American Sun

This is where to post any NFL or NCAA football franchises.
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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 28 Jun 2026, 23:07

Captain Canada wrote:
28 Jun 2026, 09:44
Mireya really the Valedictorian of Caesar's school of Gaslighting huh?
She didn't gaslight Sena in that scene :shifty: She did some shady shit when she picked up Camila, but gaslighting???
Soapy wrote:
28 Jun 2026, 10:17
Francesca a #maneater, stay away Saul, you not ready for that
Caesar wrote:
28 Jun 2026, 00:23
Sena’s hand went still on Camila’s hair. “I don’t know. It’s just you’re always showing so much. Like you’re on sale.”
Image
Saul jumping into the deep in brudda.

:giannis:
redsox907 wrote:
28 Jun 2026, 21:44
black dude in a cowboy hat the same dude they passed when they were leaving the country bar after creeping on Tessa. EJ woulda caught her then, but he bailed too quickly :kghah:

Mireya is literally the worst :pgdead: It is not a ridiculous request to ask your significant other to dress correct when meeting their parents
#nooticer

Mireya dresses like that around her parent(-like figure) and if you fake it once, you gotta keep faking it. What if after they meet, Minji shows up to the house looking for Sena? Mireya likes walking around in small t-shirts and panties. Then what?! :druski:
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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 28 Jun 2026, 23:08

Sek / Omitl

Kimberly looked up from her desk when Caine came through the glass doors. Her fingers paused over her keyboard and she smiled. “He’s on a call but he said to go on back. Can I get you anything? Coffee, water?”

“I’m good.”

He nodded once and turned down the hallway, passing the framed photos on the wall.

Tatum stood at the window with his phone pressed to his ear, his other hand in his pocket. He turned when Caine’s footsteps hit the carpet and pointed at one of the armchairs in front of the desk.

Caine crossed the room and sat, one ankle over his knee, his hands settling onto the armrests. He let his eyes move across the whiteboard on the far wall. The column of brand names was longer than the last time he had been in here, new ones printed in Tatum’s block letters at the bottom of the list, a few with dollar figures beside them, others with question marks.

“Yeah, we’ll circle back after the holiday. Tell your people to have the revisions ready by then.” Tatum pulled the phone from his ear, tapped the screen, and slid it into his back pocket. He crossed to Caine and they dapped up. Tatum dropped into the chair beside him, crossing one leg over the other.

“How are you doing with everything, kid? Starting to feel the pressure?”

Caine snorted a laugh. “I ain’t never been somebody to fold so fuck no. I’m gonna keep doing what I been doing.”

“Good, because what you’ve been doing is making both of us a lot of fucking money.” Tatum’s head tilted a fraction, one corner of his mouth pulling up. “That Balmain add-on is really making up for what we gave up over the summer when the kid was born.”

“I was wondering what that extra shit in my bank account the other day was.”

Tatum’s eyebrows lifted. He leaned forward in the chair, his forearms settling onto his thighs. “Didn’t I tell you that you need to put that in some investment vehicles to start letting your money work for you?”

Caine shrugged. “I invested in some shit here or there.”

Tatum’s mouth flattened into a line. “I’ll tell my guy to give you a call.”

“I ain’t gonna talk to some random white man about my money, Tatum. Another one. No offense.”

Tatum waved off the comment. “He’s Asian anyway.” His eyes went to the whiteboard on the far wall for a beat, moving down the column of names. “Just three games left before the championship. The collective is starting to ask a lot of questions about your future as a Trojan.”

“The Browns are still at the top of the fucking draft board.”

“Not since Monday.” Tatum’s index finger came up off the armrest. “Now, it’s the Jets at one, Cleveland two and Tampa at three.”

“Too bad playing for the Bucs would mean living in fucking Tampa.”

Tatum held his hands up. “They’re some nasty motherfuckers out there. Bunch of old people swinging and shit.” His voice dropped half a register. “Fucking other people’s wives is a young man’s game.”

Caine laughed. “You know about that?”

“I plead the fifth.”

Tatum’s mouth pulled at both corners. He brought his hands together in his lap. “Look, it’s 2028. We’re not in the days when staying in college means giving up money. We can get you up to top five money at SC if you keep playing Heisman-winning football.”

“Ain’t got shit to prove if I win everything this season, though.”

“You’re already that guy at Georgia Southern.” Tatum sat forward. “You win two Heismans and two natties here? You’ll be that guy at USC, too. That’s something. Get your number retired with two programs.”

Caine looked at the whiteboard across the room, his eyes moving down the column of names, the figures and question marks beside them. His thumbnail dragged once along the line of his jaw.

“Until I break my leg against Fresno State next season.”

“That’s why you need to put your money in some fucking investments.”

Caine shook his head and started laughing.

~~~


Mireya held her coffee with both hands, her thumbs pressed against the paper sleeve where the heat came through. Jaslene sat beside her on the bench with her arm resting along the back of it behind Mireya’s shoulders, close enough to be there, far enough not to touch. A jogger passed with earbuds trailing from his collar and behind him a woman pulled a small child by the hand, the child dragging her feet through a patch of shade.

Mireya took a sip and set the cup on her thigh. “How’s work been?”

Jaslene shrugged. “Same old, same old. Stasia got these new girls, Rebecca and Connie. Bitches are so awkward on the stage. Rebecca’s willing to fuck so she makes it up. Connie?” She took a sip of her coffee and swallowed before she finished. “She needs to find another job.”

Mireya’s mouth pulled to one side. “That makes me feel worse that you said I needed to find another job, too.”

“Eso es diferente, mi a—Mireya.”

Mireya looked at her out of the corner of her eyes. “Don’t do that.”

Jaslene’s jaw shifted once. “We’re supposed to just be friends.”

Mireya turned the cup on her thigh, her thumb running along the seam of the sleeve. “No sé por qué quieres alejarme tanto de ti. Things were fine as they were.”

Jaslene’s fingers moved once against the wood behind Mireya’s shoulder. “People evolve and change, situations, too. You’re doing better now than you were then.”

“No, I’m not.” Mireya’s eyes went to the path ahead of them where a woman pushed a stroller through a column of light between two oaks. “I’m losing my fucking mind. All I do is go to class, go home, take care of my babies, repeat.”

“There’s nothing wrong with that. That’s okay.”

“You don’t understand.” Mireya turned her head to face her. “Ale, Haylz and Bee still want me around. Why don’t you? Pensé que me querías.”

Jaslene’s eyes held on her. Her coffee rested on her thigh, her other hand wrapped around the cup, the rings on her fingers pressing into the paper sleeve.

“I do. That’s why I’m doing this. I’d rather this than the way you were going.”

Mireya sucked her teeth. “I don’t want to have this conversation again.”

Jaslene held her hand up behind Mireya’s back. “That’s fine. We won’t.” She brought the hand back down to the bench, her fingers settling against the wood. Her coffee came up and she drank from it, her eyes moving to the path ahead of them. “How are you and your girlfriend?”

Mireya rolled her eyes. “She thinks I’m too much of a slut to introduce to her parents.”

“That what she said?”

“Basically. She said I dress like I’m on sale.”

Jaslene’s chin came up a fraction, her head turning back toward Mireya. “You tell her what you did for work?”

“The dancing and stripping. Not the rest.”

“You can’t expect people to know what bothers you if you don’t give them the full picture of why that shit is bothering you.”

“I’m not telling her that I trick.”

“Probablemente deberías dejar de hacerlo mientras estés con ella.”

Mireya shook her head, her hair catching against the collar of her jacket. “This is why I need you. You understand. You get me in a way Ale and them don’t. The way other people don’t.”

“I’m right here.”

Mireya’s eyes held on Jaslene’s face. “Until I try to fuck you then you’re disgusted by me.”

Jaslene’s head turned fully toward her. Her eyes moved across Mireya’s face, from her mouth to her eyes and back. “That’s not true.”

“I’m not trying to have this argument again.”

“Okay.”

Mireya lifted her coffee and took a sip, her eyes going to the path where a man walked a dog with its leash held loose in one hand, the dog pulling toward the grass and the man letting it go.

Jaslene’s hand moved from the bench to Mireya’s back. Her fingers found the strands of hair resting against the collar of Mireya’s jacket and she played with them, slow, lifting them off the fabric and letting them fall and lifting them again. Her thumb grazed the nape of Mireya’s neck on one pass, the touch landing against the skin above the collar and pulling away.

~~~


Autumn had her tray pushed to one side with half a wrap left on it, the lettuce wilting where the tortilla had torn. Jade sat across from her with a container of orange chicken open between her forearms, her fork working through the rice underneath it. The union was full around them, the lunch rush filling the tables in every direction, trays, bags and open laptops crowding the surfaces, voices overlapping from all sides.

Jade pointed her fork at Autumn, a grain of rice still on the tine. “Girl, your man getting us in one of them suites again this weekend?”

Autumn shook her head. “The boosters aren’t giving up their suites for a game against Penn State. I think it’ll just be his mom and his younger daughter up there.”

“I still don’t know how you do that.”

Autumn sucked her teeth. “Can we not keep having this conversation? I’ve been with this man for damn near eight months at this point. Simone drags the shit enough.”

Jade held a hand up. “Alright, girl. I’m just always surprised.” She let the hand drop and stabbed a piece of chicken, chewing it as her eyes moved across the union. She swallowed and sat up straighter in her chair, her shoulders squaring, her fork tapping the rim of the container once before she set it down. “That remind me. I ain’t tell you about my new boo.”

Autumn raised her eyebrow. “When you got a new boo?”

“We been kicking it for a minute, but you know I ain’t to run to make nothing official.”

“Who is it?”

Jade picked her fork back up and pushed a piece of chicken through the sauce, dragging it in a slow line across the bottom of the container. “His name is Garrett Tr—.”

“That white boy who plays baseball here?”

Jade’s fork stopped over the container. She looked up at Autumn, the piece of chicken still on the tine. “Yeah. He’s not my normal type, but he fun.”

Autumn sat back in her chair. “I can’t believe you’re letting a white man fuck you.”

“You don’t have to say it like that.” Jade’s chin dipped a fraction, her eyes leveling across the table. “He ain’t one of them. He grew up around us in Dallas.”

Autumn snorted a laugh. “My fucking ass he did. He just told your ass that to fuck.”

Jade’s jaw shifted once under the skin. “I ain’t gonna say what I want to say.”

Autumn shrugged, her hand reaching for what was left of her wrap and tearing a piece off the end. “I already know what you’re going to say. That’s how old and tired that shit is, and how untrue it is.” She put the piece in her mouth and chewed, her eyes staying on Jade.

Jade set the fork down on the edge of the container and leaned back in her chair, her arms crossing over her chest. “Look, that’s why I ain’t want to just come out and start telling everyone, but things are going well even though he’s a little different than other dudes I’ve fucked with.”

“What do you think is going to happen?” Autumn’s head tilted, her eyes on Jade’s face. “He’s going to get drafted and take you with him?”

“Now you sound jealous.”

“Jealous how? I have a man.”

Jade leaned forward, her forearms pressing flat onto the table on either side of her container, her weight coming off the back of the chair. “What do you think is going to happen? He’s going to get drafted and take you with him? You ain’t the only one who can say that and you the main who shouldn’t be saying that shit at all.”

Autumn’s mouth flattened into a line. “Caine and I are different.”

“Different how? Because you said it is?” Jade’s eyebrows went up, her head tilting to match them. “Bitch, please.”

Autumn held her hands up,. “I’m happy for you even though he’s white.”

“I’m trying to be like Serena Williams, bitch.”

Autumn shook her head, her hand coming up to cover her mouth as the laugh broke through her fingers. Jade was already gone, her body folding forward over the table.

~~~


Caine sat on the porch with his plate balanced in his hand, a drumstick stripped to the bone beside a pile of greens and mac and cheese that he was working through with a plastic fork. Rachaad sat in the other chair with his own plate, his fork scraping the styrofoam as he dragged it through the last of the cheese.

Caine pulled a piece of chicken off the bone with his teeth and chewed, his eyes on the block. Rachaad leaned back in his chair, his plate tipping on his knee, and stabbed his fork into a piece of chicken thigh.

Nap came up the sidewalk from the far end of the block, his stride easy, his hands coming up when he saw them on the porch.

Rachaad raised his free hand. Nap came up the steps and dapped Caine first then Rachaad. He stepped back and leaned his shoulder against the post at the top of the steps, one foot crossed over the other at the ankle, his hands going into his pockets.

“I ain’t seen y’all down here in a lil’ minute.”

Rachaad set his fork on his plate. “All them fucking away games, man. We been two, three days a week in LA before hopping on a plane for a month.”

Caine nodded. “Facts. Whoever made the schedule was on some fuck shit.”

Nap laughed. “That’s what happens when y’all want to ball, lil’ homies. Y’all can come out here and work a regular job like the rest of us niggas and then you won’t have to fly all over the country.”

“I did my time on the block.” Caine set the stripped bone on the edge of his plate. “I’m gonna take the plane.”

Nap shook his head but the laugh was still in his face, his mouth pulling at both corners. Rachaad grinned and picked his fork back up, going after the greens.

Rachaad chewed, swallowed, and pointed his fork at Nap. “Where Sevino been? My grandma said his baby mama moved out to Santa Monica a couple weeks back. He get arrested?”

Nap’s mouth leveled. His weight shifted against the post. “Nah, Sevino got shot. He fucked up, but he alive.”

“Y’all know who?”

“Them Fruit Town niggas. Caught him on the wrong side of the ave.”

Caine looked up from his plate. “Ain’t they Bloods, too?”

“Everybody politicking, lil’ homie.” Nap’s hand came out of his pocket and gestured down the block. “They trying to run all this shit.”

Caine shook his head. “I ain’t never going to understand how all this shit work out here.”

“West Side gonna parlay with them and see if they can smooth it over but I ain’t optimistic ’bout the shit if I’m being honest.” Nap’s hand went back into his pocket.

Rachaad’s fork had stopped over his plate. “So, y’all gonna hit one of theirs?”

Nap shrugged, one shoulder lifting against the post. “That’s how the shit go if that’s how the shit go.”

Caine’s fork pressed into the mac and cheese on his plate. He held it there for a beat, his eyes on Nap. “I might have a way for y’all to make some more money if y’all end up going to war.”

Nap’s chin came up. “Shit, I’m listening.”

“Some of my potnas from back home. They dealing with some other shit so I don’t know when it’s gonna be.”

“Just hit me up.”

Caine nodded. “I will.”

Nap held his eyes for a beat then dipped his chin once.

Nap pushed off the post and straightened, his hands coming out of his pockets. He dapped Caine up then moved to Rachaad and did the same. “Y’all be easy, lil’ homies. Stay safe in these streets.”

He went down the porch steps and across the yard,. He hit the sidewalk and turned back the way he’d come, his hands going into his pockets again, his shoulders rolling once as he walked.

Rachaad watched Nap until he turned the corner then looked back down at his plate. He stabbed a piece of chicken and held it on the fork without lifting it. “I ain’t know you were selling dope, nigga.”

“I don’t sell shit.” Caine scraped the last of the mac and cheese off the styrofoam. “My potna just asked me a question and I made the connection.”

Rachaad snorted a laugh. “Don’t let them NFL GMs hear that shit. You’ll end up like that Sorsby nigga.”

Caine shook his head. “Except I ain’t fucking trash like him.”

Rachaad laughed. “This goofy ass nigga.”

~~~


Sena sat with her back against the cushion of the couch, her hands in her lap, one thumb rolling the seam of her jeans between her fingers. Across the rug, Celia had her notebook open against her knee.

Sena’s eyes moved from the rug to Celia’s face. “Is it wrong that I think it would be easier for me to come out if I was single or if I was with someone like Alex instead of Mireya?”

Celia’s pen shifted between her fingers. “Why do you think that?”

“If I were single, I’m only telling my parents one thing, I’m only into other women. There’s no ‘Also, this is the specific woman that I’m with.’ It’s just cleaner.”

Celia’s head tipped a fraction. “You can have those conversations at two different times. Everything doesn’t need to come out all at once.”

Sena shrugged. Her thumb found the seam of her jeans again, the fabric rolling between her finger and thumb. “I figure it would just be easier to do it together. That way while they’re still figuring out if they hate me for being a lesbian, I can just sneak in that I’m also actually with a woman.”

“Do you think they’ll hate you? Have they given you any indication that they’d be against you being a lesbian?”

“No, but we’ve never talked about that in any way so I’m just assuming.”

Celia smiled. “You know what they say about assumptions.”

Sena’s breath came out through her nose. “Right. But I already told them I’m with someone anyway so I have to fix that lie.”

“Right, you told them Rey when you meant Mireya. And you just said that you think this would be easier if you were with someone like Alex. Why do you feel that way?”

Sena’s thumb stopped on the seam of her jeans. Her eyes went past Celia to the watercolor on the wall behind her shoulder, the cordgrass bending to one side, the water pulled back to mudflat, the wash of sky above the reeds. “Mireya is just a lot. She’s… I don’t know how to put it. Maybe that she’s an acquired taste.”

“From what you’ve told me, she has a very specific way of behaving that I would agree wouldn’t sit right with everyone. That doesn’t answer why you think someone else would make things easier, though.”

“She’s just so stubborn. She doesn’t bend to make things easier.”

“Do you expect her to?”

Sena’s jaw shifted once. She pulled her eyes off the watercolor and brought them back to Celia’s face. Her hands resettled in her lap, her fingers lacing together, thumbs pressing. “I asked her if she could dress more modestly if she met my parents.”

Celia’s chin dipped a fraction. “I could see why that would be a point of tension. How did she respond?”

“Like Mireya does.” Sena’s laced fingers tightened, the knuckles pressing against each other. “Hot then cold then nothing then acting like it didn’t happen. The way she ends arguments? It’s so unsettling. It throws you off.”

“How does she end arguments?”

Sena’s hands unlaced in her lap. She pressed her palms flat against her thighs, fingers spread. “Touching your face or neck, saying something or asking a question then walking away.”

She looked at Sena over the top of the notebook, her posture shifting forward a fraction in the chair. “That’s dominance behavior. The touch, especially on your neck.” She held Sena’s eyes. “Does she get violent with you?”

Sena shook her head. “She doesn’t even raise her voice. Even with the girls.”

Celia let a beat pass, then another. “I got you. It sounds like you’re between a rock and a hard place with all of this.”

Sena nodded. Her hands were still laced in her lap, her thumbs pressed together, the pressure turning the skin pale at the nail beds. Her eyes moved to the rug between them.

“Yeah, I fucked up.”

~~~


Mireya sat in the leather chair with her hands on her knee, one leg over the other, her weight settled into the back of the seat. Fernanda sat across from her, her posture mirroring Mireya’s.

“Do you have kids?”

Fernanda nodded. “I have one. He’s thirteen.”

“You know what no one ever tells you about having kids? How used to saying the same thing over and over again you have to get. We’re going to LA this weekend for Caine’s game and I swear Camila asks me if we are every fucking hour, on the fucking hour.”

Fernanda smiled, the corners of her mouth pulling up. “That short term memory is really the bane of every parent’s existence. Especially when they’re Camila’s age.”

Mireya nodded to herself, her mouth opened and closed once before she spoke.

“Sena told me I dress like a slut the other day.”

“Is that what she said or is that what you heard?”

“She said I dress like I’m on sale.”

“You do, because you are.”

“You didn’t have to say it like that.”

“It’s the truth. You say it yourself.”

Mireya shrugged.

Fernanda let a beat pass, her eyes steady on Mireya’s face. “Are you ready to talk about where your relationship with sex and your body comes from?”

Mireya sighed, the air leaving her through her nose. Her eyes moved past Fernanda to the photograph on the wall behind her shoulder. The beach, the cart, the corn. She looked at it for a beat longer than she had before in any of their sessions, then brought her eyes back to Fernanda’s face.

“His name was Rafael. Everyone called him Rafa, though. Because of course they fucking did.”

Fernanda raised an eyebrow. “Who’s name was Rafa?”

“The first person I had sex with.”

Fernanda nodded. “Was that not a positive memory?”

Mireya snorted a laugh, the sound coming through her nose. Her thumb pressed harder against her knee. “I mean, he was like twenty-one.”

Fernanda’s eyes widened “Oh. That’s—”

“Illegal.”

Fernanda nodded. “Right.”

Mireya uncrossed her hands then folded them back over the opposite way. “He worked with Kike and my Tio Luis, doing construction. Him and Kike were close, basically the same age and shit. He started coming around with Kike, hanging around the family. One day, he told me I was pretty. You know how the rest of it goes.”

Fernanda’s posture shifted forward a degree in the chair, her weight coming off the back of it. “You were vulnerable to that because of your relationship with your mother deteriorating at that time in your life.”

“I agreed to it.”

“You couldn’t have agreed to it.”

“I guess.” Mireya’s right hand came up. Her thumb found the corner of her mouth, the pad of it resting against her lower lip. “Anyway, once we did it once, he’d only talk to me if he could fuck me. Outside of Angela and Paz, I ain’t have too many friends. Family hot and cold because of Maria. So, I did it.”

Fernanda nodded, her lips pressed into a flat line. “I see. What happened to him? Did you ever tell anyone?”

Mireya shook her head. “Kike knew. I guess Rafa told him.”

“The same Kike who has been trying to have sex with you for years.”

Mireya nodded.

“Do you think it’s related?”

Mireya shrugged. Her thumb pressed once against her lip and then her hand dropped back to the armrest. “I don’t know. It doesn’t matter now. Rafa got deported after like six months of that. I assume he’s still in Mexico now.”

Fernanda held the silence for a beat, then another. “So, you were groomed and raped and didn’t get the closure of justice.”

“I agreed to it.”

“You couldn’t have.”

Mireya’s eyes moved to the photograph on the wall. Her jaw worked once.

“Right. But that’s how I figured out the easiest way to get attention. Until I met Caine.”

Fernanda’s head tipped a fraction. “How was Caine different?”

Mireya’s eyes came back from the photograph. “He keeps sticking around. No matter what I do.”

Soapy
Posts: 15709
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » Yesterday, 06:43

Caesar wrote:
28 Jun 2026, 23:08
Mireya’s eyes came back from the photograph. “He keeps sticking around. No matter what I do.”
Image

Run, nigga
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Captain Canada
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Joined: 01 Dec 2018, 00:15

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Post by Captain Canada » Yesterday, 10:28

I see the trap, I ain't folding fn

:50:

Also, it's still fuck Autumn.
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redsox907
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Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

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Post by redsox907 » Yesterday, 13:10

Ceila read my mind. Mireya treating Sena like Trell treated her. Difference is, Sena isn't as emotionally broken as Mireya was and thus is less easily manipulated.

Sena breaking up with Mireya for Alex? :hmm:

Also, Autumn still insufferable. Any of your friends bring the blitz and you get pissed. Homegirl finally decides to open up about her new bae and first thing Autumn does is send the blitz lmao
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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » Today, 07:24

Soapy wrote:
Yesterday, 06:43
Caesar wrote:
28 Jun 2026, 23:08
Mireya’s eyes came back from the photograph. “He keeps sticking around. No matter what I do.”
Image

Run, nigga
Not being there for others is the reason we have the problems in society we have.
Captain Canada wrote:
Yesterday, 10:28
I see the trap, I ain't folding fn

:50:

Also, it's still fuck Autumn.
Callous. :smh:

We know, milk warrior. :troll:
redsox907 wrote:
Yesterday, 13:10
Ceila read my mind. Mireya treating Sena like Trell treated her. Difference is, Sena isn't as emotionally broken as Mireya was and thus is less easily manipulated.

Sena breaking up with Mireya for Alex? :hmm:

Also, Autumn still insufferable. Any of your friends bring the blitz and you get pissed. Homegirl finally decides to open up about her new bae and first thing Autumn does is send the blitz lmao
Mireya's not a master of manipulator like Trell was either.

:hmm:

Ain't that how it typically go?
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Topic author
Caesar
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Post by Caesar » Today, 07:24

Rak / Nacatl

Ramon stood at the hood of his car with his hands in his pockets, his weight on one foot, his eyes moving between the BGs posted down the block. Tyree leaned against the passenger side, his arms crossed, his chin tipped back against the roof. The lamps that still worked threw strips of orange across the pavement in intervals, every other one dead, the dark pooling in the gaps between them.

A few of the BGs had their usual positions along the fence and the telephone pole, their bodies loose, their eyes working the traffic that came through on the cross street. Two addicts moved along the sidewalk on the far side, one of them drifting toward the fence where one of the BGs stood with his hands in his hoodie, the other hanging back on the curb, his weight shifting from one foot to the other, his head on a swivel. The addict at the fence pocketed whatever he’d been handed and the two of them moved off down the block together, their shadows stretching long under the working lamps and disappearing in the dead ones.

Shauntoine walked over from the corner after the exchange, his hands coming out of his pockets as he crossed the street. He stopped in front of Ramon and Tyree, his weight settling.

“Say, big bruddas, y’all find out who that was shooting at T?”

Ramon shook his head. “We still looking.”

Shauntoine looked between them. “Should we be clutching?”

“Keep the lil’ niggas with the sticks the lil’ niggas with the sticks. Y’all know where the rest of them at.”

“But I ain’t never got nothing on me.”

Tyree’s toothpick shifted to the other side of his mouth. “Because you got drugs on you, you fucking dumb ass nigga. You want to get caught with crack and a fucking gun? You want to hold the fucking money, too?”

“I’m just saying.”

Ramon’s chin dipped once. “You good. Shit been quiet for weeks anyway.”

Tyree sucked his teeth and pointed past Shauntoine toward the corner where a man stood looking around, his hands jammed in his coat pockets, his head turning in short pulls. “Get your ass over there and serve that junkie, nigga.”

Shauntoine held his hands up and turned. He jogged across the pavement toward the man, his sneakers slapping the asphalt.

Tyree watched him go, the toothpick rolling once between his teeth. He shook his head. “Some of these lil’ niggas retarded. I swear to fucking God.”

“Nigga scared because they potna got shot, remember?”

“It’s the fucking streets. Niggas get shot.” Tyree pulled the toothpick from his mouth, the wood pinched between two fingers, his eyes on the block where Shauntoine had reached the man at the corner and the two of them were talking, their bodies angled toward each other. He turned to Ramon, his weight settling against the car again, his arms crossing. “You still ain’t never told me what that informing ass nigga told you.”

Ramon shrugged. “’Cause he ain’t tell me nothing worth telling. He just said it was some niggas he ain’t never heard of.”

“So it was Ant.”

“How you figure that? People know him.”

“But they don’t know him as no boss. That was Trell.” Tyree put the toothpick back in his mouth. “Ant was just the nigga shooting niggas.”

“He ain’t got nothing to take a shot at you for.”

“He fuck men. Trannies.” Tyree tapped his temple. “He ain’t right in the head. He don’t need no reason.”

“That’s some weak ass logic, brudda.”

“Or it’s Scottie and them.”

Ramon looked at him. “You mean, Scottie, the nigga who potnas you shot at. And Shad who brother you shot at.”

“Thought they wasn’t 110.”

Ramon’s jaw shifted once. He pulled his hands from his pockets and folded his arms across his chest.

“At this point, we gotta run the shit up the chain and see what the old niggas know.”

“Man, fuck that.” He turned to face Ramon. “So they can say don’t spin on whoever it is?”

Ramon shrugged. “What other choice we got? I ain’t trying to go track down no lead from a nigga talking to the police. I ain’t going to jail, nigga.”

Tyree sucked his teeth and waved off the comment, his hand cutting a short line through the air between them. Tyree put the toothpick back in his mouth and turned to face the block. Ramon turned with him.

Somewhere down the far end of the street a car turned and its headlights swept the houses for a beat before it kept going.

~~~


Autumn came down the driveway with her keys in her hand, her bag over one shoulder, her stride carrying her toward her car. Miles’ sedan pulled up ahead of hers and parked, the engine cutting.

Through the windshield she could see Miles in the driver’s seat and Demi beside him, her hair pulled back from her face, one foot up on the dash. Miles leaned across the center console and kissed Demi once before he pushed his door open and got out, a folder tucked under his arm.

He came up the driveway toward the house. “What’s up?”

Autumn watched him. “Should you be bringing your little boo around while working? That shit seems like it’s against some kind of law.”

Miles shook his head, the laugh still in his face as he passed her. He walked up to the front door, knocked twice with the back of his hand, and stepped inside.

Her eyes went to the sedan at the curb where Demi sat in the passenger seat with her head down, her thumb moving across her phone screen. Autumn looked at the house once, then back at the car. She dropped her keys into her bag and walked down the driveway toward the street.

She came around the back of Miles’ car, past the bumper and up the driver’s side. The window was down. Demi’s elbow rested on the sill, her phone held loose in her fingers. Autumn leaned down and rested her forearm on the door, her face level with Demi’s.

“You’re Demi, right?”

Demi looked up from her phone and smiled. “Yeah, I saw you the other day.”

“Yeah.” Autumn’s eyes moved once across the interior of the car, the purse on the floor by Demi’s feet, the Stanley in the cupholder, and came back to her face.

“Do you know Miles well? I know he works for your dad.”

Autumn raised her eyebrow. “Who’d you vote for in 2024?”

Demi’s pulled together. “Excuse me?”

“You look like a Kevin McCarthy kinda bitch.”

Demi laughed and her phone lowered to her lap. “He would’ve had to have run for me to vote for him in ’24, no?”

“Vince Fong, then. Whatever floats your boat.”

“I voted for Kamala. Obviously.” Demi’s smile held, her eyes steady on Autumn’s face. “I’m an ally.”

Autumn snorted a laugh. “Fucking a Black man doesn’t make you an ally.”

Demi’s smile dropped. She leaned back against the door, her body shifting its weight toward the center of the car. “I can tell no one’s ever punched you in the mouth.”

“You want to be the first one to try it?”

Demi’s chin came up. “I don’t get down in the muck.”

The front door opened behind them. Miles came down the driveway with a set of folders in his hand, his hand already reaching for his keys. He looked between Autumn at the passenger window and Demi inside the car as he came around to the driver’s side, his eyes narrowing a fraction.

Autumn looked over the roof of the car at Miles, then brought her eyes back down to Demi. “Make sure you and Miles don’t do any pillow talking that makes problems for my daddy, Becky. I don’t trust y’all.”

Demi rolled her eyes. Her head turned away from the window toward the windshield, her jaw set, her thumb pressing once against the lock button on her phone.

Autumn straightened up off the car. She stepped back from the door and adjusted the bag on her shoulder, her eyes holding on Demi for a beat longer before she turned and walked up the sidewalk toward her car. Miles stopped at the driver’s side, the folders against his arm, his chin lifting a fraction too high.

“Why you bothering people?”

Autumn opened her door and dropped her bag onto the passenger seat. She looked at him over the roof of his car. “Don’t raise your voice to that one. We don’t want to have to protest for you.”

She got in, pulled the door shut, and started the engine. She checked her mirror once, put the car in drive, and pulled away from the curb. Miles was still standing at his door when she turned the corner.

~~~


Sena sat cross-legged on her bed with her back against the headboard, the joint between her fingers, her other hand resting on her ankle. Alex sat beside her with her legs stretched out and crossed at the ankles, her shoulder against the headboard, her head tipped back against the wood. The smoke sat in the air between Sena and Alex, thin and blue where the light caught it, drifting toward the window in a slow current from the fan overhead.

Sena took a pull, the smoke filling her chest, then let it go toward the ceiling and passed the joint to Alex. Alex took it without looking, her fingers finding the paper.

“I’ve been telling David that it’s about time for him to get on his knee or I’m going find someone new.”

“Y’all have been together like four years and still in college. You can’t wait a couple more years?”

“I don’t see any reason to wait. If he wants to marry me, he can make that commitment now. We already fucking live together.” Alex brought the joint to her mouth, pulled, and let the smoke out slow.

“That’s really what you want to do?”

Alex shrugged. “I don’t know. The dating pool is infested with fuckery so I’m not trying to get back in it.” She held the joint out between them.

Sena took it. “You don’t even know. You haven’t tried to date anyone since high school.”

Alex looked over at her and winked.

Sena snorted a laugh, the smoke catching in her throat. “Of course, you’d fucking cheat.”

“I’m twenty-one. I’m not supposed to be making good decisions.”

“You were just talking about getting married, Alex.”

“More reason to sample what the world has to offer.” Alex reached over and took the joint from Sena’s fingers, her nails grazing Sena’s thumb on the way through.

Sena shook her head. Her eyes went to the blinds for a beat, to the strips of light crossing the carpet, then came back. “Mireya’s probably cheating on me right now.”

“Why would you think that?”

“We’ve been fighting this week. Because I said she needed to dress more modestly.” Sena’s thumb moved along the seam of her jeans at the ankle. “Now, she’s in LA with her daughters’ father.”

Alex exhaled through her nose, the smoke curling out in two thin lines. “I’ve only seen her a couple times in person, but she is kinda skankish.”

“You’re biased. She could dress like a nun and you’d still think that.”

Alex passed the joint back. “She probably has a sexy nun costume.” Alex’s mouth pulled at one corner. “She looks like the type.”

Sena sighed. “Alex.”

Alex held her hands up, the joint between two fingers of the raised hand, the smoke rising off the tip in a thin thread. “So you’re breaking up?”

“I don’t want to. I just want her to make shit easier. She always picks the most difficult option for every fucking thing.”

Alex lowered her hands and passed the joint back. Sena brought it to her mouth, pulled once.

Alex shifted on the bed, her body turning a fraction toward Sena, her knee drawing up until it pressed against Sena’s thigh. “You need a distraction. You’ve been spending too much time in her world, with her kids and shit, in the house her baby daddy bought, riding in the car he bought.”

“She bought her new car.” Sena let the smoke go.

Alex raised an eyebrow. “In the car he bought.” She let a beat pass, her eyes on Sena’s face. “You need to start doing things for you and stop letting her dominate everything. It’s a relationship.”

“That’s rich coming from you.”

Alex shrugged. “I’m just saying.”

“I don’t even know how to start doing that.”

Alex leaned over. Her hand came up to Sena’s cheek, her palm settling against the skin, her fingers curling behind Sena’s ear, and she kissed her.

Sena pulled back, her head pressing into the headboard behind her. She reached over and pressed it into the ashtray on the nightstand without looking. “Alex, chill.”

“I can be your distraction, Sena.”

“You were just talking about getting married to David.”

Alex shrugged. “So?” She leaned in again and kissed her, slower this time. She pulled back far enough to speak. “Do you want to?”

Sena’s eyes went to her phone on the comforter beside her hip. She looked at it for a beat, then brought her eyes back to Alex and nodded.

~~~


Caine sat deep in the couch with Micaela against his chest, her face turned into the fabric of his shirt, her breathing slow against his collarbone. One hand held her back, his fingers spread wide enough to cover the span of it. Camila was between them, asleep on Mireya’s arm, her body curled into Mireya’s side, one hand gripping the hem of Mireya’s shirt where it bunched at her hip. The TV ran a movie across the room, the dialogue low enough to sit under the sound of Micaela’s breathing, the light from the screen shifting over the coffee table, the far wall and the side of the couch where the four of them had settled into each other.

Caine’s free hand came up to the side of his head, his fingers finding the ends of one of his locs and twisting it between his thumb and forefinger. “How’s therapy going?”

Mireya shrugged, the motion small enough not to shift Camila’s head on her arm. “It’s alright.”

“Alright, but your ass keep going.”

“I like talking to someone that ain’t involved in the shit. She’s neutral. Just listening. Telling me where I’m fucking up.”

“She could spend months telling you where you fucking up.”

Mireya sucked her teeth. “Now, you got fucking jokes.”

Caine smiled, his hand still at the loc, the ends twisting between his fingers. “Solo digo las cosas como son.”

Mireya rolled her eyes. “You should try it. You got a lot of shit you need to get off your chest.”

“Like what?”

“¿En serio?”

Caine shrugged. “I’m straight. I ain’t about to go cry on nobody couch.”

“You ain’t gotta fucking cry.”

“That’s still some white boy shit.”

Mireya shook her head. “Eres un tonto.”

They sat with the movie playing and the light from the screen moving across the room. Micaela’s breathing came even against Caine’s chest. Camila’s grip on Mireya’s shirt had loosened in her sleep, her fingers slack against the fabric.

Mireya looked at him. “Why do you keep fucking with your hair?”

“I need it cleaned up before tomorrow.”

“To put a helmet on your head.”

“I got an image to uphold.” He nodded over his shoulder toward the hall. “But mama shouldn’t have ate those tamales.”

“That shit looked off as soon as you opened the box.”

“Blame UberEats for that shit. Y’all the ones want to eat but ain’t want to go nowhere.”

“I can do it.”

“Do what?”

“Your fucking hair, Caine.”

Caine snorted a laugh. “Be fucking for real, Mireya.”

“I’ve watched mami do it hundreds of times. I do Camila’s hair. My fucking own. I’m not some random white bitch who watched two YouTube videos.”

Caine looked at her. Micaela’s fingers curled once against his shirt in her sleep. “You better not fuck my shit up.”

“Tienes razón. Ponte extensiones.”

Caine shook his head. He leaned forward slow, his hand sliding from the loc at his temple to the back of Micaela’s head, holding her steady as he eased himself off the couch. His feet found the carpet and he lowered himself to the floor in front of the coffee table, his back against the base of the couch, Micaela still against his chest, her face pressing deeper into his shirt as the angle changed..

“The stuff on my dresser.”

Mireya lifted Camila’s head off her arm, sliding her hand out from under the weight of it and settling the girl down onto the cushion. Camila’s mouth opened once and closed, her body turning onto her side, her knees drawing up. Her footsteps carried through the apartment, the hardwood giving once under her weight, then nothing as she walked into in the bedroom.

She came back with a jar of butter gel and a comb in one hand, a spray bottle in the other, a pack of clips tucked under her arm. She set the jar and the comb on the coffee table, the spray bottle beside them, the clips in a loose pile near the edge. She looked down at him where he sat on the floor with his back against the couch, Micaela’s face against his chest.

Mireya stepped over his legs and sat down on the couch behind him. She brought one leg over his shoulder, her calf coming to rest against his chest on the opposite side from Micaela, the other leg tucking under herself. She adjusted once, her weight finding the cushion, her knees framing his head. She picked up the spray bottle and misted his hair, the water darkening the roots where it landed, the locs pulling heavier with the moisture. She set the bottle down and opened the jar, scooped a small amount of the butter gel onto her fingers, and worked it between her thumb and forefinger until it went smooth. She reached forward, parted a section near his crown with the tail of the comb, and took the first loc between her fingers. She started the retwist from the root, her thumb and forefinger rolling the new growth tight against his scalp, working down the shaft of the loc until the twist caught and held on its own. She clipped it flat and moved to the next one.

Caine’s eyes closed. Mireya’s fingers worked the next loc, parting it from the ones beside it, the comb running a clean line through the new growth before her thumb and forefinger took over.

~~~


Jill came through the back door with the tray of raw wings balanced on one hand, the screen door catching on her hip before it swung shut behind her. Paul stood at the grill with a pair of tongs in one hand and a beer in the other, the grate already smoking, the coals bright underneath. The backyard opened up past the patio to a fence line where the grass had gone thin near the posts. A cooler sat at the edge of the concrete, the lid propped open, bottles standing in the ice with their labels dark where the water came up around them.

A TV sat on a stand against the outside wall of the house, the pre-game show running low enough to sit under the conversation. Stacy, Hillary, and Rhonda had the sofa and the two chairs arranged near the TV, drinks on the side table between them. Tom, Jeff, and Steve stood near the grill with Paul, beers in hand, their voices going back and forth over whatever Paul was doing with the coals. Victoria toddled across the patio in front of Jill, her bare feet slapping the concrete, one hand gripping a plastic cup she’d taken from the side table. Ainsley, Stacy and Tom’s daughter followed a few steps behind her, smaller, less steady on his feet, his arms out for balance.

“Put that down right there, bae.”

Jill set the tray on the side shelf of the grill. Paul leaned over and she kissed him, his hand catching the small of her back for a beat before she stepped away. She crossed the patio, stepping over Victoria’s path without breaking stride, and sat beside Stacy. Her legs crossed and her hand reached for the drink she’d left on the side table. The ice had gone thin in the glass, the condensation running down the outside of it onto the wood.

Stacy turned toward her, one arm along the back of the sofa. “I was just telling them that we need do a couples’ cruise now that Victoria is old enough to not need you every second of the day.”

Hillary leaned forward in her chair. “It’s not Victoria that’s keeping her here. It’s her trying to be the fucking attorney general.”

Jill shook her head, her drink coming up. “Attorney general? Absolutely not. Waste of my time to run that election.”

Rhonda crossed one leg over the other. “Liz Murrill did it. You can.”

Tom called over from the grill, his beer tipping toward the group as he spoke. “No offense, Paul, but Jill would be a damn lot better to look at on TV than Liz Murrill.”

Paul laughed, the tongs clicking as he flipped a piece of chicken, the grease sizzling where it hit the coals. “I’ll take it as a compliment.”

Jeff nodded toward the TV. “I hate when y’all put on this Big 10 shit. Where’s the SEC show?”

“That’s all that’s on right now.”

The pre-game show kept running, the analysts moving through their segments, their voices sitting under the conversation on the patio. Victoria came back across the patio and pressed herself against Jill’s leg, the plastic cup still in her hand. Jill reached down without looking and smoothed the girl’s hair back from her forehead, her fingers running through it once before her hand came back to her drink.

The segment on the TV changed. A graphic filled the screen with the USC and Penn State logos side by side, the matchup stats running in columns beneath them. One of the analysts leaned forward and started talking about USC’s season, the quarterback who had come out of Georgia Southern in the spring and had been on a tear. The other analyst cut in with the numbers, the passing yards and the touchdowns stacking in columns that made the case before the words did. A highlight package ran behind their voices, the quarterback dropping back, the ball coming out, the receiver pulling it in at full stride. Another clip showed him scrambling past two defenders and throwing on the run, the ball landing thirty yards downfield. The name ran along the bottom of the screen. CAINE GUERRA, JR. QB, USC.

Stacy pointed at the TV. “Don’t you know that boy?”

Jill nodded, her eyes on the screen. The highlights kept running, the quarterback scrambling left on one play, throwing across his body on another, the crowd in the background on its feet. “I prosecuted him back in ’24.”

The highlights kept running on the screen behind her, one play after the next, the crowd noise coming through the TV speakers in waves. Tom whistled from the grill, long and low. “I know it chaps your ass that you lost and now he’s on fucking TV.”

The husbands laughed. Paul didn’t. He stood at the grill with the tongs resting against the grate, his eyes on Jill across the patio. Tom was still laughing beside him, his hand slapping Jeff’s shoulder as the sound carried. The smoke came up from the grate between Paul’s fingers.

Jill looked back at Paul. He shrugged, one shoulder lifting, the beer still in his other hand.

Jill shook her head and turned back to the TV. The highlights had ended and the analysts were talking over each other about the Heisman race, one of them making the case that no one else was close.

Behind her, the grill popped once as the grease hit the coals. The husbands went back to their conversation. Stacy said something to Hillary that Jill didn’t catch. Victoria pressed harder against her leg. Jill’s hand came back down to the girl’s hair.





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Soapy
Posts: 15709
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » Today, 10:05

Autumn

:ruok:

None of these people need to be together

:kobeout:
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redsox907
Posts: 5603
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » Today, 13:15

Autumn a bitch just to be a bitch lmao. She walks around like she better than everyone else, but yet is so insecure about her old flame moving on she gotta press him everytime she see him lol

Sena cheating with Alex, Mireya more than likely cheating with Caine. These people all deserve each other

you ain't bringing Jill Babin back for no reason :ooo:
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