American Sun

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Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 13941
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 18 Nov 2025, 14:51

redsox907 wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 12:12
Caesar wrote:
17 Nov 2025, 22:34
Trell lifted his chin toward the open space where the men waited. “Go make your money, Luna.”
oh Trell a cuck now?

I'm sure Ramon knows that more than just dancing happens at those parties, so once he gonna do with that info now :hmm:
Caesar wrote:
17 Nov 2025, 22:33
Why would he do anything? He ain't the married one.
Cause he gonna try and save his ho? He treats her better than every girl we've seen him mess with aside from Mireya, so if she was in trouble I would assume he would attempt to help. Probably do so even if Laney told him not too.

ALSO:

They setting up 3NG to take the fall for Peanut? Building a case of them taking out the competition :hmm:
This isn’t cuck behavior but we’ve hashed through that.

Ramon does know. They were invited multiple times to partake in those very activities.

Took y’all long enough to recognize the difference in how he treats Laney and approaches her compared to all the other chicks he’s come across sans his BM.

Are they though? :hmm:
Soapy wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 13:47
Mr. Charlie

Image
Mr. Charlie old ass don’t know shit about shit.

Also we got this gif on here as a smilie.
Captain Canada wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 14:27
Solid win against Coastal. Bunch of frauds over there.

Shit is finally blasting off. Wonder what Ramon is going to do with all of this new information.
You’ll have to stay tuned to find out :curtain:
redsox907 wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 14:38
Captain Canada wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 14:27
Solid win against Coastal. Bunch of frauds over there.
:whatido:

Coastal didn't need that stray man
Because Coastal some busters
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Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
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Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 18 Nov 2025, 14:52

I Know Who Hides Tomorrow

The bar sat off the main drag in Statesboro, wood floors sticky with old beer and whatever had been tracked in from the gravel lot. Neon washed the walls in tired blues and reds. A game from earlier played on mute over the bar, highlights looping while somebody’s country song thumped too loud from the jukebox.

Caine had barely stepped through the door with the rest of the guys when one of the bartenders leaned over the counter, towel slung over his shoulder. “Aye, you number ten, right?” he’d called. “Drinks on us tonight, man. Y’all did that.”

That had been hours ago. The promise still hung over the night.

Dwight had his arm hooked over Caine’s shoulders now, breath hot with liquor when he leaned in, plastic cup sloshing in his free hand. Around them, Donnie and Kordell were crowded up to a pair of girls at the high-top, laughing too loud at something that probably hadn’t been funny the first time. Dillon, Terrell, Jaylen, Javier, and Keanon were scattered along the rail and into the space behind them, talking to whoever would listen, hands already busy waving down the bartender for another round.

“My nigga, you know we ‘bout to be fucking ranked, right?” Dwight said, voice rough with drink. He pulled Caine in tighter, cup wobbling. “Motherfucker Georgia Southern, nigga. I knew I was right to say your weird ass should’ve been the starter.”

Caine sucked his teeth, then let the laugh out anyway. “Fuck you mean, bro?” he asked, mouth crooked.

Dwight shrugged, grinning, then twisted at the waist to look past Caine. Keanon had his shoulder leaned to the bar, head bent toward a girl with glitter on her collarbone. Dwight pointed at Caine with the hand holding his drink. “Kea, ain’t this nigga kinda weird?”

Keanon turned his head just enough to look, eyes a little unfocused but his smile easy. “You kinda weird, bro,” he said, then went right back to the girl, fingers drumming against his cup while she laughed into his shoulder.

“Fuck both y’all,” Caine said, brushing Dwight’s arm off his neck.

Dwight only laughed and reeled him in again.

Dillon and Terrell shoved in on Caine’s other side, shoulders bumping his. The bar was three deep now, voices stacking on top of each other, the clink of bottles against the wood and the sharp slide of credit cards across the counter.

“Say, my boy wants some shots,” Dillon shouted toward the bartender, chin jerking in Caine’s direction.

The bartender glanced up from where he was capping a bottle for someone else. His look landed on Caine. Caine lifted a shoulder in a small shrug.

The bartender snorted and reached down for a bottle from the bottom shelf. “Y’all gon’ feel this shit in the morning,” he muttered, more to himself than anyone else, as he set a line of cloudy shot glasses on the bar and started filling them in quick, practiced pours.

Terrell slid one down in front of Caine with the side of his hand. “You gotta get drunk, bro. We celebrating.”

Caine wrapped his fingers around the warm glass. The smell hit his nose first, harsh and sweet at the same time. Dillon grabbed two for himself and Dwight, pressing one into Dwight’s empty hand. Terrell kept one, another for Keanon if he ever turned around.

“Aight,” Caine said.

They all raised their shots. Dwight whooped, “To being ranked, bitch,” and they tipped the liquor back.

The burn ran hot down Caine’s throat and sat in his chest. He hissed air through his teeth once and set the glass back down upside down. Dwight slammed his next to it like he was trying to crack the bar. Terrell already had his hand up for another, but the bartender had moved down the line.

By the time the bar lights came up a notch to warn everybody the night was closing down, Caine’s head felt clear again, the sharpness back behind his eyes. His tongue didn’t drag in his mouth. The last drink he’d had, he could still count. The others weren’t in the same place.

He helped Terrell off his stool when the man nearly slipped trying to stand, steered Dwight toward the door with a hand in the middle of his back, and made sure Javier had his keys taken away by someone sober enough to drive him. They peeled off in twos and threes into the humid dark, voices echoing between parked cars.

Outside, the air hit different. The music from inside thumped softer once the door swung shut behind him. Crickets worked the edges of the noise. A couple other bars down the strip spilled light and people onto the sidewalk.

Caine walked toward his car, shoes crunching over loose rock. His teammates’ laughter faded behind him, swallowed up by doors closing and engines turning over.

Halfway across the lot, something pulled at the corner of his attention—a familiar shape parked crooked on the far side, near the patch of scrub grass by the fence. A jeep he recognized sat there.

He changed direction without thinking much about it, cutting between trucks and sedans until he was at the jeep’s side.

The dash lights still glowed faint. The engine was off, but the keys sat in the ignition. In the backseat, stretched out with her feet toward the door and her head turned toward the far window, Rylee lay on her side. One arm was flung over her stomach. Her hair had slipped loose from wherever she’d tried to pin it up. Her boots were still on.

He rapped her ankle with his knuckles, harder than a tap but not enough to bruise. “Hey, Rylee!” he shouted. “Get up!”

She jolted, hand flying to her face. Her eyes blinked open slow in the dim, trying to grab the light from the dash and the parking lot light. For a second she just stared, gaze sliding over his shoulder like she was trying to place where she was.

Then it settled. Recognition cut through the fog.

“Oh,” she said, voice gravelly. “Fuck, I’m wasted.”

She pushed herself up on one elbow and immediately lost the fight with her balance, dropping back onto the seat with a thump. Her hand went to her forehead like she could hold it still.

Caine reached past her into the front, fingers closing around the keys. He slid them out of the ignition and let them jingle in his fist. Then he opened the back door all the way, the hinge creaking.

“C’mon,” he said. “I’m gonna bring you home.”

He got his hands under her arms and pulled until she sat upright, her legs heavy as they swung toward the open door.

“Wait, no,” she mumbled, grabbing weakly at his forearm. “I cain’t go home like this.”

Her head dipped forward and then jerked back up, eyes trying to stay on his face. “You don’t know where I live, though?” she added, tongue thick around the words.

“Yeah, I do,” he said. “You told me.”

She hadn’t. He just tucked that part away. He’d learned that from being in the house at the front of the family’s lot.

“Oh.” Her mouth pulled sideways for a second, like the simple answer had to travel a long way to make sense. “But my daddy cain’t see me like this.”

“I hear you,” he said.

He slid an arm under her knees and another behind her back. She was dead weight for a breath, then looped her arms around his neck. The smell of liquor clung to her, sharp under the sweetness of whatever perfume she’d put on earlier in the night.

The gravel shifted under his feet as he carried her, the lot quiet enough now that he could hear each step. Rylee’s head lolled against his chest. A couple of guys near the far side of the lot glanced over and then back to their own cars.

Caine reached his car and thumbed the unlock button. He opened the passenger door with his free hand and eased Rylee down into the seat, guiding her so she didn’t bang her head on the frame. She slumped back, hands finding the seatbelt but not quite managing it.

“Alright,” he said, reaching past her to pull the belt across and click it in. “You can sleep on my couch.”

He started to swing the door closed.

“Caine,” she said, catching the edge with her fingers. Her eyes were half open, glassy but fixed on him. “Do you think I’m pretty?”

He paused. “Yeah,” he said.

She blinked slow. “But nobody thinks I’m pretty like Laney.”

Caine didn’t say anything to that. He eased her hand off the door, closed it until it latched, and walked around to the driver’s side.

~~~

The Keurig hummed on the counter, a tired little machine trying to sound busy. Mireya stood in front of it with one hand braced on the edge of the laminate, eyes on the dark drip that hadn’t started yet. Her other hand rested next to her phone, fingers close but not touching. The screen was still lit, Ramon’s name at the top, the last message sitting open.

We need to talk about where I saw you last night.

The words had been there for almost an hour. She had stared at them until the screen went dark, tapped it back awake, stared again. Dodging him meant giving him room to move however he wanted. She couldn’t risk him deciding that meant going to Caine first with whatever version he wanted to tell. So she had typed out her address, added I’ll be up, and hit send before she could talk herself out of it.

Her body hadn’t come down yet from the night. Her calves ached. The inside of her thighs felt tight. The back of her neck still smelled faintly of weed and cheap cologne every time she shifted. She had slept a couple hours at most, more of a spin through dark than real rest.

The Keurig finally choked itself into motion. Water hissed through the pod and started to pour in a weak stream into the chipped mug she had set under the spout. The smell of coffee moved through the small kitchen, thin but enough to cut through the leftover scent of grease from dinner and Camila’s cereal bowl in the sink.

A knock hit the front door. One. Then two more, quick and sharp.

Mireya closed her eyes for a second, pulled in a breath that didn’t do much, and pushed off the counter. She left the machine working and walked down the short stretch of floor to the door. The apartment was quiet except for the Keurig and the faint buzz of the fridge. From down the hall, beyond Camila’s cracked bedroom door, she could hear a soft child’s snore.

She put her eye to the peephole. Ramon filled the circle. Jaw set, shoulders forward like he had been standing there long enough to get annoyed.

She let the breath out in a slow sigh, undid the chain, and opened the door without greeting. Then she turned her back on him and walked toward the kitchen.

The sound of his shoes on the floor followed. He shut the door behind him with a flat click. The morning light from the front window caught dust in the air. By the time he stepped into the kitchen, the Keurig had finished. The mug sat full under the spout, a thin curl of steam rising.

Ramon’s eyes went around the room once. Counters, sink, the small table pushed against the wall, the high chair folded beside the fridge. Nothing in his face moved.

He stopped on the other side of the island. He rested his hands there, fingers loose, and waited.

Mireya reached for the mug. The ceramic was almost too hot against her palm, heat biting at the skin still sensitive from last night. She set it down closer to her, reached for the creamer, poured until the coffee turned lighter, then added two spoons of sugar. The spoon clicked against the sides as she stirred.

“You said we needed to talk,” she said, eyes on the swirl in the cup. “You might want to do that.”

Ramon watched her another second. His jaw moved once before he spoke.

“So, you’re a stripper?” he asked. “Sucking dick for money and shit? I know what happens at that nigga’s parties.”

The words landed flat across the counter. Mireya kept stirring until the sugar disappeared. Her hand didn’t shake. She let the spoon tap once more against the rim, set it aside, and took a first sip. The coffee burned her tongue on the way down. She looked past the faucet to the narrow window over the sink. The sky outside still held that dull early gray that meant the sun was up but not ready yet.

“You don’t know me well enough to judge me,” she said.

Ramon shifted his weight, one hand lifting to drum his fingers on the island. The sound was soft but steady.

“Is that why you wanted me to get that phone from that white boy?” he asked. “That chomo. All that shit was about this?”

Mireya shook her head once. The motion was small.

“That was something different,” she said.

She didn’t give him more. She lifted the mug again and drank, letting the heat sit in her chest. If he wanted to build a story, he could do it without her help.

Ramon’s gaze stayed on her like he was waiting for something else. An explanation. An apology. Anything.

It didn’t come.

He blew air out through his nose, impatience showing before he spoke again.

“Either I’m going to tell Caine or you’re going to do it,” he said. “Either way, one of us is going to tell him.”

Mireya turned then. She leaned her hip into the counter, mug still in her hand.

“You’re not going to do shit,” she said. “It’s not your fucking business. What I do to survive is what I have to do because he went play fucking football star in Georgia.”

Ramon’s voice came up without him checking it.

“You dancing naked in traphouses and getting fucked by hood niggas for fucking money!” he said. “That’s my nigga! I can’t not tell him this shit!”

The sound bounced off the small room, too loud for the space. Mireya’s shoulders came tight.

“Lower your fucking voice,” she snapped, teeth tight. “My daughter is asleep.”

For a second, they just stared at each other over the counter. The fridge hummed on. Somewhere outside a car drove past, music low under the engine.

Ramon’s chest moved once. He didn’t back down, but his voice dropped.

“He should know this shit,” he said.

“I’ll tell him then,” Mireya said.

Ramon studied her face. She let it stay still. No flinch, no rush to reassure him. Just the set of her mouth and the steady way she blinked.

He lifted one hand, pointed a finger at her.

“I’m going to give you a fucking week,” he said. “If you don’t tell him, I will the next time we’re in Georgia.”

Mireya nodded once, the motion clipped.

“You can get out now,” she said.

Ramon’s mouth pressed into a thin line. He pushed off the island and turned toward the door. His footsteps moved across the floor. He was almost to the frame when he stopped. His shoulders tensed, then he turned back.

“How you know that nigga Boogie?” he asked.

Mireya snorted, a short sound that had no humor in it.

“How did it look like I knew him, Ramon?” she said. “Don’t ask stupid shit. It’s too early in the morning.”

He took a step back toward the island, eyes narrowed.

“You know Junebug?” he asked.

Mireya lifted one shoulder.

“Why?” she asked.

Ramon waved a hand, brushing off the question without really answering it.

“I ain’t saying you work for that nigga or nothing,” he said. “I just know he be with Boogie. You know him?”

“I met him like twice,” Mireya said.

Ramon nodded, more to himself than to her.

“Ask Boogie where he be at and text me his lo,” he said.

She frowned.

“For what?” she asked.

“Because you owe me for that shit with that chomo,” Ramon said.

The kitchen cooled around them. Mireya let the silence run long enough to feel it. She thought about that night The fact that she had asked for that.

“And if I do that,” she said slowly, “you’re going to let me tell Caine on my own time.”

“Yeah,” Ramon said. “In a fucking week, like I said.”

“Two,” Mireya said. “So, I can tell him in person when we go to Georgia.”

Ramon watched her, weighing it. Then he gave a small nod.

“Alright, two,” he said. “Send me that location this week, though. I need to handle that shit ASAP.”

Mireya nodded back once.

“Alright,” she said. “I’ll ask Boogie.”

Ramon held her eyes a beat longer.

“You better tell him, Mireya,” he said. “Because I will.”

Then he turned and left for real this time. The door opened and closed. The apartment went back to the same thin sounds as before.

Mireya stared at the door for a moment, the mug warm in her hand. Then she turned back to the window over the sink, watching birds on a powerline.

~~~

Trell walked on the narrow sidewalk, hands in his pockets, shoulders easy. Ant stayed just off his right shoulder, head tipped down, watching the street without looking busy. Boogie, Yola, and the fifth man moved behind them in a loose pack, low talk from earlier gone quiet now that they had turned off the busier street.

The block sat mostly still. A couple of cars hugged the curb, dust on the hoods. The row of two-story shotguns leaned into each other, paint tired, iron rails out front flaking. A busted streetlight had gone dead over the middle of the row, so the early light spread soft over everything instead of sharp.

Trell stepped up to the right house without checking the numbers. He lifted his hand and knocked once, knuckles heavy on the wood. The sound carried into the quiet space behind the door.

Boogie shifted his weight back and looked up at the second floor windows. Yola rolled his shoulders once and tucked his chin deeper into his hoodie. Ant didn’t move. Only the slight lift of his chest showed he was breathing.

Footsteps creaked over hardwood on the other side of the door. Locks clicked. An older Black woman pulled the door open and blinked at the group on her stoop. Her eyes landed on Trell first, then slid to Ant, to the others, then back to Trell. Her mouth pressed thin.

She didn’t invite them in. She turned her head and called over her shoulder, voice thick with sleep. “Dez!”

The shout ran up the stairs. For a second there was nothing. Then hurried steps hit wood. Dez jogged down, one hand braced on the rail, T-shirt twisted, sweatpants hanging low on his hips. He looked like he had rolled straight out of bed. He hit the bottom of the stairs at speed and then froze when he saw who was at the door.

His bare feet stuck to the floor. He dropped his gaze for a second, then made himself take that last step down to the front room.

The woman looked from him to Trell again and shook her head once, small but clear. She turned away without a word and shuffled back toward the rear of the house, slippers whispering on the floor.

Trell’s voice stayed even. “Put your shoes on and take that jewelry off.”

Dez’s shoulders sagged. For a breath he didn’t move. Then he bent and reached for the beat-up sneakers sitting against the wall. He shoved his feet into them without untying the laces. His chain caught the light from the doorway when he lifted his hands to the clasp. He worked it loose and dropped it into his palm with his rings, metal clinking.

He didn’t look at anyone when he slipped through the door. He pulled it closed behind him on his own people and faced the street.

Boogie and Yola stepped in without waiting. They each put a hand on him and steered him off the front walk, not rough but not gentle either. The fifth man fell in behind, eyes cutting down the block once before he followed. They took Dez toward the gap between houses, where the narrow run of alley started.

The alley sat behind the row, dirt and concrete run together with broken glass and bottle caps scattered near the fence lines. The backs of the shotguns rose over it, wood stairs and little porches stacked above old brick. It was early enough that no one sat outside yet. A window unit hummed somewhere. A dog barked twice and then stopped.

Boogie and Yola shoved Dez ahead of them until his back faced the far fence. He planted his feet and turned his hands out, palms up.

Trell was the last one to step into the alley. He didn’t rush. Sunglasses covered his eyes even in the gray morning. He stopped with space between him and Dez, the others spread along the sides, closing him in without touching.

“You scared to shoot niggas?” Trell asked.

The words fell quiet, no extra bite on them. Dez’s hands lifted higher.

“I just ain’t see no point in shooting when everyone else was and they was already dead,” he said. His voice cracked on the last word. He swallowed and tried again. “They was already on the ground, big bro. I ain’t think—”

Trell shook his head once. “People don’t trust the motherfucker who’s afraid to commit the crimes, too, Desmond. That’s how niggas become informants.”

The word sat heavy in the alley. Dez shook his head fast.

“You know I’d never snitch, Trell. C’mon, man.” His eyes flicked past Trell to Ant and the others, then snapped back. “You know I been riding with y’all.”

Ant moved for the first time. He reached behind his back and slid his gun from his waistband, the metal catching a thin strip of light. He didn’t point it yet. He just held it down by his side, wrist loose.

Dez’s gaze went to the gun and stayed there. The muscles in his jaw worked. “Trell, big bro. You know I been in this shit my whole life. Y’all gonna kill me behind my mama house?”

Trell nodded once. “We ain’t gonna kill you, lil’ brudda.”

He closed the space between them in a few steady steps. His hand came up and landed on Dez’s shoulder, grip firm. Up close, Dez smelled of sleep and old cologne and the night before. His shoulders dropped a little more under the weight of Trell’s hand.

“Thank you, man,” Dez said, voice small. “I’m gonna do better.”

“I know you will,” Trell said.

His hand slid from Dez’s shoulder to the back of his neck. Fingers spread. For a breath, nothing moved.

Then Trell’s elbow came up and snapped forward into Dez’s forehead.

The sound was dull against bone. Dez’s head snapped back and his body went with it. He dropped to the dirt and concrete, both hands flying to his face. A smear of blood showed quick between his fingers.

He tried to curl in on himself. Trell stayed with him, hips still square. He bent at the waist and drove his fist down into Dez’s head, then his arms. Once, twice, again, each hit landing on whatever part Dez couldn’t cover fast enough. Dez made a sound from behind his hands, more breath than word, and folded tighter, knees pulling up toward his chest.

Trell straightened. He wiped his elbow off with the palm of his hand, streaking Dez’s blood across his own skin and then down the side of his shirt. His face didn’t show much of anything.

He turned his head toward the others and pointed down at Dez. “Stomp this bitch ass nigga out.”

The command didn’t need to be repeated. Boogie moved first, stepping in and driving his boot into Dez’s side. Yola followed, kicks thudding into Dez’s back and legs. The fifth man crowded in, fists dropping, feet coming down hard wherever there was space.

Dez balled up tighter, arms over his head, trying to protect what he could. His shoes scraped on the ground as the blows shifted him an inch at a time. The air filled with the sound of breath and impact and low curses from the men over him.

Trell stepped back out of the circle they made. He watched from just beyond the reach of their swinging limbs, sunglasses still on, shoulders loose. Behind him, Ant slid his gun back into his waistband, the movement slow and neat, eyes never leaving the mess on the ground.

~~~

Laney stood off to the side of the front porch, just out of the main stream of bodies filtering out of the sanctuary. The sun pressed down on the gravel lot beyond the steps, making the hoods of trucks and sedans shine. The hymn they had ended on still hung in the air in pieces, hummed under a few breaths as people shook hands and pulled one another into hugs. Her daddy’s voice carried every now and then, warm and even, as he told some couple he was praying for them. Her mama laughed that church laugh that never got too loud.

Laney kept her place in the shade of a white column, hands folded in front of her, smile pinned in place for whoever glanced over. She nodded when somebody waved, gave a soft “Mornin’” when a deacon’s wife drifted close enough to hear it, then let her face smooth again. The heat still found her under the overhang, sweat beading at the back of her neck, catching in the roots of her hair. Kids weaved through the grown folks’ legs, dress shoes scuffing the painted boards, the smell of perfume and starch mixing with the faint tang of coffee from the fellowship hall.

She watched her parents do what they always did. Her daddy stood on the top step, hand on the rail, shaking every hand that came near, head bowed in toward each person like they were the only one there. Her mama worked the line beside him, touching forearms, brushing lint off shoulders, asking after grandbabies. People looked at them and then, like they couldn’t help it, looked at Laney too.

“Laney,” a woman’s voice called, sweet and bright.

Laney turned her head before she turned her body, smoothing her skirt as she shifted. Mrs. Wilcox walked up in a pale blouse and a skirt that stopped proper at the knee, hair sprayed into place, Bible tucked under one arm. The powder on her cheeks caught the light, softening the lines there.

“Mrs. Wilcox,” Laney said, the corners of her mouth lifting. “Good to see you.”

“It’s so good to see you too,” Mrs. Wilcox said, reaching to touch Laney’s wrist for a second, fingers cool from the air inside. “I’ve been meanin’ to tell you you’ve been absolutely glowin’ lately.” Her smile sharpened a little. “Did Tommy leave you with a little gift before he went to Oklahoma?”

Laney felt the words hit and held them off her face. Her smile stayed, tight at the edges. She gave a small shake of her head. “No, ma’am,” she said. “The good Lord ain’t blessed us with another one yet.”

Mrs. Wilcox patted her hand, eyes dipping down to Laney’s midsection and back. “Well, you know the Lord says to go forth and be plentiful,” she said. “You definitely shouldn’t stop at three when you’re as young as you are. You got at least four or five left in you ‘fore you start your change.”

Laney’s fingers flexed once against the side seam of her dress. She nodded. “It’s in God’s hands,” she said, the words easy from use.

“That it is,” Mrs. Wilcox said. She let her hand fall and shifted her Bible up on her hip. “The reason I wanted to talk to you is because I was passin’ by that one bar right outside the city last night,” she went on. “And I saw a bunch of those boys who play football up at Georgia Southern walkin’ in there. I thought I saw that boy y’all got workin’ here on probation walkin’ in, and I know he ain’t twenty-one, so wouldn’t that be against his probation?”

Laney lifted one eyebrow before she schooled the rest of her face. The breeze, such as it was, brought her a breath of hot exhaust from a car turning out onto the road. “Last I checked, you ain’t gotta be twenty-one to go in a bar, Mrs. Wilcox,” she said.

Mrs. Wilcox fluttered her free hand, bracelets clinking. “Well, surely he shouldn’t be goin’ into a bar,” she said. “Not in his situation.”

Laney shifted her weight and stepped just enough to the side that her back turned toward the rest of the crowd and her parents. Her voice stayed low, even. “What exactly is it you’re tryin’ to do?”

Mrs. Wilcox’s chin tipped up a notch. “Well, you know I’ve told you before I don’t like that boy bein’ around my Hannah,” she said. “I just think if he’s on probation then he ought to be followin’ it, or Mr. Bethel should send him back to wherever he’s come from.”

Laney let the words sit for a beat. The murmur from the line at the steps filled the space between them. From somewhere to her right, a toddler squealed, then was hushed. “You know Hannah’s in a sorority, right?” Laney asked.

Mrs. Wilcox blinked. “I don’t see what that has to do with—”

“Hannah done put more dicks in her mouth than have been in Trojans,” Laney said, cutting clean across the protest. “Caine’s the least of your worries when it come to your Hannah.”

For a second Mrs. Wilcox didn’t move. Then her hand flew up to her chest, fingers spread wide. Her mouth opened on a small gasp. Color rose high on her cheeks, fighting through the powder. “I can’t believe you would speak that way at a church,” she hissed. “Your father’s church.”

Laney didn’t step back. Her eyes stayed on the older woman’s face. “I can’t believe you’d pass judgment on somebody at a church,” she said. “My daddy’s church.”

Mrs. Wilcox shook her head, curls quivering. “This is what I’m talkin’ about,” she said. “Criminals infest ever’thing. I think we oughta just lock them all up in El Salvador.”

She clutched her Bible tighter to her side and turned on her heel, marching toward the top of the steps where Pastor Hadden stood. Laney watched her angle herself right toward him and toward her mama, watched the way Mrs. Wilcox’s shoulders squared like she was readying a story.

Laney’s face didn’t change. Whatever heat had flared in her chest cooled to something still. She turned back toward the slow-moving knot of people on the porch, slid herself back into her small space by the column, and folded her hands in front of her again. Her smile came back, neat and practiced, as she took up her place once more.

Soapy
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Post by Soapy » 18 Nov 2025, 16:12

Caesar wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 14:51
Mr. Charlie old ass don’t know shit about shit.
nah, talking about the fact that i mentioned too much passing and the next scene, Mr. Charlie said the same thing
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redsox907
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Post by redsox907 » 18 Nov 2025, 17:51

Caesar wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 14:52
“You dancing naked in traphouses and getting fucked by hood niggas for fucking money!” he said. “That’s my nigga! I can’t not tell him this shit!”
I was about to praise Ramon for being loyal, then he sold his boy out on info for June :smh: it be your own sometimes

His homies baby momma got kids playing tag in her throat on the reg and he ain't gonna say shit so he can slide on some two bit pimp for his girl that don't care if it gets him murked in the process :smh:

Dez got what was comin. CANT BE SCARED TO SHOOT LIL BRUDDAH

I though Mrs. Wilcox was going to rat on Caine scooping Rylee back to the house lmao

Mrs. Wilcox a trifling bitch. :fuckem:
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Post by Caesar » 19 Nov 2025, 09:48

Soapy wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 16:12
Caesar wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 14:51
Mr. Charlie old ass don’t know shit about shit.
nah, talking about the fact that i mentioned too much passing and the next scene, Mr. Charlie said the same thing

Ah. Just a likkle Easter egg.
redsox907 wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 17:51
Caesar wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 14:52
“You dancing naked in traphouses and getting fucked by hood niggas for fucking money!” he said. “That’s my nigga! I can’t not tell him this shit!”
I was about to praise Ramon for being loyal, then he sold his boy out on info for June :smh: it be your own sometimes

His homies baby momma got kids playing tag in her throat on the reg and he ain't gonna say shit so he can slide on some two bit pimp for his girl that don't care if it gets him murked in the process :smh:

Dez got what was comin. CANT BE SCARED TO SHOOT LIL BRUDDAH

I though Mrs. Wilcox was going to rat on Caine scooping Rylee back to the house lmao

Mrs. Wilcox a trifling bitch. :fuckem:
We already hashed this out but I hardly thing Ramon “sold Caine out.”

Dez need to go get in somebody’s classroom because the street life might not be it for him.

Mrs. Wilcox would’ve had to have been out in the wee hours of the morning for her to have known that
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Post by Caesar » 19 Nov 2025, 09:48

The Unjust Shall Live By Sin

Caine lay on his back in the belly of Laney’s van, the seats folded flat beneath them so the whole back turned into one long, uneven mattress. He kept his palm where it was, resting on his chest. Laney’s head lay there, her hair brushing his chin, the warm weight of her cheek moving every time he breathed.

The air inside the van was warm and still. Outside, some bug scraped a dry rhythm in the grass. A distant truck rolled past and threw a pass of light through the back windows, thin and blurred by dust. It slid over the curve of her shoulder and then was gone.

Her fingers traced slow lines along the back of his hand. She wasn’t really drawing anything, just moving, following the beat of his. The tip of her thumb kept catching the same bone.

“You know at some point, this gon’ have to end, right?” she said.

Her voice was quiet. She didn’t lift her head. She just kept her eyes somewhere on the roof above them.

Caine’s shoulders shifted under her. He answered with a small shrug, the movement lifting her with him. “We been sneaking around,” he said. “Ain’t no reason we can’t keep sneaking around.”

Laney blew out a breath that warmed the fabric of his shirt. Her fingers slowed for a second, then picked up again, tracing the same path across his knuckles.

“That’s the thing ‘bout the middle of nowhere, Caine,” she said. “Sooner or later, some nosey bitch is gonna realize somethin’s different. Then they start whisperin’ behind they hands till the entire town’s talkin’ about it.”

“You really think people would believe that you would be fuckin’ around on your husband?” he asked.

Her fingers stopped. Not a freeze, just a pause, the slightest hitch against his skin before they started moving again, slow and deliberate. Her nails grazed the back of his hand once.

“You’d be surprised what people would assume ‘bout me,” she said. “It wasn’t but a few days ago Mrs. Wilcox asked me if I was pregnant.”

He raised an eyebrow even though she couldn’t see it in the dim. The van rocked a little under them when he shifted.

The delay sat between them. Laney felt it. She tilted her face up off his chest and looked at him through the dark.

“Caine,” she said. “I got my tubes tied after Hunter. I wasn’t tryin’ to have no more kids.”

He hummed in response, a low sound in his chest that she could feel against her cheek when she settled back down.

“Now that’s some shit I’m surprised to hear from you,” he said after a beat. “Figured that wouldn’t be somethin’ y’all did in your family.”

Laney looked back toward the ceiling. Her fingers went back to his hand. “Ain’t nobody know,” she said with a small shrug he could feel more than see. “It was durin’ COVID. Popped him out alone ‘cause of the pandemic and Tommy had just left for Germany.”

The van filled with the sound of both of them breathing. Somewhere up front a piece of loose plastic clicked soft with each small sway. Laney’s phone buzzed against the carpet, then a thin alarm tone cut through the quiet, high and insistent.

She reached out without lifting her head, patting across the shadowed floor until her fingers closed around the phone. The glow from the screen lit the inside of the van for a second, turning her face pale, catching the line of his jaw, the curve of her bottom lip. She thumbed the alarm off and let the light die.

“We got another fifteen minutes,” she said, voice a little rougher around the edges now. “And then we gotta go pretend.”

Her head settled back on his chest.

“Fifteen minutes plenty time,” he said.

Laney looked up at him again, that same small movement, chin dragging along his shirt. In the faint light that leaked through the back windows, a faint smile pulled at her mouth.

~~~

Mireya’s pen moved quick across the page, ink catching the afternoon light where the table cut a harsh line of shade. Her laptop sat open in front of her, the chemistry textbook propped half on the keyboard and half on her forearm. The air outside the library ran warm even in the shade. Every time the glass doors hissed open behind them, a thin ribbon of cooler air slipped out, touched the back of her neck, then vanished into the heavy heat.

High tables and metal chairs lined the walkway. Somebody had left a Styrofoam cup sweating on the next table over, straw bent, lipstick ring drying at the rim. Students drifted past with backpacks hanging low, conversations overlapping about Greek letters, midterms, rides home, somebody complaining about parking again.

Sena leaned back in her chair until it squeaked, dark hair pushed off her forehead with one impatient hand. Her eyes stayed fixed on the dense block of text on her tablet for another second before she shut them, head tipping back toward the washed-out sky.

“This shit is so confusing,” she said, voice clipped with frustration. “You can’t tell me that they’re not purposefully writing this in gibberish.”

Frankie snorted without looking up, braids swinging when she shook her head. She had her notebook open but her pen lay across the middle of the page, stalled mid-sentence.

“C’s get degrees, girl,” she said. “That’s what I keep telling myself.”

Mireya’s eyes tracked the problem she was copying down, then the line of her own handwriting under it. She paused, pen tip hovering a beat over the paper.

“C’s aren’t going to get you in HSC though,” she said, finally looking up.

Sena dropped her chair back onto all four legs with a soft scrape. She pointed at Mireya with the capped end of her pen.

“Now, that’s what I keep telling myself,” she said.

Frankie sucked her teeth and rolled her eyes, even as her mouth twitched like she wanted to smile.

“I’ve already decided that if I can’t get into HSC then I’m just going to Nicholls or Holy Cross,” she said. “I’ll be straight.”

Mireya let a breath out through her nose that turned into a short laugh.

“It’s crazy that you already got a back-up plan in our first semester,” she said.

Frankie finally looked up from her notes, eyes bright with the kind of tired that came from too many late nights scrolling and not enough reading. She tilted her head, mouth curling.

“Bitch, I had this backup plan before I even applied to this motherfucker,” she said.

That broke whatever tension had been sitting over the table. Mireya and Sena both laughed, the sound cutting through the low murmur from the other tables.

The laughter slid into a softer quiet. Frankie picked up her pen and went back to underlining a paragraph. Sena leaned forward, elbows on the table now, fingers hunting for a line in the problems they had highlighted earlier. Mireya dropped her eyes to the study guide she was building, cursor blinking in the document on the screen while her hand copied key equations into her notebook in tighter, more careful handwriting.

Pages rustled. Pens clicked. The soft tap of Sena’s nails against the metal table kept a loose rhythm next to the scratch of Frankie’s pen. Mireya tried to lock onto the words on the page in front of her. Electron configurations. Quantum numbers. Some chart she had already stared at three times that day and still had to look at again to make it stick.

At the back of her mind, a small voice she had never been able to shut up whispered that this place was not really made for her. Not the clean sweep of the library steps, not the hum of people who only had to think about tests. Her life sat divided into parts that did not fit together clean.

Nights under lights, skin oiled and glittered, bass thumping through the floor until it climbed into her bones. Hands on her waist. Hands in her hair.

Morning routine with Camila, brushing tiny teeth, fighting tangles, packing snacks. Kissing her forehead before dropping her off and pretending she was okay.

Then this. A plastic chair outside a library, chemistry notes spread in front of her.

The feeling pressed at her chest in a way she recognized. Somebody who had slipped in through the side door and was waiting for somebody to notice. She flexed her toes in her shoes under the table and tried to breathe past it.

Mireya lifted her gaze from her notebook. Across the table, Sena’s brow furrowed as she typed something into her laptop, the light from the library catching a faint shine at the corner of her lip gloss. Frankie’s braids brushed her cheek when she bent closer to the page, lips moving soundlessly as she read.

Mireya’s eyes moved between them. Frankie’s soft curse at a problem she still could not get to balance. The curve of Sena’s shoulders as she leaned in, jaw set. She looked back to Sena and held there.

Sena must have felt it. She glanced up, their eyes catching. Sena’s mouth tugged into a small, tired smile. Then she dropped her gaze back to her laptop, fingers already reaching for the trackpad again.

Mireya rubbed at her eyes with the heel of her hand until small dots of light sparked behind her lids. She let out a slow breath, leaned back in her chair until the metal frame creaked, and rolled her neck once to chase off the stiffness. Then she pulled herself forward again, dragged the notebook closer, and started filling in the next line on her page, diving back into the study guide she was making.

~~~

Ramon stood on the corner with his back to the brick, shoulders easy, hoodie light on his frame. It was one of those slow afternoons where the heat did most of the talking. Cars drifted down the block every few minutes, music leaking from cracked windows, then gone again. For once it was just him and the BGs. E.J. was in Belle Chasse, Tyree was sitting in somebody’s classroom, and the block still needed watching.

The younger ones had posted up along the sidewalk and in the yard, half working, half playing. One leaned against the crooked chain-link, tapping a rhythm on the metal with a lighter. Another sat straddling a milk crate near the gate, laces loose, head tipped back as he laughed at something on his phone. They clowned on each other between hand-to-hands, jokes tumbling over the low murmur of traffic, their voices too loud for how exposed they were.

An older man shuffled up from the direction of the avenue, cheeks hollowed, eyes a little glassy. He cupped his hand against his mouth as he spoke. One of the boys slipped off the crate, met him halfway, and the world narrowed down to their hands. Palms touched, grip turned, something small passed, and the old man headed back the way he came, already fishing in his pocket for a lighter.

Ramon let them handle it. That was why they were here. Still, he drifted to the mouth of the block, sneakers grinding grit on the pavement. He checked the intersection, eyes running quick over every parked car, every porch. No blue-and-whites, no unmarked Crown Vic. Just a woman dragging a trash can, a bike rolling lazy past, the sound of a dog barking two streets over. He stood there one more beat, then walked the other way, toward the far end of the block.

The sun hit harder on that side, no tree cover, just straight light on asphalt and warped siding. Ramon wiped sweat from his temple with the back of his hand and scanned that corner too. A delivery truck idled at the stop sign, turn signal ticking, then eased off. No police, no city trucks, nobody slowing that didn’t have a reason. He took it in and turned back.

By the time he reached the yard again, the youngsters had gone back to talking loud. Two of them argued about who had more money. Another pretended not to listen, but his eyes kept sliding over, waiting his turn to talk. A plastic grocery bag rustled in the weeds near the fence, catching the faint breeze that barely made it between the houses.

That was when she came down the sidewalk.

The woman’s heels clicked uneven on the cracked concrete, catching in spots where grass pushed through. She wore a short black skirt that had seen better nights and fishnet stockings with a hole spidered open at one knee. Her tank top clung to her, faded and pulled thin, one strap sliding off her shoulder. She headed straight for the boy closest to the corner, the one with his hands deep in his hoodie pocket and his eyes on the street.

“Y’all got some crack?” she asked, voice rough but steady.

The boy slid his hand from his pocket, nodding once. “How much you got?”

She dug into her bra and came out with two crumpled dollars, smoothing them on her palm like that might make them worth more. “This all I got.”

The boy stared at the bills, disgust pulling at his mouth. His friend watched from the fence, grin already curling.

“That ain’t enough, bitch,” the first one said, smacking the money out of her hand. The bills fluttered down to the sidewalk, landing near her scuffed heel.

She bent halfway, then straightened, eyes darting between their faces. “Alright, alright,” she said quick. “I’ll give you some head.”

The corner shifted. The boy with his back on the fence barked a laugh, shoulders bouncing. The one in front of her looked over his shoulder at him, waiting. The second shrugged, palms up, like why not. The first boy grinned, the decision made.

“Shit, alright then,” he said.

He bent to scoop the two dollars up and started toward the narrow strip of alley that cut behind the nearest house. The woman turned to follow, tugging her skirt down with one hand.

Ramon was already moving.

He crossed the yard in a few quick strides shoulder brushing the low branch of a scraggly tree. Gravel crunched under his shoes as he stepped into the path of the boy heading for the back. He planted a hand in the kid’s chest and shoved, not enough to drop him, but enough to send him stumbling back toward the sidewalk.

“How you gonna pay the plug back if you getting your dick sucked for the shit, lil’ nigga?” Ramon said.

The boy threw his hands up, palms empty, eyes wide for a second. “My bad, big brudda,” he said. His voice cracked on the last word, more boy than man.

Ramon reached into his hoodie pocket, grabbed the two dollars, and ripped them back out. He turned and snapped his wrist, the bills smacking into the woman’s shoulder before falling to her hands.

“Get the fuck out of here, Asia,” he said.

She clutched the money to her chest like it might fly off again. Her makeup was smudged at the edges, lipstick bled past the line of her mouth. “C’mon, Ramon,” she said, desperation thin under the rasp. “I just need a little rock to get through the day.”

Ramon stepped in close enough to smell sweat and cigarette smoke clinging to her. He grabbed the back of her neck, fingers spreading against damp skin, and turned her toward the corner. His voice carried down the block.

“You see her?” he called, dragging her gaze across the line of boys. “If you see her anywhere, you bet not sell her a motherfucking thing. If you do, I’ma kill you.”

The youngsters went quiet fast. One nodded so hard his hat slipped back on his head. Another lifted both hands, wrists loose, all innocence. The one he had just shoved stared at his sneakers, jaw tight, shoulders drawn in just enough to show he had heard every word.

Ramon pushed Asia away from him, hand leaving a faint red mark at the base of her neck. “Get the fuck on,” he said.

She stumbled once, heels catching, then caught herself. She straightened her dirty clothes with two quick tugs, tugged her tank top up, and lifted her chin. Without looking back at him, she crossed the street, dodging a slow car, and called out toward a man leaning on a stop sign.

“Hey, baby,” she yelled. “You want some head?”

The man turned, interest flickering, and Asia drifted his way, voice dropping low as she reached him. Ramon watched just long enough to see her start the same tired pitch, then shook his head once, short.

He went back to the corner, back to the space he had been holding all afternoon. His eyes went to the intersection again, then the far end of the block, the rhythm of his checking unchanged. Behind him, the youngsters picked their jokes back up where they’d left them, voices rising and falling between the quick, quiet sales that never stopped for long.

~~~

The door to the advisor’s office clicked shut behind Caine and the quiet of the room gave way to the low hum of the academic center. Printers whirred somewhere down the hall. A TV over the front desk rolled silent highlights from the Coastal game.

He shifted his backpack higher on his shoulder and let out a breath through his nose. They had just gone over midterm dates, quizzes, all the little pieces that could drag a GPA down.

The carpet in the hallway muted his steps as he cut toward the lobby. Fluorescent lights sat in long rows overhead. A girl in a Georgia Southern polo sat behind the front desk, tapping on a keyboard.

Caine rounded the corner into the lobby and spotted Derrick McCray before Derrick even turned. The man stood near the doors, phone in one hand, the other in his pocket, talking to a staffer in a button-down. The suit was lighter today, more business casual than the first time Caine had seen him, but the same easy posture sat on his frame.

Derrick looked up, caught sight of him, and his face broke open.

“Caine!” he said, voice filling the space. He opened his arms wide, smile wider. “I’ve been meaning to reach out to you since the polls came out Sunday. How’s it feel to be ranked?”

Caine cracked a grin, shoulders loosening. “It’s kinda crazy to be real with you.”

Derrick laughed from his chest. “It’s crazy for us, too, especially after last season. We pretty much have shot up out of nowhere. We’re the talk of the conference right now.”

He clapped the staffer on the shoulder, dismissing him, then tipped his head toward the doors.

“Walk with me,” he said. “I’m on my way to another meeting.”

Caine nodded once.

They pushed through the glass doors together. The concrete outside the athletic building stretched in clean lines toward the parking lot, hedges trimmed neat along the walkway.

“Halfway through the season,” Derrick asked, falling into an easy stride beside him, “how are you liking things?”

Caine took a second before answering. Georgia pines instead of shotgun houses. He hitched the strap of his backpack again.

“I ain’t gonna lie to you,” he said. “I wasn’t feeling it when I first got here, too different from New Orleans, but it’s cool now.”

Derrick’s eyebrows went up. “Cool now, huh?”

He drew the words out, amused, and cut his eyes past Caine toward the building. Two girls in athletics shirts crossed the breezeway ahead of them, arms stacked with folders and a box of copy paper. One of them glanced over, recognized Caine, and gave a quick, shy smile before looking away again.

Derrick’s mouth twitched, question already answered in his head. He shook his head once, still grinning, and they kept walking.

“I’m not going to bore you with the stats and all that BS us finance guys like to talk,” he said, “but bottom line, you’re making us money, kid. Impressions, interactions, views, everything is up through the roof. You’re turning BTAs into converted CTAs.”

Caine huffed out a laugh. “BTAs?”

“You liked that?” Derrick asked. “My kid taught me that one.”

He slapped Caine on the shoulder, palm landing over the backpack strap.

“But look,” he went on, tone smoothing back into business, “like I told you before I know they’re sniffing around, trying to get you in the portal, but I can tell you that your potential earnings as a junior with two great seasons under your belt is higher than your potential as a sophomore with one.”

They stepped off the sidewalk and onto the asphalt of the lot. Rows of cars sat under the afternoon light, paint catching the sun.

“It’s not really been something I been thinking about, transferring,” Caine said. “I’m just trying to play ball.”

Derrick nodded slowly, as if he respected the answer, even if he didn’t buy it all the way.

“It’s one thing to say that now,” he said. “It’s another thing to say that in December. But I’m telling you that we, the Foundation, we’re committed to you. Give us one more year and we’re going all out on a marketing package built around you.”

They wove between two parked trucks. Ahead, a silver Lexus sat in a shaded spot near a tree, windows dark.

“Are you going to be a millionaire from it?” Derrick asked. “Hell no. Neither am I. But we’re talking six figures, easy. Let us build your legend up then in ’28, you go to Georgia, Alabama, Florida, wherever and tell them give you six or seven million instead of the five hundred thousand they’ll give you to fight for a chance to hold a clipboard.”

Caine kept his eyes on the blacktop for a few steps and nodded once.

Derrick clicked the unlock on his key fob. The Lexus chirped and flashed. He stopped at the driver’s door and turned so the sun caught the edge of his smile.

“Think about it, Caine,” he said. “And keep getting those wins. GATA!”

Caine lifted his hand in farewell and turned away toward the path that led down to the union.

~~~

Mireya sat in the passenger seat with the engine off and the windows cracked. Her fingers tapped out an uneven pattern on the door panel, nails clicking against plastic, then dragging back to the same spot.

The street in front of the house stayed quiet. A car rolled past every few minutes, music low, somebody’s bass a thick thump that faded quick. Farther down the block, a dog barked and kept on barking until somebody yelled and it cut off. The whole row of houses felt like it was holding its breath.

Her phone buzzed against her thigh.

She pulled it from the pocket of her shorts and looked down at the screen. Ramon’s name sat over the text.

You told him yet?

The words sat there, small and black. Her thumb hovered over the screen. For a second she thought about opening the thread, typing something back, even if it was just a lie. Yeah. I told him. Or Not yet. I will.

She locked the screen instead and slid the phone back into her pocket.

The quiet inside the car pressed in again. The smell of Trell’s cologne lingered faint on the seat, mixed with sun-warmed leather. Mireya shifted, dragging her nails along the door again, and stared at the front of the house.

The front door opened.

Dez came out first, one shoulder hooking a small duffel bag, the strap digging into his shirt. Even from where she sat, Mireya saw his face clear. Both eyes swollen, the skin around them dark and puffy, stitches catching light along his forehead. His lip had a thick crack running through it. He stepped down to the walkway with a small hitch, the limp turning every step into work. When Boogie came out behind him, duffel in hand, he said something Mireya couldn’t hear and swung a lazy hand toward Dez’s side.

Dez flinched away fast, teeth clenching.

Boogie laughed and shook his head, still talking, his shoulders loose. Dez tried to laugh with him and didn’t quite get there. They popped the trunk on Ant’s car and shoved the bags inside. Dez moved slower on the walk back to the porch, hand braced at his ribs once before he dropped it.

Ant came out next, door swinging wider around him. He had another bag in his hand, smaller, and he passed it to Boogie without breaking stride. Trell followed, sunglasses already on, T-shirt clean, chain sitting neat against it. He paused on the top step, leaned in toward Ant, and said something low.

Ant nodded once, short. He jerked his chin toward the cars and peeled off toward his own, keys already in his hand. Boogie and Dez moved with him, the three of them breaking off from the front of the house in a loose line.

Trell stood there a second longer, eyes behind the dark lenses turned toward the street. Then he came down the steps and walked straight to his car. Mireya stopped tapping her fingers.

He opened the driver’s side door, slid in, and shut it with a soft, solid sound. The key turned. The engine caught, humming under their feet.

Trell looked over at her as he shifted into reverse.

“All good?” he asked.

Mireya met his gaze and nodded once. “Yeah.”

She leaned back into the seat, letting her shoulders sink into the worn cushion, and turned her face toward the window as he eased them away from the curb. The house slid past in her peripheral vision, the porch, Ant’s car, the backs of Boogie and Dez as they finished loading up.

They rolled to the corner and Trell tapped the brakes before turning. Mireya watched the block fall away behind them in the side mirror, the houses, the strip of sky over the roofs, then looked forward again.

“What happened to Dez?” she asked.

Trell snorted a quiet laugh under his breath. “He did some shit that made me look bad and there’s gotta be consequences for shit like that, you know?”

Mireya turned her body more toward him without thinking, one knee angling on the seat. “What’d he do? That was that bad?”

Trell lifted one hand from the wheel and waved it, the gesture sharp and dismissive, then dropped it back down.

“It don’t really matter,” he said. “Have you ever seen The Wire?”

She shook her head.

“They got this scene on there where a character says ‘My name is my name,’” Trell said. “That’s how shit works in the streets. I can’t have people shitting on my name because niggas under me not moving how they should be moving.”

The city moved past her window in a slow run of blocks and side streets. Mireya nodded. Her fingers found the seam of the seat between them and picked at it. The words settled in. She shifted again, turning more fully toward him, one elbow braced on the console, body pulled closer.

“I guess that makes sense,” she said.

Trell glanced at her, his mouth curving just a little.

“Thought you said you were familiar with niggas like me?” he asked.

Mireya nodded, her eyes on the side of his face, on the line of his jaw under the frames. “I am. They just weren’t too worried about their reputation.”

Trell huffed. “Don’t sound like they were too serious about the game then.”

She shook her head, gaze still on him. “He wasn’t. Not like that.”

“Old boyfriend?” Trell asked.

Mireya didn’t answer. She held his profile in her line of sight, steady, the question hanging between them. She let it sit there, unpicked. The tires hummed under them, the air from the vent finally starting to cool the space.

A faint smirk tugged at Trell’s mouth, but he let the question die. He shifted his hands on the wheel, knuckles loose.

“What you trying to eat?” he asked.

Mireya let her shoulders relax back into the seat again. She lifted one shoulder in a small shrug.

“Surprise me,” she said.

~~~

Laney wiped the last streak of sauce out of the pan with a sponge that had already gone soft around the edges. The kitchen light sat harsh over the sink, humming under the steady rush of water. Plates stood stacked to dry, the boys’ plastic cups turned upside down along the rail. The house had settled into the stillness it only found after bedtime, quiet enough that she could hear the clock over the stove and the faint whir of the fridge.

She turned off the tap and shook her hands once before dragging the dishtowel down her fingers. Her shoulders ached in a way that matched the day. Work, then running the boys from one thing to the next, then baths and dinner and the run of “Mama, I need…” until the last door finally shut. Now it was just her and the hum of the house.

She rubbed at the back of her neck, thumb pressing into the tight spot there. The muscles protested. She rolled them out and reached for a stray cereal box on the counter, folding it down along the seams. Her phone buzzed against the laminate, the vibration skating across the surface.

She glanced over. The screen lit the corner of the kitchen blue.

Caine: thinking of you.

Her mouth pulled into a small smile. It loosened something in her chest for a second. She picked up the phone, thumb hovering over the keyboard. No words came, so she pressed her fingertip to the message and tapped the heart. The little red icon bloomed beside his text.

The old thread above it showed the other side of them. Times to be at the church. Things that needed fixing. Supplies to pick up for the daycare. “Can you look at the AC?” and “I’ll be there at eight.” She scrolled up once, then back down to where his last words sat.

Her tongue pressed against the back of her teeth. She opened the options, hit delete, and watched the text slide away. Just the short exchanges people expected to see between Mrs. Laney and folks from church. Orders and confirmations. Nothing soft.

She set the phone face down on the counter and moved to the sink window. The glass caught her reflection first, faint, then gave way to the dark outside. The camper sat in its rut. No porch light on the little step. No dull yellow glow bleeding through the blinds. The metal shell picked up just enough light from the house to show its outline.

Laney stood there, watching for any twitch of movement. No shadow crossed in front of it. No flash of Nevaeh lighting a cigarette. No laugh rolling across the yard. Just the sound of insects and the distant rush of a truck somewhere beyond the fields.

“Figures,” she murmured under her breath. Her fingertips tapped once against the sill. Blake never did stay anywhere long. It would be just like him to pack up and drift to the next place that would take him in, leave that camper sitting there.

She let the curtain fall back and turned away from the window. The vinyl under her bare feet felt cool where the small rug didn’t reach. She picked up a lone fork from the table, dropped it into the sink, and was reaching for the switch to kill the overhead light when the sound hit her.

Boots on the porch. Heavy, spaced steps across the boards, each one sinking into the old wood. Her heart punched once, but her body stayed steady. The doorknob rattled, someone testing it.

Laney’s feet carried her backward toward the fridge, slow, careful. Her gaze stayed on the door. She lifted her arm, reaching toward the top of the fridge, fingers searching for the edge of the shotgun they kept up where little hands couldn’t reach. Her fingertips brushed dust and empty space, hunting for the cold line of metal.

Before she found it, a key slid into the lock. The scrape of it in the tumblers cut through the quiet. The knob turned smooth.

She froze, hand still hovering above her head.

The door swung open on a draft of cooler night air and the smell of travel. Tommy filled the doorway, duffel hitched over one shoulder, still in his fatigues like he’d come straight from Oklahoma to the truck and then home. Dust clung thick to his boots.

His eyes caught on her with her hand still up over the fridge, took it in, then moved away without comment. He closed the door with his heel, turned the deadbolt, and checked it twice, giving it a test tug.

“They cut it short,” he said. Terse, flat.

Laney dropped her arm, fingers curling in toward her palm. She gave a small nod. “Okay,” she said, voice low.

He didn’t answer. He slid the strap off his shoulder and started down the hallway toward their room, each footstep heavy on the worn path. She fell in behind him without thinking, body slipping into the familiar rhythm, letting him lead the way.

In the bedroom, the air held the stale warmth of nights she’d spent alone. Tommy let the bag fall near his side of the bed, the same spot it always landed. He crossed to the chair in the corner and sat down, exhaling as he bent over his boots. His fingers worked at the laces, quick and impatient.

Laney stepped toward the dresser, hand reaching for the strap of the bag. The soft lamp light spilled across the top of the drawers, catching on the silver frame that should have been standing straight. It wasn’t.

The wedding photo lay on its face, felt backing to the room.

Her hand paused on the strap for a moment. Tommy’s head was still bent, attention fixed on the knot he was undoing. While he leaned over his boots, she slipped her fingers off the duffel and reached for the frame instead. She lifted it, turned it upright, and set it back in its place.

She nudged the frame until it sat square and let her palm rest on the top edge for a breath.

Tommy grunted as he pulled the first boot free. She dropped her hand, grabbed the duffel strap, and hauled the bag up onto her shoulder.

“I’m goin’ to wash this,” she said.

He gave a short nod, eyes still on his feet. The second boot hit the floor with a soft thump.

Laney shifted the weight of the bag and moved toward the door. At the threshold she glanced back once. “You want somethin’ to eat?” she asked.

“Yeah,” he said.

She dipped her chin and stepped into the hallway. The narrow walls closed around her as she carried the bag to the laundry room. The light there flicked on with a buzz when she hit the switch. She dropped the duffel beside the washer, unzipped it just enough for the smell of sweat and field dust to escape, then zipped it again. The wash could wait.

She turned the light back off and walked the short stretch back to the kitchen. The hum of the fridge met her at the doorway, steady and familiar. She went straight to the sink and twisted the faucet. Water rushed out, warming and then cooling against her fingers before she let it run.

She planted both hands on the edge of the counter, arms locked straight. Her shoulders rose once, fell. She bit down on her bottom lip and held there, eyes fixed on the dark window over the sink.
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redsox907
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Post by redsox907 » 19 Nov 2025, 10:49

I haven't read the latest update, but forgot to add yesterday

Wonder what Pastor Hadden thinks about mixed race babies conceived out of wedlock :hmm:

caught up now:

wasn't much in that update, but also a lot :hmm:

Caine sounds like he boo lovin while Laney keeping it real, even if she don't fully want to believe it. We'll see what gets brought to the light now that Tommy is back home and Caine can't creep in whenever. They keep hunching in vans hidden away from the world, knowing Tommy could pop up at any minute?

Also, tying tubes can fail, especially if it's a procedure she had done on the sly.

Mireya playing a dangerous game with Ramon. His loyalty being sold out aside, he still isn't going to let her get away with not telling him.

Ramon knows Asia obviously. The reason why he wouldn't ever be a pimp? :hmm:

AND

the way Laney paused when Caine said ain't like anyone would believe she was sleeping around makes me think she's been caught doing it before but it never got public. Either Tommy, Nevaeh or Blake found out and confronted her, but never blew it up
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Post by djp73 » 19 Nov 2025, 22:19

They don’t usually tie tubes anymore, it’s more common to remove them altogether
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redsox907
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Post by redsox907 » 19 Nov 2025, 22:43

djp73 wrote:
19 Nov 2025, 22:19
They don’t usually tie tubes anymore, it’s more common to remove them altogether
my BM had her tubes tied after our second (her 3rd), then there was a complication with the procedure and they basically had to burn them out :fml:
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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 20 Nov 2025, 10:08

redsox907 wrote:
19 Nov 2025, 10:49
I haven't read the latest update, but forgot to add yesterday

Wonder what Pastor Hadden thinks about mixed race babies conceived out of wedlock :hmm:

caught up now:

wasn't much in that update, but also a lot :hmm:

Caine sounds like he boo lovin while Laney keeping it real, even if she don't fully want to believe it. We'll see what gets brought to the light now that Tommy is back home and Caine can't creep in whenever. They keep hunching in vans hidden away from the world, knowing Tommy could pop up at any minute?

Also, tying tubes can fail, especially if it's a procedure she had done on the sly.

Mireya playing a dangerous game with Ramon. His loyalty being sold out aside, he still isn't going to let her get away with not telling him.

Ramon knows Asia obviously. The reason why he wouldn't ever be a pimp? :hmm:

AND

the way Laney paused when Caine said ain't like anyone would believe she was sleeping around makes me think she's been caught doing it before but it never got public. Either Tommy, Nevaeh or Blake found out and confronted her, but never blew it up
Where there’s a will, there’s a way :smart:

Man said done on the sly like she was in a back alley clinic in Oaxaca. She got that good military insurance bro

Mireya is known to roll the dice on these things.

How do you think he knows this Asia :hmm:

It’s always them subtle little pauses that make you wonder, right? :curtain:
djp73 wrote:
19 Nov 2025, 22:19
They don’t usually tie tubes anymore, it’s more common to remove them altogether
It’s just an outdated turn of phrase, good sir.

redsox907 wrote:
19 Nov 2025, 22:43
djp73 wrote:
19 Nov 2025, 22:19
They don’t usually tie tubes anymore, it’s more common to remove them altogether
my BM had her tubes tied after our second (her 3rd), then there was a complication with the procedure and they basically had to burn them out :fml:
No wonder she shot you :troll:
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