partition. They pulled masks from the box on the shelf and looped them over their ears, pressed the metal strip across the bridge of their noses.

They walked to Micaela’s isolette. Mireya brought her hand up toward the porthole, her fingers open, her palm turning flat to slide through the gasket. Tanya stepped beside her.

“Do you want to hold her?”

Mireya’s hand hung in the air. Her fingers stayed open, suspended between her body and the porthole, the distance she had closed every visit since the first day now held in a gap she had stopped crossing. She looked up at Tanya and her lips parted behind the mask.

“Really?”

Tanya nodded. “Her doctor said she’s progressed enough to be held when she did the rounds earlier.”

Mireya looked at Caine. He met her eyes over the top of his mask, and she turned back to Tanya, nodding, her voice pressing thin against the cotton. “Yeah, I mean. Of course. Please.”

Tanya smiled behind her mask, the corners of her eyes creasing. She gestured to the chair on the other side of the isolette. “We’ll just have you open that gown and take off your shirt so it’s skin to skin.”

Mireya’s hands went to the ties at the front of the gown, but Caine reached out and moved them back, his fingers closing around her wrists and lowering them.

“I got you. So you don’t have to go wash your hands again.”

Mireya nodded. Caine untied the gown and pulled it open, then gathered the hem of her shirt and worked it over her arms and her head while she held still. He settled the gown back over her shoulders, the cotton falling open at the front, and Mireya held the edges with her elbows pinned to her sides as she walked around the isolette to the chair.

She sat down. Her hands came to rest on her thighs, palms flat, her chest bare except for her bra under the parted gown. Her breathing had changed. The rhythm of it had gone shallow at the top, each breath pulling in short and releasing before it reached the bottom of her lungs.

Tanya unlatched the top of the isolette and lifted the panel. She reached inside with both hands, sliding her fingers under Micaela’s back, cradling the base of her head in the curve of her palm. She lifted her, gathering the trailing wires and the IV line against her forearm with her other hand as Micaela came free of the plastic. The wires swayed once and settled against Tanya’s sleeve. She turned toward Mireya and held her out.

Mireya’s hands came off her thighs. She reached forward, and her fingers slid under Tanya’s, and the weight transferred between them. Mireya brought her to her chest in a motion that traveled from her hands up through her wrists and her forearms and into her shoulders as she drew Micaela against her.

Micaela’s cheek found the skin above Mireya’s sternum. The contact was warm and immediate, Micaela’s face turning a fraction into Mireya’s chest, her mouth working once against the skin. Her hand came up from where it had rested against her own stomach and curled against Mireya, the fingers closing around nothing, the knuckles pressing soft into the space between her breasts. Her other hand opened and closed once and then settled flat against Mireya’s rib.

Mireya’s arms closed around her. The gown fell wider at the shoulders and the cotton bunched at her elbows where she held it open with the angle of her arms, her hands cradling Micaela’s back and the base of her head, her palms covering so much of her daughter that the fingers overlapped against each other on the far side. She could feel the heartbeat through Micaela’s ribs against her chest, quick and light.

Caine came around the isolette and stood beside the chair. His hand found Mireya’s shoulder, his palm settling against the gown.

Mireya’s eyes filled. The first tear broke from her lower lid and tracked down her cheek into the mask, the cotton darkening where the moisture hit. She looked down at her daughter’s face against her chest. At the closed lids. At the lashes pressed to her skin. At the small mouth working once more against nothing and then going still.

She pressed her lips together behind the mask and the tears came faster, running from both eyes now, catching in the cotton at her chin. Her arms tightened around Micaela by a fraction and Micaela’s body settled deeper against her chest with the pressure, the warmth of her spreading across Mireya’s skin.

“Es tan hermosa.”

“Eso se debe a mis buenos genes.”

Mireya snorted a laugh, and Micaela shifted against her chest, her hand tightening once and loosening.

And Mireya’s eyes stayed on her.
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redsox907
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American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 25 May 2026, 22:01

Caesar wrote:
25 May 2026, 14:21
There was little to no mental illness in that update outside of Caine's self-soothing by making those mugs perfectly straight.
:martin:

Autumn the only normal one in that entire house right now

Sara getting some pick me up dick, eh.

Glad they finally got to hold the baby

Soapy
Posts: 15367
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

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Post by Soapy » 26 May 2026, 05:45

Caesar wrote:
24 May 2026, 20:25
You struggled with reading comprehension in school, didn't you? It's clear the longest Caine spent not at the hospital in this spell was in that previous chapter because it was Camila's birthday.

Also:

Here is Brice Colton playing football after his baby mama got her wig split and his child was missing and potentially dead and making no effort to join the search for said child: viewtopic.php?f=4&t=1607&p=120867&hilit=skylar#p120867

Here is Brice Colton not attending the funeral of his baby mama who got her wig split while playing house with his pseudo girlfriend and still not looking for said child: viewtopic.php?f=4&t=1607&p=120924&hilit=skylar#p120924

Here is Brice Colton attending business meetings and playing football while a crackhead got his child but he doesn't know that because he hasn't joined the search for said child: viewtopic.php?f=4&t=1607&p=120970&hilit=skylar#p120970
ya know ya cooked when ya only defense is to compare yourself against an objectively terribly father

saving the latest update for tonight's game

spurs are undefeated when i read updates between timeouts :blessed:

go spurs go
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Post by Captain Canada » 26 May 2026, 10:11

At least the last scene where Mireya finally got to hold the baby was sweet.

The nastiness knows no bounds.

Soapy
Posts: 15367
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 26 May 2026, 20:26

Captain Canada wrote:
26 May 2026, 10:11
At least the last scene where Mireya finally got to hold the baby was sweet.

The nastiness knows no bounds.
Needed that cleanse after the last few updates

I feel like Alex is going to end up impacting things negatively
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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 26 May 2026, 23:01

redsox907 wrote:
25 May 2026, 22:01
Caesar wrote:
25 May 2026, 14:21
There was little to no mental illness in that update outside of Caine's self-soothing by making those mugs perfectly straight.
:martin:

Autumn the only normal one in that entire house right now

Sara getting some pick me up dick, eh.

Glad they finally got to hold the baby
Benefits of having a psychologist mother.

Don't besmirch the good name of Sara like that. She was just having a conversation with an old friend.

Things progressing for lil' Mica.
Soapy wrote:
26 May 2026, 05:45
ya know ya cooked when ya only defense is to compare yourself against an objectively terribly father
Captain Canada wrote:
26 May 2026, 10:11
At least the last scene where Mireya finally got to hold the baby was sweet.

The nastiness knows no bounds.
Not Captain Canada saying something Mireya did was sweet?!

What you mean?!
Soapy wrote:
26 May 2026, 20:26
Captain Canada wrote:
26 May 2026, 10:11
At least the last scene where Mireya finally got to hold the baby was sweet.

The nastiness knows no bounds.
Needed that cleanse after the last few updates

I feel like Alex is going to end up impacting things negatively
Image

How Mireya gonna be looking if Alex try some slick shit.
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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 26 May 2026, 23:30

Yama / Tlazohpialli

Mireya pulled the key from the ignition and sat with her hands in her lap. The antiseptic had worked into the cotton of her shirt hours ago, the sharp chemical edge of it softened now into something flatter, closer to skin, a smell that stopped registering until she stepped outside.

She pushed the door open. The heat came through the gap before she had both feet on the concrete, pressing against her face. her forearms and the backs of her hands where she gripped the doorframe. She stood and her back pulled tight from the base of her spine up through her ribs, the muscles locked from the hours she’d spent holding still in the chair beside the isolette, not wanting to move an inch and jostle Micaela while she held her. She pressed her fist into the small of her back, her eyes closing for a beat before she straightened and shut the car door.

She walked up the driveway with her purse strap cutting into her shoulder, her steps landing flat, each one coming a beat after the last. She reached the front door and her keys were already in her hand when tires rolled over the concrete behind her.

She turned and watched as Jaslene’s car swung into the driveway behind hers. The engine cut and the door opened and Jaslene came out of the car fast, her shoes slapping the concrete, her bag left on the passenger seat, her hair loose and tangled. She crossed the driveway, her stride eating the distance between them before Mireya had pulled her hand off the doorframe.

Jaslene took Mireya’s face in both hands. Her palms settled against her jaw, her fingers curling behind her ears, the rings on her fingers pressing cool against the skin at Mireya’s temples. She held her there and her eyes moved across Mireya’s face, reading it, searching it, her thumbs running once across her cheekbones before she dropped her hands and stepped back. Her gaze went down the length of Mireya’s body, from her collarbones to the flat where her stomach had been full weeks ago to her hips to her feet and back up.

“¿Por qué no me lo dijiste?”

Mireya’s keys bit into her palm where she’d tightened her grip on them. “I only told Mari.”

“That’s not what I asked you.”

Mireya nodded over her shoulder toward the door. “Come on. I’m tired. I want to sit down and rest before I go back to the NICU.”

She turned back to the lock and she pushed the door open. The cool air from inside came through the gap and hit the sweat along her hairline and her throat. She stepped through and Jaslene followed, the door pulling shut behind them.

Mireya dropped her purse on the table by the door. She walked to the couch and lowered herself onto it, her hand bracing against the armrest as her weight came down. The cushion gave under her and she let her head fall back against the top of the couch, her eyes on the ceiling, her chest rising once and settling.

Jaslene sat beside her then reached over and took Mireya’s hand off the armrest, folding it into both of hers, her fingers lacing through Mireya’s. Her thumb found the ridge of Mireya’s knuckles and ran along it.

“Conseguí el primer vuelo de regreso, mi amor.”

Mireya turned her head against the back of the couch to look at her. “I’m fine. I’m just worried about Micaela. She’s past the worst of it, but you never know with these things.”

Jaslene’s thumb kept moving along her knuckles. Her eyes held on Mireya’s face, the line between her brows deepening. “So, why didn’t you tell me? I could’ve been here to help you.”

“Porque quiero volver al trabajo cuando Micaela salga de esa caja de una vez por todas y tú vas a intentar convencerme de que no lo haga.”

Jaslene’s thumb stopped on Mireya’s knuckle. Her hands tightened around Mireya’s for a fraction before they eased.

“Of course, I am. You died. You don’t need to do that anymore.”

“Yes, I do.”

Jaslene’s hand pulled free of Mireya’s and swept through the air between them, her fingers tracing an arc that took in the living room, the hallway behind it, the house and everything it held. “For what? You have what you need. You have two daughters now. Working while you were pregnant was already too much. Now?” Her hand came back to her lap. “¿Quieres morir de una vez por todas?”

Mireya’s jaw shifted. She looked at Jaslene, at the hand that had just moved through the air and come back to her face.

“Baby, please. It’s who I am. I just need you in my corner.”

Jaslene’s mouth pressed into a line that held for a beat, two, the muscle at her jaw working once under the skin. She shook her head, the motion small, her chin sweeping left and coming back.

“I’m not going to argue with you, mi amor. Not when you’re recovering.”

Mireya nodded. “Gracias.”

She turned on her side, pulling her legs up onto the cushion, her knees drawing toward her chest. Her head found the armrest, and she shifted until the padding sat right under her cheek. She looked up at Jaslene, her hair falling across the cushion behind her.

“Hold me while I rest and tell me all about your trip to Puerto Rico.”

Jaslene looked at her for a beat then shifted on the couch, swinging her legs up and sliding in behind Mireya, her back settling against couch, her body curving around Mireya’s. Her arms came around her, one settling across Mireya’s waist, the other tucking under the arm Mireya had folded against her own chest. Her chin came to rest against the back of Mireya’s head, her breath moving through the hair there.

Mireya pressed back into her. The warmth of Jaslene’s body came through the cotton of both their shirts and settled against her spine, against the ache that had lived there for weeks, the muscles loosening a fraction. She closed her eyes.

Jaslene’s thumb started moving again at her ribs, the rhythm slow, the pressure even. She pulled a breath in that Mireya felt expand against her back and let it out.

“Mi hermana got a boyfriend now.”

~~~


Caine rolled the rental through the Ninth Ward with his window down, his left hand on the wheel, the other resting on the console between the seats. A group of kids rode bikes down the center of the street ahead of him and he eased off the gas and let them pass, one of them popping a wheelie on a frame too big for his legs, the front tire hanging in the air for three seconds before it came back down.

Autumn sat in the passenger seat with her elbow on the armrest, her chin in her palm and her sunglasses pushed into her hair, her eyes moving across the houses and the yards and the faces of people on their porches as they passed.

Caine pointed out his window at an empty lot between two shotgun houses, the grass grown high enough to bend under its own weight, a chain-link fence sagging across the front of it where one of the posts had pulled loose from the concrete. “That’s where I got in my first fight back in the day. I was like seven or eight and this dude named Germaine tried to son me.”

Autumn’s eyes followed his hand to the lot. A man pushed a shopping cart down the sidewalk on the other side of the street, the wheels grinding over the seams in the concrete, a trash bag bulging from the basket, a blanket rolled tight and bungeed across the top. She watched him for a beat, her chin still in her palm, then turned her head toward Caine. “You lost, didn’t you?”

Caine snorted a laugh. “I ain’t never lost no fight, love. I batted the piss out that boy until his big brother had to come save him.”

“All my life I had to fight ass nigga.”

Caine laughed, his hand lifting off the console for a beat before it came back. “You got jokes.”

Autumn shrugged, her shoulder rising and falling against the seatbelt. “Just calling it out how I see it.”

They passed a corner store with two men leaning against the wall outside, one of them drinking from a bottle in a paper bag, the other talking with his hands. A dog lay on the sidewalk in front of them with its ribs showing through its coat, its head resting on the concrete, its eyes tracking the car as it rolled by.

Caine swung the rental into a driveway and put it in park. He pointed through the windshield at the house in front of them. “This is mi abuela’s house. Where I grew up.”

Autumn leaned forward in her seat, her hand coming off her chin, her eyes moving from the porch to the windows to the roofline and back. She looked over at Caine. “When you said 11, 12 people lived in there, I imagined it being a little bigger.”

Caine nodded. “Yeah, it was tight as a bitch in there. C’mon.”

He pulled the key from the ignition and pushed his door open. He walked around the front of the car, his hand trailing the hood, and came to the passenger side. He opened the door and stepped back. Autumn swung her legs out and stood, her hand catching the doorframe as she came up.

They walked up the steps to the porch, the boards giving under their weight, the wood creaking at the joints where the nails had loosened from the joists. Caine pulled his keys from his pocket and found the one for the deadbolt, sliding it in and turning it. The lock gave and he pushed the door open, leaning his head through the frame.

“Abuelita, soy yo. ¿Estás en casa?”

His voice carried into the house and came back to him off the walls of the front room. He waited a beat. Nothing came back. He shrugged and stepped fully inside, looking back at Autumn over his shoulder. “Guess ain’t nobody here.”

He moved out of the doorway and held the door with his hand against the edge. Autumn came through, her shoulder passing close to his chest, and he let the door swing shut behind her.

The living room was small enough that the furniture filled it to its edges. A sofa pushed against one wall, an armchair angled across from it, a TV on a low stand between them. A wooden cross hung above the threshold between the living room and the kitchen, dark stained, mounted with a single nail. The carpet was worn to paths between the furniture, the pile pressed flat where feet had traveled for decades. Pictures hung in a cluster on the wall above the sofa, frames in different sizes and finishes, some level and some not.

Autumn stood in the center of it and turned, her eyes taking in the room in a slow pass.

Caine pointed at the sofa. “That was my room for a year after I got out of prison.”

Autumn’s eyebrow came up. “Why?”

“Me and my uncle got beef and he ain’t wanna be in the same room with me.”

Autumn walked past him into the kitchen. The counter ran along the far wall under a row of cabinets, the laminate worn through at the edges to the particleboard underneath. She reached up and touched the base of a Virgin Mary statue on top of the cabinet, her fingertips pressing against the ceramic. “You got one of these, too. In your closet.”

“I ain’t religious though.”

Autumn snorted a laugh. “Clearly.”

She dropped her hand from the statue and kept moving, heading down the hallway that opened off the back of the kitchen. The hall was narrow, the walls close enough that she could have touched both sides if she spread her arms. Three doors, evenly spaced along the left side.

Caine came up behind her and pointed at the first one. “Mi mama, mis tias and mis primas slept in there.” He pointed to the next. “Mi tio and mis primos in there. That’s where I was before I got shipped to the living room.” His hand moved to the last door at the end of the hall. “That’s mi abuela’s room. Mi abuelo too before he died.”

Autumn walked to the second door and pushed it open with her fingertips. She leaned her shoulder against the frame and looked inside. A bunk bed sat against one wall, a twin against the other, the mattresses bare, the frames metal. A dresser filled the space between the beds, the drawers closed, the surface holding a stack of folded blankets and a can of air freshener. She scanned the room, her eyes measuring the distance between the beds, the gap between the dresser and the wall, the ceiling that sat low enough that anyone standing on the top bunk could touch it with a flat hand.

She looked back at Caine. “If you were living on top each other like this when you were a kid, how the fuck you get Mireya pregnant?”

Caine laughed, his head tipping back against the hallway wall. “Probably in the shed.”

Autumn shook her head. “You a nasty nigga.”

~~~


Sara stood behind the stove with a wooden spoon in one hand and the handle of a skillet in the other. The burner under the pot beside it ran low, the lid lifted a fraction by the steam pressing out from underneath, the liquid bubbling at a steady interval that she’d stopped timing and started feeling. She turned the chicken in the skillet with the edge of the spoon, the underside browned, the oil popping once against the back of her hand before she shifted her grip and angled the handle away. A dish towel hung from her shoulder, the cotton spotted with grease near the end from where she’d wiped her hands between tasks.

She looked past the kitchen through the doorway into the living room. Sena was on the couch with her legs stretched out across the cushions, her socked feet crossed at the ankle, her phone propped against her thigh. The TV ran a show Sara had stopped following three episodes in, the dialogue muffled by the distance and the sound of the oil in the skillet.

“Mija, come here right quick.”

Sena looked up from the couch. She swung her legs down, her feet finding the floor, and walked into the kitchen. She leaned back against the counter on the island side, her hands rolling into the hem of the hoodie she wore, the fabric bunching between her fingers.

Sara set the spoon across the rim of the skillet and turned around, leaning against the counter behind her. The stove ticked at her back, the heat from the burners pressing through the cotton of her shirt at her lower back.

“How are you doing? With all of this?”

Sena shrugged. Her hands kept working the hem. “I don’t think I’m in a position to complain about anything.”

“Your feelings are important, too. I wouldn’t disagree that there’s a time and a place, but that doesn’t mean that what you are feeling is any less important.”

Sena’s fingers found the seam at the bottom of the hoodie and pressed along it, her thumb tracing the stitching. She gestured at Sara with one hand, a small motion that started at her chest and moved outward. “I’m new to this.”

Sara tilted her head. “To me?”

Sena shook her head. “Talking to someone who knows I’m with a woman. A woman they’re close to.”

Sara folded her arms across her chest, her fingers curling around her elbows. The skillet popped behind her and she reached back without looking and turned the burner down a notch, the popping easing into a low murmur.

“There’s a first time for everything. Do your parents not know?”

Sena shook her head. Her hands went back to the hem, the fabric twisted between her fingers. “I don’t think I could break their hearts like that.”

“It shouldn’t break their hearts. I know the world can be cruel and closed-minded a lot of times but that’s something you should probably talk to them about.”

Sena shrugged. Her hands wrung together inside the hoodie, the fabric pulling tight across her knuckles. “Yeah, I guess.”

She looked down at the tile between her feet, her weight settling back harder against the counter, the edge of the granite pressing into her lower back through the hoodie. Her eyes came back up to Sara and she held there for a beat before they moved past her to the window above the sink, the light coming through it flat and bright against the faucet.

“Can I ask you something?” Sena said.

Sara nodded. “Of course.”

“Why does it not seem like you want Caine and Mireya together?”

Sara’s thumb pressed once into the crook of her elbow and released. “I just want both of them to find what they need and that might not be with each other.”

“It’s strange, if I can say that, because most mothers would want their son with his kids’ mom.”

Sara shrugged, one shoulder lifting and falling. “I’m not like most I guess.”

“Seems that way.”

The skillet popped behind Sara, a sharp crack of oil against the iron that broke the air between them. The pop came again, softer, and the oil settled back into its murmur. From upstairs, the faint sound of a door opening and closing carried through the ceiling and faded.

Sara turned back to the stove. She picked the spoon up off the rim of the skillet and pressed the edge of it into the chicken, checking the give. She lifted the lid off the pot and stirred once, the spoon cutting through the rice, the steam climbing past her wrist and breaking apart above her hand. She set the lid back and looked over her shoulder at Sena.

“You hungry?”

“I can eat.”

Sara gestured toward the table with the spoon. “Go sit down and I’ll fix you a plate.”

“I can do that.”

“I didn’t ask you if you could. Go and sit down, mija.”

Sena nodded to herself. She pushed off the counter and walked to the table, pulling a chair out and lowering herself into it. Her hands came to rest on the surface in front of her, the fingers lacing together, her thumbs pressing against each other.

Sara pulled a plate from the cabinet and set it on the counter beside the stove.

~~~


Sara carried the plate up the stairs, the ceramic warm against her palm, the dish towel draped over her forearm. She reached the landing and turned down the hall toward the guest room, her footsteps soft on the carpet. She stopped at the door and knocked with the back of her knuckle.

“Come in.”

Sara turned the knob and pushed the door open, easing it through its arc until the room opened in front of her. Autumn sat on the ottoman near the window, her legs crossed at the knee, her phone in both hands, her thumbs still on the screen. The light from the window came through the curtains behind her and caught the edges of her hair where it fell past her shoulders.

Sara held the plate up. “I cooked and thought you might want something to eat.”

Autumn smiled, her phone lowering to her thigh. “Oh, you didn’t have to do that.”

“I did it anyway.”

Autumn nodded and shifted her weight forward, her hand pressing against the ottoman to push up. Sara crossed the room before she got to her feet, closing the distance in a few strides, and held the plate out. Autumn took it, her fingers curling under the rim, the warmth of the ceramic passing between them. She looked down at it, the chicken and rice and the slice of avocado laid along the edge.

“This looks delicious. I can see where Caine got his cooking skills from.”

Sara laughed, her hand coming up to push a strand of hair behind her ear. “Caine can do a little something, but he still cooks like a man. Only cooking to what he wants to eat unless it’s for Camila.”

“He is a little heavy handed with the cayenne.”

Sara nodded as she walked over to the bed and sat on the edge, her palms pressing into the mattress on either side of her thighs, her weight settling. The comforter bunched under her hands where she pressed.

“Me and you haven’t really had time to talk.”

Autumn set her phone down on the ottoman beside her thigh and balanced the plate on her lap, her fingers resting on the rim. “I know everyone’s been ripping and running with everything going on.”

“You flew out here though. The least I can do is get to know the woman my son called supposedly for clothes.”

Autumn’s mouth pulled at one corner. “That’s a fair way to put it. I didn’t expect you to be so young.”

Sara shrugged. “Ain’t young as I was. Definitely don’t look it with all this shit stressing me out.”

Autumn shook her head. “I doubt anyone thinks you look old.”

Sara looked at Autumn, her chin level, her eyes steady.

“How much do you know? About Caine? About his relationship with Mireya?”

Autumn picked up the fork Sara had set on the plate and turned it between her fingers. “I think I got the sixty second version. Where he’s from, his family, the year in prison, the white woman in Georgia.”

Sara snorted a laugh.

Autumn smiled, the fork still turning once more between her fingers before she set it back on the plate. “About Mireya. He just said they’re close, but they’re not together.”

Sara nodded. “I know it’s a strange situation I’ll give anyone that. But you’ve been here for a couple weeks and I’m sure you’ve noticed that no one from Mireya’s family has come to check on her.”

“Caine told me about that, too.”

Sara pulled a breath in and let it out, the air running long and thin. Her hands came off the mattress, and she folded them in her lap, her fingers lacing, her thumbs settling against each other.

“I’m not going to lie to you, mija. If I was your age? And I walked into this? I might go running for the first thing smoking back home.”

Autumn’s eyes held on Sara’s face. “Is that a suggestion?”

Sara shook her head. “It’s just a view into how I thought when I was 20. But I also had a one-year-old back then.”

She paused.

“I don’t get into Caine’s relationships. Probably should a little more so he wouldn’t have a five-year-old and wouldn’t have been fucking some pastor’s married daughter and her little sister.”

Autumn’s eyes went wide, her chin pulling back a fraction. “The sister too?”

Sara laughed, her head shaking once, her hand coming up to press against her forehead before it dropped back to her lap. “Ask him about that. It was a very stupid fucking thing to do.”

Autumn shook her head, her eyebrows still lifted.

Sara’s laugh settled. She looked at Autumn across the room, the plate balanced on her lap.

“I’m not trying to get them back together. If you’re who he wants then as long as you want him, that’s what I want.”

“I can respect that.”

Sara smiled. She gestured toward the plate, her hand sweeping once through the air between them. “How’s the food?”

~~~


Caine pulled the rental into the apartment complex and rolled through the lot, his eyes checking the building numbers against the text on his phone propped in the cupholder. The lot was half full, a few cars parked nose-in along the curb, a woman carrying grocery bags from her trunk toward a stairwell on the far side. He found the building and swung into a spot near the entrance.

Autumn looked through the windshield at the complex, her eyes moving across the balconies and the covered walkways and the strip of grass between the buildings. “When you said you were going to introduce me to your friends, I expected a traphouse or something.”

Caine snorted a laugh. “They weren’t at the trap when I texted them. I ain’t know Tyree had gotten an apartment. Motherfucker lived with his mama and daddy for the longest.”

Autumn rolled her eyes, her head tipping against the headrest. “A hood nigga living at his mama house? Really, nigga? Y’all some cliché ass niggas. You got the kids, he was at his mama house. What about the other one? He fuck only white bitches?”

Caine shook his head. “Not Ramon. That’s E.J., but he moved out to Houston.”

Autumn laughed, the sound filling the car, her hand coming up off her thigh. “If this was Atlanta, I’d think one of them had to be DL too, then.”

Caine pulled the key from the ignition and dropped it into his pocket. “They got that shit out here, too.”

Autumn shook her head as Caine pushed his door open and stepped out. He walked around the front of the car and opened her door. She swung her legs out and stood, her hand finding the doorframe as she came up.

They crossed the lot to a door on the ground level. Caine knocked twice, his knuckles landing flat against the metal.

“That bitch open, nigga.”

Tyree’s voice came through the door muffled by the wall but loud enough that a man walking his dog two doors down looked over. Caine turned the knob and pushed the door open.

Tyree sat on the sofa with his legs spread wide, a blunt pinched between two fingers, smoke curling from the cherry in a thin line that climbed toward the ceiling fan turning above him. Ramon sat in an armchair to the left with one ankle crossed over the opposite knee, his phone in his hand, his thumb resting on the edge of the screen. A baseball game ran on the TV across the room at low volume, the commentators’ voices pressed flat by the speakers.

Caine walked over to them. Tyree pushed up from the sofa, the blunt transferring to his other hand, and dapped Caine up, pulling him in and slapping his back once before stepping back. Ramon stood from the armchair and did the same.

“Sorry to hear about what happened to your lil’ one and Mireya, brudda.” Ramon’s hand came off Caine’s back and he stepped away, his weight settling.

“Appreciate it.”

Tyree pulled on the blunt, the cherry flaring, the smoke rolling out of his mouth as he spoke through it. “Yeah, but if she anything like you, she gonna be too stubborn to give up.”

“Probably in the box straightening all the wires already.” Ramon’s mouth pulled at one corner.

Autumn snorted a laugh from the doorway.

Caine looked at her then back at them. “Y’all got fucking jokes.”

Autumn held her hands up, palms out, then stepped around Caine and crossed to where Ramon and Tyree stood. She extended her hand to Ramon first. “I’m Autumn. His girlfriend.” She turned and shook Tyree’s hand.

Tyree let her hand go and looked her over, his eyes moving from her face down and back up. He turned to Ramon. “I should’ve kept with that baseball shit. You see these bad bitches this nigga be getting off that football shit?”

“He didn’t get me from that.”

Ramon shrugged. “You met him somewhere he at ’cause he play football, though.”

Caine looked at Autumn. “He kinda got you there.”

Autumn shook her head. She walked to an armchair opposite Ramon and sat on the arm of it, , her hands settling on her knees. Caine lowered himself into the seat beside her, his shoulder coming to rest against her thigh where she perched on the arm.

“So, where y’all met?” Autumn asked, her chin tipping toward Ramon and Tyree.

Ramon sat back down in his chair, ankle coming up over his knee again. “As guests of the Orleans Parish Prison system.”

Tyree laughed, the blunt between his teeth, the sound coming out with the smoke. He pulled it free and tapped the ash into a cup on the coffee table. “Cellblock D, nigga. Juvenile division.”

“Oh, so y’all all hoodlums.”

Caine looked at Autumn. “You still be thinking I’m lying to you.”

Tyree pointed at Caine with the blunt. “That weird ass nigga don’t know how to lie. That’s his problem.”

Autumn shook her head, her mouth pulling to one side. “Could be a good or a bad thing.”

Caine shrugged. “It is what it is.” He looked at Ramon and Tyree, his weight settling deeper into the chair, his arm resting on the armrest behind Autumn. “Catch me up, brudda. I ain’t seen y’all in a lil’ minute.”

~~~


Mireya lay behind Sena with her chest pressed to Sena’s back, one arm tucked under the pillow beneath both their heads, the other draped across Sena’s waist. The glow from the streetlight outside the window pressed through the curtains in a pale band that crossed the carpet and stopped at the foot of the bed. The air conditioning pushed a low hum through the vent above the closet door and the fan turned above them.

Sena’s fingers found the back of Mireya’s hand where it rested on the mattress in front of her. She traced the line of a tendon from the knuckle to the wrist, her fingertip moving slow, the pressure light.

“I think she’s going to get out of that box soon. In a couple weeks, maybe three.”

Sena’s finger paused on the tendon, the pad of it resting against the ridge of bone at Mireya’s wrist. “It might be longer than that, though. She was really early.”

“I think she’s ready to be home with me. She’s growing, gaining weight, feeding.”

Sena’s finger resumed its path, tracing back up toward Mireya’s knuckle, finding the valley between two tendons and following it. “I just don’t want you to get your hopes up if they keep her there longer. I know what it’ll do to you.”

Mireya’s arm pulled back from Sena’s waist. She scooted her hips away, the sheets sliding between them, opening a few inches of space. Her hand came to Sena’s shoulder and pressed, the pressure light, her palm turning Sena onto her back. Sena let her body follow the push, her shoulder blades settling against the mattress, her face turning up toward the ceiling before her eyes found Mireya above her.

Mireya propped herself on her elbow, her head resting against her fist, her other hand coming up to Sena’s face. Her fingers settled along Sena’s jaw, her thumb finding the line of her cheekbone and moving across it.

“Don’t do that.”

“Do what?”

“Treat me like I’m fragile.”

Sena’s eyes held on Mireya’s face, the light from the window catching one side of it and leaving the other in shadow. “You are right now. There’s nothing wrong with letting other people take care of you for a while. It doesn’t make you less of a person.”

“I just don’t like it. I don’t like feeling like I can’t do shit on my own.”

Sena’s hand came up from the mattress and rested on Mireya’s forearm where it crossed the space between them. “You don’t have to go through life alone, Mireya. The only way this is going to work is if you let me in, let me be a crutch for you when you need it.”

Mireya nodded. Her thumb moved over Sena’s lips, tracing the shape of the lower one from corner to corner and back. She traced it again, slower.

“I hear you, baby. I do. It just ain’t easy. I don’t let go easy.”

“I know. You’re stubborn as fuck. And it’s so strong you passed it down to Camila, because she’s the same way.”

Mireya snorted a laugh. “People say she acts like Caine, not me.”

Sena shrugged. “I don’t know him well enough, but you’re in there.”

Mireya’s thumb left Sena’s lips and came to rest against her chin. Her eyes moved across Sena’s face in a pass that traveled from her forehead to her mouth and back. Sena’s hand stayed on Mireya’s forearm, her fingers curled against the skin, the warmth of her grip steady.

The fan turned above them. The streetlight pressed its band across the carpet. The air conditioning cycled through a shift in pitch that lasted a second and settled back.

“I think you should go see that therapist a couple times when Micaela’s out of the NICU. Just to see if it’s something that’ll work for you.”

Mireya’s thumb lifted off Sena’s chin. Her hand moved to the pillow beside Sena’s head, her fingers pressing into the fabric. “I’m not trying to tell some random ass fucking person my business.”

“You told that social worker.”

“So she didn’t try to take Camila from me. But just enough. If I tell a shrink everything, they’re going to file reports and shit.”

Sena shook her head against the pillow, her hair shifting against the cotton. “Not if you’re not a danger to yourself or anyone else.”

“That’s what they say.”

“I go to one.”

Mireya’s eyebrow came up. “Why?”

“Didn’t have anyone to talk through my feelings with.”

“And that shit works for you?”

Sena nodded. “Yeah.”

Mireya pulled a breath in and let it out. Her fingers worked once against the pillow beside Sena’s head, the fabric compressing under her grip before her hand eased.

“I get judged enough for the shit I do. I ain’t paying no one to do it.”

“It’s not like that.”

“Maybe for you.”

Sena’s lips parted and her mouth opened on the start of something, the breath pulling in to carry it, and Mireya lowered herself off her elbow. Her body came down against the mattress, her weight settling, her face moving past Sena’s jaw. She pressed her mouth to the skin below Sena’s ear, then along the line of her jaw, her lips finding the bone and following it, kiss after kiss, each one landing and lifting and landing again closer to Sena’s mouth. She reached Sena’s lips and pressed into them, the kiss soft and long, her hand coming off the pillow to the back of Sena’s head, her fingers sliding into the hair at her nape.

She pulled Sena into her. Her arm came around Sena’s shoulders, drawing her close, Sena’s body turning into hers until they lay chest to chest, Mireya’s chin resting on the top of Sena’s head. She closed her eyes. Her breathing slowed. Her arm tightened once around Sena’s shoulders.

Sena’s hand found Mireya’s ribs through her shirt, her palm flat against the cotton, the heartbeat underneath it steady against her fingers.
User avatar

redsox907
Posts: 5376
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 26 May 2026, 23:47

oh look, Mireya avoiding her problems with sex, go figure

also, curious what's going to happen when Sena walks in on Mireya and Jas spooning :kghah:

did Mireya tell Sena she was a pro, or just a stripper? I forget.

Caine really giving Autumn the VIP treatment huh? She never gonna come back to New Orleans, think its just full of thugs

Soapy
Posts: 15367
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 27 May 2026, 05:58

Soapy wrote:
26 May 2026, 05:45
spurs are undefeated when i read updates between timeouts
fuck you @Caesar
User avatar

Captain Canada
Posts: 7232
Joined: 01 Dec 2018, 00:15

American Sun

Post by Captain Canada » 27 May 2026, 09:34

Mireya still fucking around with Jaslene (inb4 Caesar says its innocent friends bonding through physical touch) is hilarious.

I'll give rare props to Caine, he's really leaning into the relationship and being extremely transparent. Good on him.
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