American Sun

This is where to post any NFL or NCAA football franchises.
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Caesar
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American Sun

Post by Caesar » 03 Jul 2026, 16:35

Soapy wrote:
30 Jun 2026, 10:05
Autumn

:ruok:

None of these people need to be together

:kobeout:
Autumn being suspicious of a random white woman a dude who works for her politician-adjacent father is dating is a red flag?
redsox907 wrote:
30 Jun 2026, 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:
Or see above.

All Mireya did was step in for Caine's mother to fix bro's hair. :smh: This would be like saying man was cheating if he went to some random hair stylist he found on IG.

:curtain:
Captain Canada wrote:
01 Jul 2026, 09:29
These really are four of the worst people ever huh? They really can't stop self-sabotaging.

Comical that Caine has one girl to do his hair and the other to dress him, but don't mind me :curtain:
I'm lost at what self-sabotaging Autumn did in that chapter. This isn't even gas lighting. I genuinely have no idea what y'all read into that. :pgdead:

Are you trying to imply something about Caine because he can't tidy up his own hair? You cut your own hair, slime?
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American Sun

Post by Caesar » 03 Jul 2026, 16:36

Wala / Maitl

Caine stood at the kitchen island with his hands on Autumn’s hips, her body bent forward over the marble with her palms pressed flat against the surface and her back arched, her hair falling forward past one shoulder. The TV ran across the room, Danny Kanell’s voice carrying over the CBS Sports desk with Aaron Taylor seated to his right, and underneath it, faint and steady, the sound of skin against skin.

“Look, I know everyone is talking about Caine Guerra. He’s having a great season, sure, but everyone knows my stance on these spread offenses. He’s never under center unless he’s taking a knee to run the clock out and they don’t even do that all that often. These guys just don’t translate well to the NFL. Especially when you take into account that he’s played what? Three tough games?”

Caine’s grip shifted on her hips. His eyes went to the screen across the room where Kanell leaned forward in his chair y. A graphic of USC’s remaining schedule filled the lower third of the screen beneath him. The light came through the windows to his left and pressed flat across the marble, the hardwood and Autumn’s shoulders where it caught the bare skin.

“His not having a lot of gametime against the best programs is a common knock on him,” Taylor said.

“Because it’s true. He’s not being asked to do anything difficult. He’s not showing that he can do anything difficult. I can throw it to Xavier Jordan against Iowa. Right now. I can do it right now. He’s a great runner, seven hundred yards or whatever. I don’t know if I would call him a quarterback.”

“Let’s take a look at USC’s upcoming matchup with rivals UCLA.”

“Fuck,” Caine said, exhaling hard through his nose and taking a full step back from her. He leaned back against the counter on the opposite side of the kitchen, his weight settling against it.

Autumn flipped her hair over her head and ran a hand through it, her fingers pulling through the strands until they fell back behind her shoulders. She straightened off the marble and rolled her shoulders once, her palms pressing flat against her own thighs.

Shen bent down and pulled her panties up from where they’d been around one ankle, tugging the waistband up and into place against her hips.

She looked at him over her shoulder. “They might as well just get it over with and call you a nigga.”

Caine snorted a laugh. “They probably do when them cameras ain’t rolling.”

“Your problem is that you don’t have a name that could make people think that you’re white.”

“I don’t?”

Autumn laughed, her head shaking, her hand still working through her hair. “Fuck no. If you didn’t play football, you’d have your job applications getting thrown out left and right with Caine Guerra at the top of it.”

“I think it’s the felonies that would do that.”

Autumn rolled her eyes. She crossed to where he stood and leaned into his chest, her body fitting against his, her hands coming flat against his sternum with her fingers splayed wide across his chest. Her chin tipped up so her eyes found his face.

“Can I convince you to come out with us this weekend after the UCLA game?”

“Yeah.” Caine nodded. “I think I can manage that.”

“Don’t do it if it means I have to fight your baby mama.”

Caine shook his head. “If you scared, just say that.”

Autumn swatted at him, her palm flat against his ribs. “I never been afraid of a bitch.”

Caine laughed. His arms came off the counter behind him and wrapped around her waist, pulling her body in until it settled full against his. Her hands shifted from his chest to his sides. The TV ran across the room behind them,

His chin came down so he could meet her eyes. “You wanna come with me to New York, too?”

Autumn pulled her head back. “They told you that you are a finalist?”

Caine nodded.

“You run that by Mireya?”

“You have got to stop being so worried about her. I told her to bring her girlfriend.”

“That doesn’t mean anything, nigga.”

“I told her I was going to ask you.”

“Alright,” Autumn said.

Caine smiled. He leaned down and kissed her, her body tipping up into him, her fingers pressing once into his ribs. He pulled back far enough to see her face.

“You want a round two?”

Autumn sucked her teeth, but the smile came up on her face before she could do anything about it.

~~~


Yola rolled off her and sat on the edge of the bed, his back to her, his chain hanging forward off his neck. He leaned over and grabbed a blunt from the corner of the table beside the bed, pinching it between his thumb and forefinger and bringing it to his mouth. His other hand found a lighter somewhere in the clutter on the surface and he flicked it twice before the flame held. The tip caught and he pulled, the cherry glowing against the dim of the room, and the first line of smoke left his mouth in a slow stream that broke apart before it reached the ceiling.

Mireya sat up and swung her legs off the other side of the bed. She walked to the bathroom, her feet finding the tile, and stopped at the rod on the wall where a single towel hung folded over the bar. She pointed at it and called over her shoulder. “Is this towel clean?”

“That’s my last clean one. Don’t wipe your pussy with that shit.”

Mireya rolled her eyes. She pulled the towel off the rod, shook it open with one hand, and wiped between her legs with it, pressing the fabric flat and drawing it through once. She folded it in half and dropped it on the bathroom floor. Back in the bedroom she found her panties near the foot of the bed, stepped into them and pulled them up over her hips, the elastic settling against her skin.

Yola had laid back against the pillow with the blunt between two fingers, his arm bent behind his head, his eyes on the ceiling. Smoke hung in a flat layer above him that the light from the window pressed through.

“So where you been hiding since Trell got dropped?”

“I ain’t been hiding nowhere.”

“But you ain’t been coming around.”

Mireya grabbed her scrubs pants from the arm of a chair near the closet and stepped into them one leg at a time, pulling them up over her hips. She found the drawstring ends and pulled them through the waist, tying it off in a single knot. “Where is there to come around?” She tugged the hem down over her ankles. “It ain’t like I was selling anything. I only went there because Trell told me to.”

“You looking for a new nigga?”

Mireya picked her scrubs top up off the same chair and pulled it over her head, her arms pushing through the sleeves, the fabric catching for a second on her hair before she tugged it free. She gestured down the length of herself with both hands. “Do I look like someone that’s trying to be in a traphouse?”

Yola pulled on the blunt, the cherry brightening against the grey light that came through the blinds. “You was in school back then too and you still used to be in right there with all the real niggas.”

Mireya shook her head. “I’m good.” She sat down on the edge of the bed near the foot and reached for her shoes on the floor beside the nightstand. She slid her foot into the first one and worked her heel down into it, pressing against the back with her finger until it seated.

She looked over her shoulder at him. “So, who’s running everything now?”

Yola shrugged. “Ant think he is but it’s a new nigga that done came into the city setting up shop. Me, Shad and Scottie been fucking with him. Skimming some here and there.”

“Who’s the new dude?” Mireya pulled the second shoe on and pressed her foot flat against the floor to seat it.

“Nigga named Royce. Got a twin brother name Romeo.”

Mireya snorted a laugh. “Goofy ass names.”

“They got money and a plan. You wanna meet them? I know them classes expensive as fuck.”

Mireya shook her head. She pushed up from the edge of the bed and walked around to the side where Yola lay, and stopped next to him with her hand held out.

Yola looked at her hand and then up at her face. “This one ain’t on the house? Old time’s sake?”

“That’s exactly why I need my money.”

Yola laughed, his head shaking once against the pillow. “If you wasn’t no pro, I could see why a nigga would want to wife you.”

He reached over to the nightstand and pulled the drawer open, the wood catching once before it slid free. His hand came back with a roll of bills held tight by a rubber band around the middle, the ends of the bills fanning out where they’d been folded over. He worked his thumb under the band, peeled the first bill off the roll, and laid it flat across her palm. The second came off and landed on top of the first. Mireya watched his thumb hook under the edge of the third.

~~~


Saul drove with his elbow on the window and his head propped against his hand, the interstate stretching flat across the Bonnet Carré with the spillway opening up on either side of the bridge.

The water sat low and grey under the sky, the grass along the edges of it yellowed and pressed flat from where higher water had been weeks ago and dried into a lean that all pointed the same direction. He looked out over it for a second, the flat expanse of it running all the way to the tree line where the cypress stood bare against the grey, then shook his head and turned his eyes back to the road in front of him.



He took the exit and turned south, following the streets as they narrowed, the houses getting closer together, chain link and concrete driveways and trash cans pulled to the curb. He found Trent’s block and pulled to the curb two houses down from the address, put the car in park, and killed the engine.

He sat with his hands on the wheel, his thumbs pressing into the leather at ten and two. The neighborhood was around him, a dog barking behind one of the houses, a truck parked halfway up a driveway with its hood raised and no one under it. He pulled the key from the ignition, pushed the door open and stepped out onto the street.

He stood next to the car with his hand on the top of the door and looked at the house, at the front porch, the Ring camera mounted above the door frame and the walkway leading up from the sidewalk. His hand tightened on the door and he bent back toward the seat, his body half in and half out, then shook his head once. He straightened, closed the door behind him, and walked up to the porch.

He raised his hand to the door and stopped, his knuckles an inch from the wood. He could hear a TV on inside, something with a laugh track muffled through the door. He let a breath go through his nose, then knocked three times and let his hand drop back to his side.

Trent’s voice came through the Ring camera speaker, tinny and compressed. “Fuck off, bitch.”

Saul threw his hands up, facing the camera. “C’mon, bro. Can we just fucking talk?”

“You can talk.”

“Just let me in, man.”

Nothing came back through the speaker. Saul stood on the porch with his hands at his sides, his weight shifting once from one foot to the other, his eyes on the small dark lens of the camera.

He could hear movement inside the house, a lock turning over, then a second one. The door opened and Trent filled the frame, leaning on the door jamb with his shoulder pressed into the wood, a crutch tucked under his opposite arm. The rubber foot of the crutch sat planted on the tile behind him.

Saul looked at the crutch, then up at Trent’s face. “You’re up and walking around now?”

Trent’s jaw shifted once. “Fuck you. You got me and Javi shot and then disappeared for a fucking year, just living it up.”

“I was just in St. Amant. I ain’t disappear nowhere.”

Trent shook his head, his grip tightening on the crutch handle under his arm. “That makes it fucking worse. You were just forty minutes away and didn’t come check on us once.”

“You told me not to.”

“But now you here standing in front of my fucking face like shit’s normal.”

Trent lifted the crutch off the floor and held it out in front of him. He looked at the crutch, then back at Saul, his eyes flat. “You going see Javi?”

Saul nodded. “Yeah, I was going to swing by there after here.”

“You gonna need a plane ticket.”

Saul’s eyebrows came together. “What?”

“His parents couldn’t afford to take care of him here. Since you know, he’s fucking paralyzed from the neck down. They went back to Mexico.”

Saul looked down at the concrete of the porch, the crack running through it near the edge of the step. “Fuck, man. I ain’t know.”

“You never do. The whole time I’ve known you, all you fucking think about is yourself because you’re jealous of your fucking cousin.”

“Nah, man. I ain’t je—”

“Well, you can’t be him now, can you? Motherfucker’s rich. And what are you doing? Living at your baby mama’s house like the broke bitch you are. She probably pays for all your shit.”

“I got a job.”

Trent snorted a laugh. “My bad, big baller.” He shifted his weight against the jamb and lifted the crutch to gesture past Saul toward the car at the curb. “Get the fuck off my doorstep.”

Saul shook his head. He turned and walked back down the porch steps to the walkway, his hands going into the pockets of his hoodie, his shoulders pulling in against the cold. Behind him, the door slammed.

~~~


Caine leaned against the back of Memo’s car with his arms crossed and his ankles crossed in front of him, his weight settled into the panel behind his back. Memo stood beside him, his phone held low in one hand, his thumb moving across the screen between glances at the building.

The Century Regional Detention Center sat across the lot in front of them. A slow string of women came through the exit one or two at a time, some of them carrying clear bags, some of them walking toward the lot where cars idled along the curb, others standing near the entrance looking at their phones or scanning the rows for whoever was picking them up.

Caine watched them come out for a beat, then laughed to himself, his head shaking. “You know most of the time when someone asks to help bail a motherfucker out, it’s for an actual crime.”

Memo looked up from his phone. “Mano, they did charge her with a crime.”

“She threw paint on a CBP truck. She ain’t fucking Pablo Escobar.”

“It’s still the orange man’s administration. They’ll put us in prison for anything.”

Caine held his hands up. “You preaching to the choir. I did my time behind bars.”

“Ade gonna appreciate you getting her out though.”

Caine looked over at him, one eyebrow lifting a fraction. “Motherfucker, I know you trying to fuck her. I’m trying to help your ass out.”

“Man, we just friends.”

Caine laughed, one hand coming up to tap the back of it against Memo’s shoulder. “Alright, bruh. So, when she comes out of there, make sure you dap her up and tell her we going fuck some bitches for her first day out.”

Memo sucked his teeth, his head shaking once, the phone dropping against his thigh. “Ahora es comediante.”

Caine’s mouth pulled at both corners. He settled his weight back against the car and let his eyes move across the lot, across the women still filtering out of the building in ones and twos, across the chain link running the perimeter, the parking lot striped and cracked, wide enough that the cars along the curb looked small against the concrete of the building behind them.

Memo went back to his phone, his thumb scrolling in long pulls. Caine kept watching the exit. A woman came through the door and stopped on the sidewalk to light a cigarette, cupping the flame against the breeze, the smoke leaving her mouth in a line that broke apart before it reached the curb. Another came out behind her and crossed the lot toward a minivan where two kids sat visible through the back window.

Adelita came through the exit with a clear plastic bag in one hand, the contents shifting against the plastic as she walked. She wore a white t-shirt and jeans, both of them splattered with dried paint, patches of red worked into the cotton and the denim in shapes that had no pattern to them. Her hair was pulled back and her eyes moved across the lot until they found Caine and Memo against the car. She changed direction and crossed the asphalt toward them, the bag swinging once at her side.

She stopped in front of Caine and looked at him, her chin coming up a fraction. “I appreciate you paying my bail. I’ll pay you back.”

Caine shook his head, his hand coming up and waving it off. “Shit was cheap. Don’t worry about it.”

Memo pushed off the fender and stepped toward her. “You good? Didn’t have to fight Big Bertha off in there, huh?”

Adelita rolled her eyes. “That’s not how jail is.”

“You were only in there a weekend,” Caine said.

Memo looked at her. “You hungry or something? We can stop.”

Caine looked over at Memo, his mouth pulling at one corner.

Memo’s jaw shifted once. “Man, fuck you.”

Adelita shook her head, the plastic bag swinging once at her side. “I just want to sleep in my bed.”

Caine pushed off the car and pulled open the back door. “I’ll sit in the back.”

Adelita looked at him, then at the back seat, then back at him. “You’re too tall for that.”

“Memo will just owe me one.”

Memo shook his head. He walked around to the driver’s side and pulled the door open, his keys already in his hand.

Adelita rolled her eyes. She walked around the front of the car toward the passenger door, the plastic bag shifting in her grip. “I don’t even want to know what y’all are talking about.”

Caine ducked his head and folded himself into the back seat, his knees pressing into the back of the passenger seat in front of him. “No te preocupes. Ya te enterarás.”

~~~


Ramon got out of his car and pushed the door shut behind him. He crossed the yard toward Nina’s front porch, his keys already out of his pocket and in his hand. He found the house key between his thumb and forefinger, slid it into the lock, turned it, and pushed the door open.

Nina stood at the counter in the kitchen with her back to him, a cutting board on the surface in front of her, a knife in her right hand moving through vegetables in short, even strokes.

Ramon walked to the table beside the door and dropped his keys on the surface. He reached behind his back and pulled the pistol from his waistband, the weight of it shifting in his hand, and set it down on the table next to the keys. The metal settled against the wood with a dull sound.

Nina looked over her shoulder as he did. Her mouth pressed into a line. “I don’t want that there.”

Ramon turned from the table and walked into the kitchen, his hands loose at his sides. “What you cooking?”

“I told you I don’t want that there.” The knife kept moving against the board.

“I heard what you said. I’m gonna move it in a bit.”

Nina’s hand stopped on the knife. She looked at him over her shoulder, her eyes flat. “You know another young boy got killed in the city last night. He was walking across the street in the East. Gunned down. Thirteen years old.”

Ramon leaned against the counter across from her, his arms crossing over his chest. “You always be telling me about all these lil’ niggas getting killed like I don’t know they asses be getting put in the dirt. Stop trying to make me feel guilty. I ain’t kill his lil’ ass.”

“But someone like you probably did. Someone in their twenties or thirties just killed somebody’s baby and no one’s going to ever give those parents closure.”

Ramon sucked his teeth and pushed off the counter, crossing the kitchen to the fridge. He pulled the door open, the light from inside catching the bottles and the containers on the shelves, and scanned the rows for a beat before his hand found a water bottle near the back. He straightened, let the door swing shut on its own, and cracked the cap. “Nina, if you don’t want to hear about niggas getting shot then move your ass out to Luling or some shit.”

Nina set the knife down on the cutting board. She turned to face him fully, her arms crossing over her chest. “I got a job offer. A new organization someone I know is starting. Doing the same thing I’ve been doing, advocating to end gun violence, end gang violence, but with more resources, more money.”

Ramon shrugged. “Sounds like it’s your type of shit then.”

“I can’t be fucking a nigga in a motherfucking gang doing that.”

“You been doing that.”

“Well, I’m not doing it anymore.”

Ramon waved the comment off with the hand holding the bottle. “This the same shit you used to say.”

“I want you to get out.” Nina’s voice came across the kitchen low and level. “I’m taking this job and I’m not going to mock my friend’s vision by being with you. If you want to leave the street life behind, you can stay, but if that’s how you want to live, we’re done.”

Ramon looked at her for a beat, his jaw shifting. He set the bottle on the counter beside him. “Shit, you ain’t saying nothing but a word.”

He walked back across the room to the table by the front door. His hand found the keys first, scooping them off the surface and closing his fist around them. Then the pistol, his fingers wrapping around the grip and lifting it off the wood, the weight of it settling back into his hand before he tucked it into his waistband behind his back.

“That’s your decision?” Nina’s voice came from the kitchen behind him.

Ramon turned his head enough to see her over his shoulder. “You ain’t giving me no demands, man. Fuck you think this is? I ain’t no pussy ass nigga running from the streets. Go find you some flonky ass nigga to fuck then.”

Nina shook her head, her arms still crossed, her mouth pressed flat.

Ramon pulled the door open and stepped through it, the cool air hitting his face and his arms. He slammed it behind him.

~~~


Sena pulled her keys from the ignition and got out of the car, pushing the door shut behind her. The air pressed cool against her face and the backs of her hands as she walked toward the front door, the porch light on and casting a yellow circle across the steps and the welcome mat. She found Mireya’s house key on the ring between her thumb and forefinger, slid it into the lock, and turned it. The door gave and she pushed it open, stepping inside.

Mireya came down the stairs before Sena had the key out of the lock, her feet quick on the steps, her hair loose over her shoulders. She crossed the front room and pulled Sena into her, one arm around her waist and the other coming up to the side of her face and kissed her. Sena’s hand was still on the key in the door. When Mireya pulled back, Sena blinked.

“What was that for?”

“Because it’s your birthday, baby.”

“My birthday is tomorrow.”

“Yeah, but I wanted to be first.” Mireya’s smile sat wide across her face, her hand resting on the side of Sena’s neck.

Sena looked around the front room, stepping further inside, and pulled the door closed behind her. “But we need to talk.”

Mireya shook her head. Her hand found Sena’s and her fingers laced through. “Not tonight. I got mi mami to take the girls. You got me all to yourself tonight.”

Sena took a deep breath, her chest expanding under her jacket, and let it go through her nose. “No, really, Mireya.”

“Okay, later. But first I want to show you something.”

Sena nodded. “Okay.”

Mireya smiled and turned, pulling Sena by the hand toward the staircase. Mireya led her to the bedroom at the end of the hall. She pushed the door open and stepped to the side so Sena could see.

Presents covered the bed. Boxes wrapped in paper, some with bows, some without, stacked across the comforter and sitting on the floor at the foot of the bed. A few bags sat between the boxes with tissue paper coming out of the tops, the colors bright under the lamplight from the nightstand.

Sena looked over everything on the bed, then turned to Mireya. Mireya stood in the doorway with her shoulder against the frame, her arms crossed loosely, the smile still pulling at her mouth.

“Mireya, this is too much.”

Mireya shook her head. “No, it’s not.”

“How much did you spend on all of this?”

“You’re a terrible gift receiver. You’re not supposed to ask how much I spent. I spent what I spent. Now, you open the gifts.”

Sena reached for the nearest box on the bed, a flat rectangle wrapped tight, and peeled the paper back from one corner, working her fingers under the seam and pulling it away in a single strip. She lifted the lid off the box underneath. Three smaller boxes sat inside, each one the same size, dark velvet with David Yurman stamped across the top in silver. She looked back at Mireya, then back at the boxes. Her fingers opened the first one. A silver cuff bracelet sat in the cushion, the cable design running the length of it, the metal catching the lamplight. The second box held another bracelet, different design, thinner. The third the same.

“You can’t have just one,” Mireya said from the doorway.

Sena held one of the boxes in her hand, the bracelet sitting in the velvet, the weight of it real against her palm. “This really is too much.”

“You deserve to be spoiled.”

Sena set the box down on the bed beside the others. She closed her eyes, her fingers pressing into the comforter on either side of her. “We really need to talk.”

Mireya crossed the room and sat Sena down on the edge of the bed, easing her back onto the mattress, then lowered herself to the floor in front of her, her knees finding the carpet between Sena’s feet. She took both of Sena’s hands in hers, her thumbs settling against Sena’s knuckles.

“Hold on. Me, first.” Her eyes came up to Sena’s face. “I know I’m hard to love. And I know most of the time, maybe even all of the time, I don’t deserve it anyway. I’m trying to be better for you, baby. I am.”

“Mireya.”

Mireya shook her head, her thumbs moving once across Sena’s knuckles. “You’ve been there for me despite everything. Whatever you need me to do to make this easier for you, I’ll do. I promise I will. I care about you and I want to make this work.”

“Mireya.”

“I love you, baby. I’m gonna do better. I swear.”

Sena’s eyebrows came together. “What?”

“I said I love you.”

Sena’s hands were still in Mireya’s, Mireya’s thumbs still against her knuckles, Mireya’s eyes still on her face from below. “I—I love you, too.”

Mireya brought Sena’s hands to her mouth and kissed the back of each one, her lips pressing flat against the knuckles, then lowered them to Sena’s lap. The smile came back across her face, slower this time, settling into place. She looked up at Sena. “What did you want to talk about?”

Sena opened her mouth. Then she closed it. She shook her head. “It’s nothing.”

“Okay. We can talk later if you change your mind.” Mireya nodded toward the boxes behind Sena on the bed. “Keep opening, baby.”

Sena turned her head and looked at the presents stacked behind her across the comforter, the wrapping paper and the bows and the bags with tissue coming out of the tops. She let a breath go, long and heavy through her nose, and reached for the next box.
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Captain Canada
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Post by Captain Canada » 03 Jul 2026, 19:45

Throw the whole couple out at this point. I'll take a thousand Caine'Autumn pairings over Mireya and Sena, holy shit.
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redsox907
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Post by redsox907 » 04 Jul 2026, 04:15

I hope Royce and Romeo get walked down by Ant, just cause :curtain:

Sena and Mireya really horrible. At least Autumn isn't cheating, she just insufferable. How are you making me like this Karen-ass bitch over everyone else :pgdead:

Ramon out in the streets for real for real now huh
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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 05 Jul 2026, 16:26

Captain Canada wrote:
03 Jul 2026, 19:45
Throw the whole couple out at this point. I'll take a thousand Caine'Autumn pairings over Mireya and Sena, holy shit.
You just hate Mireya so much that Sena is getting the residuals from that.
redsox907 wrote:
04 Jul 2026, 04:15
I hope Royce and Romeo get walked down by Ant, just cause :curtain:

Sena and Mireya really horrible. At least Autumn isn't cheating, she just insufferable. How are you making me like this Karen-ass bitch over everyone else :pgdead:

Ramon out in the streets for real for real now huh
:hmm:

Autumn has still yet to exhibit any Karen-like behavior.

He ain't E.J., brudda
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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 05 Jul 2026, 16:26

Esh / Eztli

Autumn lay on the couch with one leg bent against the cushion and the other stretched out along the length of it, her phone held above her face, her thumb moving across the screen in slow pulls. She scrolled past two posts, paused on a third, then kept going.

The knock came twice against the front door.

She sucked her teeth. Her thumb left the feed and swiped back to the home screen, found the Ring icon, and tapped it. The camera loaded for a second, the image grainy before it sharpened. Sasha stood on the doorstep with a Pyrex dish held against her hip, her free hand already reaching for the door handle.

Autumn rolled her eyes and swung her legs off the couch. She crossed the foyer in bare feet, the hardwood cool under her soles, and pulled the door open with one hand on the frame.

“You didn’t call or text first before just popping up over here?”

Sasha held the dish up between them, the foil cover catching the light coming through the doorway. “I was bringing Tee Nadine her shit back. Move.”

Autumn took a step back, her hand sliding off the frame as Sasha came through and walked past her toward the kitchen. Autumn pushed the door shut behind her and followed, her feet padding against the hardwood down the hall.

Sasha set the dish in the sink. The glass landed against the stainless steel with a flat tap. She turned the faucet on, ran water over the top, then turned it off and wiped her hands on the sides of her leggings.

Autumn leaned against the wall nearby, her arms crossing over her chest, her shoulder settling into the drywall. She watched Sasha finish with her hands before she spoke.

“You and that boy of yours doing anything this weekend?”

Sasha turned around and leaned back against the counter, her palms flat on the edge behind her, her weight resting against the cabinet. “Other than going to the game?”

“Clearly I meant other than going to the fucking game.”

Sasha shrugged “I don’t know. I’m sure there’s going to be a party or something. It’s gonna be a movie that night if we win.”

Autumn’s head tilted against the wall. “Y’all aren’t going to win.”

Sasha held her hands up. “My bad, bitch. I didn’t think you were suddenly working for ESPN just because you started fucking the nigga that plays quarterback.”

Autumn pushed off the wall and crossed to the counter on the opposite side from Sasha. She pulled herself up onto the granite. Her legs hung off the side, one ankle crossing over the other.

“It’s just that I don’t pick losers.” She tipped her chin, her eyes on Sasha. “I think we’re going to Delilah after. A little calm night, you know?”

Sasha snorted a laugh, her head shaking before her arms came across her chest. “You keep trying to tell everyone that you ain’t a fucking sack chaser but you sure are loving having that nigga trick on you.”

Autumn’s eyebrow rose, one hand lifting off the counter and turning palm up between them. “You sound jealous.”

Sasha’s weight shifted against the counter. “I ain’t jealous. That nigga is gonna go to the NFL sooner or later and he’s going to get his league-issued white bitch to replace you. Probably already has a few of them on the roster lined up.”

Autumn laughed, her head tipping back. “Because I never heard this before. When I’m sitting in a section Saturday night, drinking $1,500 shots while my nigga is waiting on me hand and foot, I’ll be sure to check in with you so you can find whatever white bitch is supposed to be replacing me.”

Sasha held her hands up before pushing off the counter as she took a step toward the doorway. She stopped at the edge of the kitchen and turned back. “I’m just looking out for you, cuzzo. Especially after I heard Miles got him a Becky with the good hair. Seems like all your niggas be leaving you for white bitches.”

Autumn’s mouth flattened into a line. “Bitch, bye. I know my man.”

Sasha held the look for a beat then she turned and walked toward the front of the house, her hand dropping off the frame, her footsteps crossing the hardwood in the hall. She called back without turning her head.

“Let Tee Nadine know my mama texted her to tell her that they swinging by here Sunday for brunch.”

Autumn tilted her head toward the hallway. “Yeah, alright. I’ll let her know.”

Sasha’s hand found the front door handle. “See you Saturday.”

Autumn shook her head as the front door opened and pulled shut behind her.

~~~


Sena’s fingers turned one of the David Yurman bracelets on her wrist, the metal sliding against her skin in a slow rotation as her eyes held on the window past Celia’s shoulder. The bracelet caught the lgiht each time it turned, a small flash of silver that moved across her knuckles and disappeared.

Celia sat in the armchair with her hands folded over each other on her knee. She watched Sena, her posture settled, her weight even in the chair.

A few more beats passed. The heater clicked behind the wall. Sena pulled her eyes off the window and looked at Celia.

“Mireya told me she loves me.”

Celia’s chin dipped a fraction. She let the words sit between them for a beat. “That’s a big step considering how new your relationship is, generally speaking. What did you say to her?”

Sena’s thumb paused on the bracelet. She looked down at her wrist, at the cable twist of the metal where it sat against the bone. She brought her eyes back up.

“I told her I loved her, too. I guess I really am a lesbian if I’m saying that after six months.”

Celia shrugged, one hand lifting off her knee and settling back. “There’s no timeline on these things.”

“I think she knows about me and Alex hooking up. I don’t know how but I think she does. I think that’s why she said it.”

Celia’s head tipped to one side, her hands resettling on her knee. “That would be a big leap for someone to make, Sena. What makes you think that?”

Sena’s hands came together in her lap, one thumb pressing against the knuckle of the other. She drew a breath and let it go through her nose. “Because she came back from Los Angeles, had all this shit for my birthday, all these gifts, told me that she was willing to do anything to make our relationship easier then told me she loved me. And she kept cutting me off when I tried to tell her.”

Celia let a beat pass. Her fingers adjusted on her knee, resettling without uncrossing. “Based on some of the things you’ve told me, Mireya has shown some behaviors in your relationship that I would categorize as concerning and we’ve discussed those.”

“We have.”

“But you’ve never said anything about her being performative in her feelings or pretending to have feelings that she doesn’t have. Her giving you numerous gifts tracks with her behaviors, especially when you wrap it in it being your birthday.”

Sena slid her thumb along one of the bracelets, her eyes dropping to her wrist. The light from the window moved across the metal in a thin band as she turned it. She watched it for a beat, her thumb tracing the cable twist from one end to the other.

“It’s just the sudden change on her being willing to do what I ask to make everything easier. She comes from LA and now she’s all in for this relationship with me?”

“Is that so absurd? You outlined your stance. She received your stance. She’s thought on it for a few weeks, a few hours while flying back, and decided that you were right.”

Sena’s eyes came off her wrist and found Celia’s face. “We’re talking about a woman that never lets me make the decisions.”

Celia’s head shifted a fraction. “Do you believe her?”

A beat passed. The heater hummed behind the wall. Sena’s thumb found the edge of the bracelet and pressed against it, the metal biting into the pad of her finger.

“I could.”

“What does that mean?”

Sena shrugged. “I don’t know. I just think I could.”

Celia nodded. She drew a breath and let it settle. “We’ve been circling this for a while. At some point, Sena, you have to decide whether you’re going to trust her or that you can’t and end this relationship, especially now that you have introduced infidelity into the dynamic.”

Sena sighed. Her spine pressed into the cushion behind her, her shoulders dropping, her hands coming off her lap and finding her thighs. “I think everything has just gotten too fucked up.”

“So then do you want to leave her?”

Sena shook her head. “No.”

“Then you need to figure it out.”

Sena rolled her lips into her mouth, the skin folding under her teeth. Her fingers found the bracelet on her wrist and turned it, the metal sliding against her skin.

~~~


Mireya shifted her weight in the leather chair, one leg stretched out in front of her, the other bent at the knee, her body leaning to the side so her elbow pressed into the armrest.

Fernanda sat with her legs crossed, one over the other at the knee, her hands resting flat on her thighs.

“Sena cheated on me with that white bitch she’s always hanging around.”

Fernanda’s eyebrow rose. “How do you know?”

“They were hanging out when I was in LA last week then the other day. The bitch posted it on IG. Then Sena kept saying she had something to tell me.”

Her head tipped a fraction, her eyes holding Mireya’s face. “What was it that she told you then?”

“I didn’t let her say anything. I was giving her gifts for her birthday, doing some nice shit for her.”

“And then what?”

She looked past Fernanda to the wall behind her, to the photograph of the beach, the elote cart, the yellow of the corn against the flat blue water. Her eyes stayed on it for a beat. “I told her I love her.”

Fernanda’s eyebrow lifted a fraction. “Is that true?”

A beat passed. She shrugged. Then she nodded. “Yeah.”

Fernanda let the word sit between them. “Did you tell her that then because you believed that she cheated on you?”

“I know she cheated on me.”

“Believed she cheated on you.”

Mireya sucked her teeth. “I told her because I wanted to tell her. I ain’t tell her that because I wanted her to feel bad for cheating. I don’t give a fuck about that.”

Fernanda held her gaze. “Because you’ve done your fair share of cheating yourself.”

Mireya’s mouth flattened. “You don’t have to say it like that.”

“There’s no other way to say it.” Fernanda’s chin leveled. “Did you have sex with Caine while you were in LA?”

Mireya shook her head. “No. I was good. I just did his hair for him because mi mami was sick.”

“He doesn’t pay anyone for that?”

“No. His mama is the only one he lets touch his hair.”

Fernanda’s head tilted a degree. “And you, apparently.”

Mireya’s eyes cut to her. “We’re not talking about that right now.”

Fernanda held a hand up. “Fair enough.” She let the hand settle back against her thigh. “Now that you’ve told Sena that you love her, you’ve introduced a significant amount of pressure into this relationship that wasn’t there before. Are you willing to be faithful to her now?”

Mireya shrugged. “I just—I don’t know.”

“Why is it that you feel entitled to be selfish with people you love, but they can’t be selfish with you?”

Mireya’s eyebrow rose, her head tilting against the back of the chair. “What do you mean?”

Fernanda’s posture came forward another degree, her weight leaving the back of the chair. “With Caine, Jaslene, your mother and now Sena, you want them to yourself. They can’t have anyone else. However, you won’t commit to doing what you need to do to be faithful to them.”

Mireya’s jaw worked once. Her eyes dropped to her legs. “Because they leave. I’m just clinging to what I know I can’t hold on to anyway.”

Fernanda’s head shook once. “That’s not factual. None of those people I’ve just named have left your life.”

Mireya’s right arm folded across her chest and her left hand came up, her thumb finding her mouth. Her teeth pressed against the edge of the nail, her eyes on the floor between them, the thick carpet holding the pale light from the window in its nap.

Fernanda watched the shift, her eyes moving from Mireya’s folded arm to the thumb at her mouth. “You keep making it difficult for Sena to stay and she hasn’t left yet. What would it take for you to commit to her and stop trying to push her away?”

Mireya’s eyes dropped to the rug between their chairs. She crossed her legs, her weight resettling deep into the leather, her thumb still pressed against her teeth.

Fernanda let the silence sit. Her eyes moved across Mireya’s face, across the folded arm, the thumb at her mouth, the now crossed legs. She drew a breath and let it go through her nose.

“We’ll come back to that.”

~~~


Caine came through the glass doors with his phone held loose in one hand. Kimberly’s desk sat to his right, the monitor dark, a coffee cup on the corner of the desk with the lid still on it, untouched, the cardboard sleeve tight around the middle.

He looked around for her, checked the hallway past the desk, then shrugged and kept walking toward Tatum’s office. He passed stopped at Tatum’s door. It was open. He knocked twice against the frame with his knuckle.

Tatum looked up from behind a printout he was holding between both hands, his elbows wide, the paper angled toward the woman standing next to him. She wore a black blazer with the sleeves pushed up past her forearms, her hair pulled back. A second printout rested on the desk between them, its pages fanned at the corner. Tatum’s face opened into a grin when he saw Caine and he set the printout down on the desk, waving him in.

“There’s our future Heisman winner. How are you feeling, my guy?”

Caine snorted a laugh as he crossed the room and dapped Tatum up. “I still don’t trust them motherfuckers just moving me up to the top of the odds this week. You know they still trying to give that shit to that motherfucker from Georgia.”

Tatum pointed at him. “That’s exactly why I asked you to come down here today.” He dropped his hand and gestured to the woman. “This is Marissa Klein. She ran brand at Wasserman but you know all that shit with those files made it a little easier to steal her away.”

Marissa shook her head, a small pull at the corner of her mouth, and held her hand out to Caine. “Nice to meet you, Caine.”

Caine took her hand and shook it once. “Yeah, you too.”

Tatum clapped his hands together, rubbing his palms. “C’mon. Let’s sit down.” He moved toward the other side of the office where the couch sat against the wall.

Marissa took one of the chairs across from the couch, crossing one leg over the other, the printout she’d carried from the desk resting face down on her thigh. Tatum dropped into the chair beside her, his ankle coming up over his knee, his hands settling into his lap. Caine sat on the couch, his weight settling back into the leather, one arm resting along the top of the cushion.

Tatum leaned forward, his forearms coming to his thighs, his hands folding between his knees. “Look, kid. We need to start thinking big picture about what’s next for you. Whether that’s going to the league or coming back to SC next year, either way, we need to set you up as the name in college football. That’s where Marissa comes in, because I can do a lot of things but that ain’t it. And of course, we need to position you as the Heisman favorite here in the next few weeks.”

Caine’s chin dipped once. “I can’t do much more than just give UCLA, Notre Dame and whoever the fuck we play in Indy belt.”

Marissa smiled, her hand lifting off the printout on her thigh. “That’s going to go a long way, but also we’re working with the advantage of the West Coast bias. Being in LA has its perks that a kid in Athens, Georgia simply isn’t going to enjoy. But that’s short term. Long term, I think we’re going to play up your bonafides. You have a great story.”

Tatum tilted his head, one hand lifting off his knee. “Except the kicking it with Bloods part.”

Caine held his hands up.

Marissa turned her head from Tatum back to Caine, her weight shifting forward in the chair, her hands coming together over her thigh. “That’s part of who you are, though, Caine. You’re the American story itself. Underdog kid who had to fight and scrap his way to USC the hard way. You’re a father, bilingual, Black Latino, from one of the most imperiled cities in the country. And to top it all off, you’re an elite fucking quarterback.”

“Don’t let the boosters hear that. They still coping with me not looking like Matt Leinart.”

Tatum laughed. “The plan is to go full court press from now to Jan 1. That sets you up for your decision on what you’re doing for the draft. And hopefully, we’ll be hoping for a deep playoff run.”

Caine’s eyebrow lifted a fraction. “That’s putting bad ju-ju on me, Tatum.”

Tatum held his hands up from between his knees. “Fair enough.”

Marissa uncrossed her legs and settled her weight forward in the chair. “If you’re okay with it, we’ll put some things together and run it by you next week before Notre Dame.”

Caine scratched his chin, his fingers moving along the line of his jaw. He let his hand drop back to the armrest and shrugged. “Y’all the bosses.”

Tatum clapped his hands together, his grin already spreading before his palms separated. “We’re gonna make so much fucking money.”

~~~


Sara held the bakery box flat on her lap with both hands, the Hi-Do label facing up, the cardboard warm against her thighs from the heat running through the truck’s vents. The streetlights in Gentilly threw orange pools across the sidewalks and the front yards they passed, the light pressing flat against chain-link fences and parked cars and the brick faces of shotgun doubles set close to the curb. Jabari pulled the truck to the curb in front of a house with a porch light on and put it in park, the engine idling for a beat before he turned the key and killed it.

Sara reached for the door handle. Jabari’s hand came up between them.

“Whoa, whoa, whoa. What you doing?”

Sara raised an eyebrow as he pushed his own door open and stepped out. He came around the front of the truck and pulled her door open. He held his hand out to her, his palm up, his other hand resting on the top of the door.

She took it, the bakery box balanced in her free hand, a smirk pulling at the corner of her mouth as she stepped down from the cab. “Oh, you’re putting on airs for your grandmother, huh?”

Jabari laughed, his hand staying in hers until her feet were on the ground. “That’s exactly what I’m doing.”

They walked up the sidewalk toward the front door, Jabari’s hand low on her back. He pulled the screen door open with his free hand and knocked twice on the wood behind it as he pushed it open.

“Mawmaw, it’s me. I got someone with me.”

A voice came from somewhere deep in the house, past the front room, past a hallway that Sara could see through the screen running toward a lit entryway at the back. “Come on in, bébé. I’m in the kitchen.”

Jabari held the screen door and Sara stepped into the front room. A ceiling fan turned above them, the blades pulling a slow current through the air that pressed cool against her face. The smell hit her two steps in, the mirepoix thick in the house, onion, celery and bell pepper sautéed down to sweetness.

Doretha appeared in the entryway to the kitchen, a napkin pressed between both hands, her fingers working the paper. She stopped when she saw Sara, her eyebrows going up, her hands stilling on the napkin.

“Sara Guerra. I ain’t never expected to see you up in here again.”

Sara laughed. “Hey, Miss Doretha. You don’t look like you aged a day.”

Doretha waved the comment off with the napkin, the paper sweeping through the air between them. “You don’t need to be lying to me. I feel it in these old bones every time the damn wind change.”

Jabari stepped past Sara, his hand dropping from her back. “What you cooking in there, mawmaw?”

“Don’t be worried about what I’m cooking if you ain’t have the decency to call me before you come over here so I could look right for company.”

Sara shook her head, her smirk still holding. “I ain’t nobody to get fancy for.”

Doretha waved them forward, the napkin tucked into her palm, her other hand gesturing toward the kitchen behind her. Jabari followed her through the entryway and Sara came behind him, his hand finding the small of her back again as they passed through. The kitchen was warm, the stove holding two pots with steam curling off the lids, the overhead light catching the linoleum and the edge of a table set against the far wall.

Sara set the bakery box on the counter, the cardboard sliding against the formica, and leaned her hip against the edge. Doretha lowered herself into a chair at the kitchen table, her hand finding the back of it before she sat. She reached for a pair of glasses on the table and slipped them on, the frames settling on the bridge of her nose. She looked at Sara over the top of them, then turned her head to Jabari, her finger coming up and pointing at Sara.

“You finally went and got you some sense, huh? Only took you about twenty years.”

“Mawmaw.”

“Don’t mawmaw me, boy.” She turned to Sara, her glasses catching the overhead light. “I know he had a little thing for you back when y’all was in high school but he would always let that other boy come here to meet you. Always said you was too good for him.”

Sara held a hand up. “I got my son out of that.”

Doretha nodded. “That’s right. Your boy’s the one who be on the TV. Everyone talking about him. What’s his name?”

“Caine.”

Doretha nodded again, her finger tapping once on the table. “Caine, that’s it. You did good with him then. You know this city an evil place. Chew up young Black boys and spit them out.”

Sara smiled, her hand coming off the counter and settling against her thigh. “It wasn’t easy.”

“Don’t I know it.” Doretha looked at Jabari, who had leaned against the counter beside Sara, his arms crossed, watching the two of them. “So, how long y’all been seeing each other?”

“It ain’t been that long. Her boy bought the house next door to me.”

Doretha’s head tipped back a fraction. “Look at that. God always got a plan.” She turned back to Sara and waved her over, her hand patting the chair beside her. “I saw on the TV when they was talking about your boy that he got some chirren. Lemme see your grandbabies.”

Sara smiled, pushed off the counter, and reached into her pocket for her phone as she crossed the kitchen. She pulled the chair out and sat down beside Doretha, their shoulders close. She opened her photos and found Camila, turning the screen toward Doretha.
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redsox907
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Post by redsox907 » 06 Jul 2026, 03:10

Mireya a manipulative lil bih, wonder where she got that from

Autumn's cuzzo half right. She gonna get left holding the bag but it aint' gonna be for a becky
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Captain Canada
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Joined: 01 Dec 2018, 00:15

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Post by Captain Canada » 06 Jul 2026, 09:33

redsox907 wrote:
06 Jul 2026, 03:10
Autumn's cuzzo half right. She gonna get left holding the bag but it aint' gonna be for a becky
Damn sure ain't gonna be for a Becky. Gonna be for an emotionally unstable Latina.

Just here for my post-update "They Should Break Up" comment.

Soapy
Posts: 15784
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 07 Jul 2026, 07:45

:romeo:

pack him up again just for GP
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Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
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Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

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Post by Caesar » Yesterday, 21:46

redsox907 wrote:
06 Jul 2026, 03:10
Mireya a manipulative lil bih, wonder where she got that from

Autumn's cuzzo half right. She gonna get left holding the bag but it aint' gonna be for a becky
:hmm:

Bro's anti-love.
Captain Canada wrote:
06 Jul 2026, 09:33
redsox907 wrote:
06 Jul 2026, 03:10
Autumn's cuzzo half right. She gonna get left holding the bag but it aint' gonna be for a becky
Damn sure ain't gonna be for a Becky. Gonna be for an emotionally unstable Latina.

Just here for my post-update "They Should Break Up" comment.
Well the Latina you talking about is working to emotionally stabilize so is he gonna find another one?

Bro's also anti-love.
Soapy wrote:
07 Jul 2026, 07:45
:romeo:

pack him up again just for GP
He gonna shoot a nigga named Keshawn actually.
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