Dale Denton | The Legacy | Rookie Year

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Dale Denton | The Legacy | Rookie Year

Post by The JZA » 14 Nov 2025, 06:02

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Chapter III: Hello Goodbyes


Texas heat had a way of sitting on your chest even when you were indoors, like the whole state refused to let you breathe easy on your way out. Layla felt every bit of that pressure as she folded the last box shut. The apartment looked stripped bare, like a body on a slab waiting to be tagged. Just boxes, dust outlines where furniture used to live, and that quiet hum in the walls that always kicked in right before a major life shift. Dale and Layla had spent the last few days moving like ghosts—packing, dumping, tying loose ends tighter than guilt knots. Dale handled the lease-break fees like it was nothing, helping Layla sign off on the last of the paperwork. While he was out doing sentimental football shit, shaking hands with the man who’d watched him grow from phenom to legend. Zara slid through the apartment for her own goodbye. The kind that didn’t need balloons or playlists—just two women and a half-melted Hershey bar between them.

Layla drop onto the couch next to Zara, snapping off a square of chocolate and stuffing it in her mouth, fixing for a pick-me-up. “I can’t believe this our last day here. This shit feel surreal.” She broke off chocolate, popped it in her mouth with a sigh. “I can’t imagine how you gon’ hold up without me around to keep your ass entertained.” Layla smirked, leaning on the back of the couch.

Zara clicked her tongue, all attitude and edges. “Mmhmm. Bitch, whatever. You ain’t that entertaining. I always find ways to keep myself… occupied.” Zara rolled her eyes playfully, snatching off a piece of chocolate like it owed her money. “You wish you had my life. But it won’t be the same without you out here starting chaos every time you breathe.” Then her expression softened, which didn’t happen often—like a pit bull deciding to nap instead of fight. “But for real… how you holding up? All this baby drama shit with Dale gotta be weighing you down.”

Layla let out a breath that felt too big for her chest. She dropped her head back into the couch cushions, staring at the ceiling like it had answers. “To be honest? It’s been a damn roller coaster. I’m excited for Buffalo—new place, new start with him… but this paternity bomb? It’s thrown everything upside down.” She hugged her knees, voice barely above a whisper. “I trust him. I do. But the timing? His ex popping up out the shadows with this? Feels messy. Makes me wonder what else is waiting to crawl out.”

She swallowed, eyes burning. “And if the kid is his… then what? I’m diving into a new city while trying to co-parent with a stranger. It’s a lot, Zar’. Like… a lot.”

"Girl, I hear you. This whole situation is messy AF. But you gotta keep faith in Dale and the bond y'all got. He seems like he's doing the right thing, trying to get answers. That's saying more than half these dudes walking around here." Zara shrugged, letting the moment breathe. "But you better than me. I ain’t got that kind of patience. Ain’t no good dick on earth worth dealing with another bitch popping up talking ’bout "baby need this, baby need that, child support! Bitch, please...” She snapped another piece of chocolate. “Fuck her though. You stronger than whatever lil’ storyline she tryna start. And if she wanna step?” Zara’s eyes went wolf-dark. “Say the word. I’ll be on the first flight to beat the brakes off her and cut that bitch.”

Layla snickers softly at Zara's fierce declaration, shaking her head. "Oh, I have no doubt you'd be on the first thing smoking to defend my honor, you crazy bitch." She shook her head, nudging Zara's arm affectionately. "One of the many reasons I adore you." Wanting to shake off the heavy mood, she pushed herself up and stretched, her workout shorts riding up her hips. She drifted to the kitchen, grabbed two water bottles, tossing one to Zara. “Come help me double-check the packing. I want everything done before Dale gets back. It’s our last night here… I wanna make the most of it.”

Zara’s grin turned wicked, slow, knowing. “Oh, I bet you do. Gotta give the neighbors one last performance before you move up north for your pookie Daley baby.” She coo'd as she draped herself over Layla’s back like a shawl. “Look at you… all in love and shit.”

Layla blushed, but didn’t deny it. “Yeah… well… he’s my person. You know I love me some quality time with him” Then her expression softened into something more serious. “And I’ve been thinking a lot about what I want too. Not just being Dale Denton’s girlfriend.”

Zara straightened, surprise flickering. “Oh yeah? Like what? And don’t tell me you wanna be some pick-me housewife baking cookies and ironing Dale’s drawers.”

Layla shoved her arm playfully. “No, dumbass. But… I’m thinking about leaving the industry. For real. I’ve been looking into online programs for programming… game design, voice acting or something. I wanted to get involved since I was like 13, growing up. I know, it's probably surprising given my current... line of work. But I've grown tired of the stigma, of constantly battling society's perceptions. And I’ve always loved gaming. I think it’s time I actually do something real for myself.”

Zara blinked—then barked a laugh. “So underneath all the Nicki Minaj hair, lashes and ass, you really a nerdy lil’ brat. I knew it.”

Layla shoved her playfully. “Shut up! Ugh, can't stand your trifling ass!”

“Nah, but for real?” Zara’s smile softened. “I’m proud of you. Takes guts to leave lucrative money to chase a dream.” She pulled Layla into a tight hug—but her eyes flickered with something darker, hotter, sharp as a razor hidden in velvet. Jealousy. Want. Fear of being left behind, but she masked it quick.

“Go ahead, girl. Chase that fucking dream and make it yours." Zara released her with an exaggerated huff. “But hey—whatever you need, I got you. Always going to support you. We ride or die, remember?”

Layla smiled, genuinely warmed. “Always.”

The apartment felt smaller now—boxes stacked, memories fading into cardboard, the quiet hum of an ending turning into something new. Buffalo was calling. So was the truth. And tonight? Tonight was the last breath of their old life.


——————————————————————————————————————————————————


Meanwhile, across town, Austin was breathing its last little hold on Dale Denton. The sun was sliding down over the University of Texas campus, painting the towers gold like the place already knew it was losing one of its brightest sons. Dale had spent the earlier part of his day dap’n up the juniors-turned-seniors, showing love, cracking jokes, blessing them with the kind of knowledge you can’t scribble on clipboard paper. Just presence. Just energy. The type of gem only a made man could drop. Later he found himself in Coach Elko’s office — the last conversation before the next chapter ripped open.

Elko leaned back in his chair, studying Dale the same way a father studies a grown kid before he leaves the house for good. “Dale, I can’t tell you how much I'm proud of you, son.” His voice had that weight behind it, that gravel that only comes from years of pushing boys toward greatness and watching the world chew them up. But with Dale, it was different — pride mixed with awe. “I’m really proud of the work you’ve done,” Elko continued. “And excited to see you do great things at the next level. Even if it was just a year, I’m glad to have been your coach. You gave this program a hell of a season… a championship this place has been starving for.”

Dale cracked a grin, all humble heat. “I’m excited too. Coming here, playing in the SEC… it answered everything I ever questioned about myself. I played the best in college football, left nothing untouched.”

Elko nodded slow, like he knew Dale was speaking nothing but truth. “You stepped up to the challenge. Showed folks what you were made of. Watching you grow in this system? Man… that was something special.” He leaned forward, elbows on the table, voice dropping to that mentor tone. “Leadership. Undying competitiveness. The hunger to learn. You set a new standard for quarterbacks at Texas. You brought swagger into the huddle… and confidence onto the field.”

The room went real still, real heavy, like the walls were trying to remember every last word.

Elko locked eyes with him. “Remember this, Dale — talent gets you seen. Grit gets you paid. And you? You got grit in abundance. You’re built for the pressure. Built for the Sunday lights.”

Dale took that in, nodding, smiling with that quiet confidence killers carry. “I was speaking to Coach Danielson on my way here, he said something to the same effect. He's excited for me just as well.Dale takes a moment before continuing his statement.But I gotta say, I'm a Dawg for life, but I'm honored and proud to have learned from you. No question your philosophies will stick with me going forward."

Elko broke into a warm chuckle. It was rare to see the man soften like that. “Well… I’m just grateful I got to coach you. You grew as a quarterback, but even more as a man.” He stood and extended his hand — not as a coach, but as somebody who respected the grind. The shake was firm. Real down the middle. No fluff on both sides. “No matter where you go, you got a supporter in me. I’m looking forward to watching you light up the league.”

He released Dale’s hand, smiling wide. “And hey — don’t forget this place. You’re always welcome back in Austin. Come visit the squad sometime.”

“You already know, Coach. I’ll send you some tickets when I come through to face Dallas or Houston.” Dale offered.

“Oh, absolutely. Send them my way,” Elko grinned. “Ain’t nothing I’d like more than kicking back with a cold one and watch the defense sweat.”

Dale's eyes drifting toward the plaque of the team at the national championship behind Elko — the title he helped bring home. “I hope Alonzo carries the torch next season. Hate that I left him with big shoes to fill, but… something tells me he’ll be alright.”

Elko looked back at the plaque, nodded like he could already see the future. “Leaving big shoes is proof of the mark you left. Alonzo learned from you. He’s ready to step up. This program is in good hands because of what you instilled here.”

Dale shook his hand one more time, grip firm with respect. “Thanks, Coach. Wish you the best moving forward.” He let out a laugh. “Alright, I gotta go. I left my lady to handle all the last-minute packing. She’s definitely gonna put me to work when we land in Buffalo. Good thing I ain't moving in the winter.”

Elko’s laugh boomed like a man who’d heard that story a thousand times. “Best of luck to you and your lady. Communication, respect, work ethic — remember those. That’s how you win on and off the field.”

Dale was halfway out the door when Elko called out one last time — the kind of line a young man hears in his head years later, right before making history. “Safe travels, kid! Chin down, eyes up. This is just the beginning. Give ’em hell in Buffalo!”

The door closed behind him. Austin had just watched a legend walk out. Buffalo had no idea what was coming.
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Dale Denton | The Legacy | Rookie Year

Post by The JZA » 14 Nov 2025, 06:05

redsox907 wrote:
12 Nov 2025, 20:33
The JZA wrote:
12 Nov 2025, 18:37
backdoor stories
if he went backdoor he wouldn't be in his current predicament :kghah:
redsox907, Touché Image
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djp73
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Dale Denton | The Legacy | Rookie Year

Post by djp73 » 14 Nov 2025, 06:29

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The JZA
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Dale Denton | The Legacy | Rookie Year

Post by The JZA » 14 Nov 2025, 07:02

djp73 wrote:
14 Nov 2025, 06:29
djp73,
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"All we got is this one ride through this whole damn mess."

redsox907
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Dale Denton | The Legacy | Rookie Year

Post by redsox907 » 14 Nov 2025, 11:51

Layla getting out of the industry, wonder how ex boyfriend gonna take that (I admittedly forgot his name...)
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Dale Denton | The Legacy | Rookie Year

Post by The JZA » 16 Nov 2025, 06:03

redsox907 wrote:
14 Nov 2025, 11:51
Layla getting out of the industry, wonder how ex boyfriend gonna take that (I admittedly forgot his name...)
redsox907, Bitch name is Dom(inique)

Only time will snitch :yep:
Last edited by The JZA on 16 Nov 2025, 06:22, edited 1 time in total.
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Dale Denton | The Legacy | Rookie Year

Post by The JZA » 16 Nov 2025, 06:11

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Chapter IV: The Tale Of Mr. Snozzberry Pt.2



A few weeks slid by since Dale and Layla touched down in Buffalo for real—no more trial run, no more hotel hopping. This was home now, even if Dale barely saw the inside of the loft due to training, mini camps, film study, NIL obligations, and every other damn thing tugging at him like bill collectors with no chill. Layla held down the crib while he ran around, flipping the loft into something pulled out of a high-fashion magazine with a whisper of her Iranian roots woven through the corners. She gave the place that feminine warmth Dale never knew he actually liked—rich textures, soft lighting, small pieces of art that looked like they carried secrets.

Dale had carved out a tiny sanctuary by the windows—the “man quarter,” as she called it. His third Heisman sat dead center like a crown jewel, flanked by the ghosts of who he used to be: Manning High’s #5, Washington’s #7, Texas’ #5. His whole journey framed like a timeline. A scrap of feng shui he convinced himself kept him balanced. Layla was finishing up reorganizing throw pillows like it was a championship sport when Dale trudged through the door, dropping his duffel like a bad habit.

“Helloooo! I’m home!” he hollered. “Anyone here? Or can I walk around butt-ass naked?”

A melodic laugh floated in from the living room, followed by the staccato of heels tapping hardwood. “Welcome home, baby,” Layla said as she stepped into view—hair sleeked back, silk blouse draped just right over her frame, high-waisted jeans hugging every curve like they were loyal. “And let’s keep the nakedness behind closed doors, hmm?” She glanced at the wide-open windows and smirked. “I was just finishing. What do you think?” She twirled, showing off the hybrid aesthetic—chic minimalism with Iranian art deco touches, like a Love & Hip Hop star fell in love with a Tehran gallery curator.

Dale wrapped an arm around her waist and kissed her, then scanned the room. “You tried? Girl, this place look like a Pakistani flea market with a pro's touch. Only thing missing is a Persian fur rug”

“A’ight, Layla van der Woodsen,” Dale said, grinning. “But nah, for real—you did your thing. If this feels like home to you, that’s what matters. You gave up a lot to ride with me out here. Least I could do is let you dress the crib.”

Her smirk softened into something warmer. “That means a lot to me, Dale. I want this place to reflect both of us… some of our roots, our future, all that...”

Dale raised a brow. “But... sounds like there's a "but" there.”

Layla exhaled, worrying the button on his shirt with restless fingers. “I guess I’ve been feeling… restless. Like I’m losing myself somewhere in the middle of your schedule, my classes, and this new life. I love you, I love being here, but I don’t want to just be the girlfriend in the background. I need something that’s mine.”

Dale pulled her close, steady with it. “You ain’t nobody’s background. You got your own bag to chase. And you’re gonna chase it.”

She blushed when he tapped her butt and stepped away, grinning in spite of herself as she watch Dale moved to the fridge. “I just don’t want to fade into your shadow,” she murmured.

“You won’t,” Dale said, cracking open a blue Powerade. “What’s going on with school? You still on that?”

Layla leaned against the island, arms folded. “Yeah. I’m still deep in the graphic design program. But I’ve been looking into game development. Storytelling, world-building… design that actually means something. I want to try that. I know, sounds stupid—a porn star trying to make games—”

“What? Hell nah!” Dale barked. “Free games for me! Do it!”

She blinked, surprised by his instant approval. “Seriously?” she asked. “You wouldn’t mind the long nights? The time? The grind?”

“Girl, you act like I don’t spend half my life grinding,” he said. “If you want it, chase it.”

Layla slid her arms around his neck and kissed his jaw. “Thank you. For real. I just want to be… more than a face or a fantasy. I want to build something beyond being a trophy girlfriend.”

“Trophy girlfriend?” Dale scoffed playfully. “Please. I’m the prize around here.”

She laughed, pushing him lightly. “Oh, of course, your majesty.”

“We a team,” Dale reminded her. “Ain’t no team before us. And in a few years, I’m hoping you bring in six figures so I can be in my soft boy era.”

She snorted. “Please. You’d last ten minutes trying to be lazy.”

“Shit, don’t test me. I got a backlog of games I need to get through,” Dale said, pulling her close.

They kissed—deep, slow, the kind that made the rest of the world mute itself—until Dale’s phone vibrated. He pulled back, annoyed. Checked the screen. And just like that, the air shifted.

Keisha.

His whole expression dropped like bad news. “Fuck…” he muttered.

Layla’s smile faded. “What happened?”

He hesitated, jaw tight. “I forgot about the paternity test. Keisha decided to ‘remind’ me.”

Layla’s concern deepened. “Do you want me to come with you? I’ll go.”

Dale shook his head immediately. “Nah. I ain’t dragging you into that circus. Me and Keisha was cool as kids, but she always had that messy streak with other people. I don’t need her trying you.”

Layla didn’t like it, but she respected it. “Just be careful. Don’t let her twist anything. You know what we are. More importantly, you know who you are.”

He kissed her cheek. “Always baby girl.” A beat passed. The weight of real life slithered in, but Dale shoved it aside with a grin. “But that’s this weekend,” he said. “Right now? How about we re-christen the bedroom?”

She giggles as Dale scoops her up, instinctively wrapping her legs around his waist. "Mmmm, now you're talking my language" She captures his lips in a heated kiss, nibbling playfully at his bottom lip. "Lead the way, QB. Let's make some memories in here, shall we?"

He carried her toward the bedroom, her laughter echoing behind them like a promise of better things—for now.


———————————————————————


The weekend crept in heavy, all gray skies and bad omens, by the time Dale touched down in the city. He wasn’t trying to be here—hell, he’d rather run stadium stairs until his legs gave out—but duty had a way of grabbing a man by the collar. After landing at JFK, he hit a shuttle, then a cab, letting Manhattan swallow him whole as it always did. He finally pulled up outside the spot Keisha picked: NYC DNA Testing of Manhattan, a squat building on East 71st that looked like it specialized in disappointing people.

Keisha was already outside with her son when Dale stepped out the cab. She had her guard up before he even closed the door behind him. Rocking purple leggings and an oversized white tee, she looked tired, the kind of tired that sleep don’t fix. The little homie—Kian—had on black cargos and a matching white tee just like hers. Both shirts spray-painted with “Harlem’s Finest” and a big-ass number 5 on the front.

Dale clocked it instantly. The message. The implication. The aim. But he let the shot slide.

“You made it,” Keisha said flat as concrete. She checked her watch like he was late to a shift she supervised. “Thought maybe you changed your mind.” Those dark circles beneath her eyes denied every ounce of chill she tried to front. “You ready to get this over with? I want the results ASAP. For everybody’s sake.”

Dale let a long breath spill out his chest. “Yeah. Let’s get it over with. The sooner the better.” He motioned toward the door. Keisha tightened her grip on the boy’s hand and led the way.

Inside, the clinic was cold, sterile—one of those places where hope goes to die quiet. Fluorescent lights buzzing overhead, weird stock photos of smiling families on the walls, medical posters reminding everybody what kind of business they were handling.

Keisha stepped up to the reception desk, shoulders stiff, smile tight enough to snap. “Hi. Keisha Harrington. We got an appointment for a DNA test.” She jerked her chin toward Dale. “And this is… the father. Dale Denton.” She paused on the word, letting it sting before following it with a look that dared him to flinch. “Let’s hope you’re ready for the truth. Wherever it lands.”

Dale ignored her completely and crouched a bit to meet Kian’s eyes. “You don’t wanna be here any more than I do, huh?”

Keisha damn near hissed, yanking the boy gently behind her. “Don’t drag him into this. He don’t understand any of this mess.” She turned to the tech behind the counter, voice clipped. “Can we get this done? I gotta pick up my daughter from her grandma’s.” Her arm curled around Kian like a shield.

The tech, a middle-aged woman built like she don’t tolerate nonsense, waved them into a small back room. Explained the process—simple cheek swabs, in and out. Keisha watched every move like she thought Dale might somehow cheat the damn cotton swab. The tech got his sample, then Kian’s. Whole thing took minutes, but the tension stretched it out. When it was done, Keisha’s eyes drifted to Dale. The softness that used to live in them was long dead. Only suspicion left.

Dale caught her staring. “So this daughter of yours,” he said, voice low, eyes sharp. “You sure she’s not mine? Or you bringing ‘em in one at a time?”

Keisha’s eyes went deadly quiet. “Don’t even joke like that, Dale. Ever.” She pulled Kian closer, protective heat radiating off her. “Nia’s father is not you. Don’t question her parentage like you questioned Kian’s.” Her voice trembled with anger she swallowed back hard. “Yeah, I made mistakes. I slept around. I was young, stupid, looking for something I didn’t know how to name. But I always knew who fathered my kids. Unlike some people.” Her gaze sliced him.

Dale didn’t react, leaning back like he had all day. “Yeah, whatever. Keep deluding your choices as mistakes. I know how foul you can get.” He looked away, out toward the traffic rolling past the window. “Anyway, couple days we’ll know. And if he’s mine? I'll step up. No questions. You know me. I grew up without a father. I ain’t doing that to another kid.” His jaw clenched. “But if that test says otherwise…” He shook his head and pointed at her. “You foul, Keisha. You real foul.”

Keisha scoffed like she’d been waiting for that. “Pot calling the kettle black. You think I’m foul? At least I raised our son without running from it.” Her voice sharpened. “And trust, I know what it’s like not having a dad. Mine left before I was born. But I didn’t break. I got stronger. And I’m raising my kids to be the same.”

She let out a breath, anger cooling into exhaustion. “Look… we got ugly history. I know that. But we need to put all that aside for Kian. He deserves both of us, even if we can barely stand each other.”

Dale shut that down immediately. “We’ll talk after the results hit the portal. Until then? No peace talks.” He glanced at Kian, guilt flickering at the edges of his expression. He wanted to say something—anything—to smooth the edges of what the boy had just witnessed. But he stopped himself. Last thing he needed was another blow-up. “I got somewhere to be. Take care of yourself.”

That was it. He walked out the clinic, flagged a cab, and was gone before Keisha could even exhale.

She stared after him, shaking her head like she’d known the ending before the scene even began. “Typical,” she muttered. “Run from your responsibilities. Coward.” She smoothed her hand over Kian’s hair and forced a smile. “Come on, baby. Let’s go get your sister. We’ll grab lunch, just us. Forget all these grown folks’ problems.”

Outside, she waved down a cab, bundled Kian inside, and shut the door on the clinic and everything it held. As the car pulled off, her eyes dropped, thoughts spiraling. If the test proved Dale was the father… would he really step up? Or would he ghost again, leave her holding all the weight like she always did? Only time will snitch, and time wasn’t known for mercy.


———————————————————————


Just barely a week gone by and the NFL preseason creeping up like a bill collector, Dale threw every ounce of his energy into grinding the moment he touched back down in Buffalo. No more junk food. No more late-night runs to the fridge. Layla made sure of that. She had him locked into that strict, ugly protein-only diet—grilled chicken, eggs, salmon—and she took way too much pleasure munching on all his favorite snacks right in front of him. Chocolate chocolate chip ice cream. Grandma's oatmeal raisin cookies. Old fashioned sour cream donuts from Amazon.

She was evil for that.

Days blurred past. Training sessions beat his body down. Team meetings cooked his brain. Playbook study had him talking to himself at night. But he still carved out time for Layla, trying to keep his sanity intact. Still… one thing sat in his head like a loose bolt rattling in an engine.

The damn paternity test.

The tech at the DNA center had told him it usually took one to three business days, rarely longer. But every time Dale refreshed that app, his nerves jumped. "Rare delays", he said. Rare, his ass.

The next morning, Dale was mid-stride on his 5K, body locked into that runner’s zone, steady and controlled—until he heard a notification ding through his headphones. He slowed up, hands on his hips, dragging in air like he pulling the last drag on a short butt. Sweat dripped down his forehead as he pulled out his phone and looked at the screen.

Results available.

His stomach dropped. This was it. No turning back.

He tapped the app open, then glanced up at the sky like he was checking in with God to make sure he wasn't on the line with Maury Povich to come out of retirement for one episode. A long, heavy sigh pushed out of him. He closed his eyes, counted to three, then opened them and read:

99.99% — NOT the father.

Dale’s knees damn near buckled. He dropped his head, relief washing through him so fast he felt light-headed. Then it hit him all at once—joy, freedom, vindication—and Dale straight-up lost it. On the side of the road, this man broke into a full celebration like he’d just won a championship. Flexing. Dancing. Acting a whole fool. Cars passing by probably thought he escaped from somewhere. He didn’t care, he just knew that the long storied chapter of Keisha in his life was finally over. He had to tell Layla.

He turned around and took off sprinting back toward the loft, legs pumping like he had rockets strapped to his shoes. Hit the building, skipped the elevator entirely—extra workout, why not—and powered up the stairs two at a time. Bursting through the front door like SWAT, he yelled, “Baby! Where you at? I got some good news!”

Silence.

Then… a faint grunt. Somewhere in the back. Sounded like pain, but he couldn’t place it. “Layla?” he called, checking the bedroom. Empty. Spare room? Empty. Laundry room was clear. Another low groan echoed from the bathroom. He rushed over, half confused, half still buzzing off the test results.

“Hey babe! I just found—” But the words died on his tongue.

Layla was hunched over the toilet, clutching the seat, body trembling as she threw up hard.

Dale froze.

“…Aww, shit…” he muttered, all that excitement draining from his face. And just like that, the victory lap ended.

Mr. Snozzberry strikes again...
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Captain Canada
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Dale Denton | The Legacy | Rookie Year

Post by Captain Canada » 16 Nov 2025, 12:15

Rubbers ain't that expensive, my boy.
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djp73
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Dale Denton | The Legacy | Rookie Year

Post by djp73 » 16 Nov 2025, 19:58

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Soapy
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Dale Denton | The Legacy | Rookie Year

Post by Soapy » 17 Nov 2025, 06:22

respect on the natty
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