American Sun

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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 17 Apr 2026, 06:57

Inki Laka / Tenahuatilli

Mireya came through the daycare door and let it pull shut behind her. Cars angled into faded lines across the lot, hoods catching the flat white of an overcast morning. She reached up and slid her sunglasses off the top of her head, ran her hand through her hair once, feeling the weight of it shift across her shoulders, and settled the frames down over her eyes.

Her phone buzzed in her pocket. She fished it out with two fingers and found her aunt Carmen's name across the top.

Mireya sighed, pressing accept and bringing the phone to her ear.

"Hola, tía."

"Mireya, ¿cómo estás?"

"I'm fine."

Carmen sighed on the other end. "Can you come by? I want to talk to you. It's been long enough that we have been at each other."

Mireya pulled the phone away from her ear and looked at the time then she brought the phone back.

"I have class in an hour and a half."

"Mireya, por favor. No te quitaré mucho tiempo."

Mireya shook her head, already walking toward her car. "I'll be there in five minutes."

"Gracias. See you soon."

The line went dead. Mireya dropped the phone back into her pocket, her keys already out, and pulled the car door open. She got in, started the engine, and backed out of the space.




Mireya took the stairs without slowing, her knuckles rapping twice on the door before she pushed it open. The hinges gave without resistance. Months since she'd last done this, and her body still moved through the motion.

"Soy yo."

"In here, Mireya."

Mireya stepped into the apartment and turned toward the living room. Her feet stopped before her brain caught up.

Her mother stood on the far side of the room with her arms crossed over her chest, her chin lifted, her mouth set in a line. Carmen stood between them with both hands raised, palms out, fingers spread. The three of them formed a triangle with Carmen at its center, her body angled toward Mireya, her weight on the balls of her feet.

"We're family," Carmen said. "No deberíamos estar peleando."

Mireya's jaw tightened. Her hand was still on the door behind her, fingers curled around the edge of it, and she could feel the pull of the hinges against her grip. She looked at Carmen, then past her at Maria, then back at Carmen.

"I have nothing to say to her."

Maria scoffed, a short push of air through her nose. "Rich coming from a disappointment like you." She uncrossed one arm long enough to gesture at Mireya. "I should've gave up on you when you got pregnant como una puta. But I gave you too many chances because that's what a mother does."

"Maria, please." The tendons in Carmen's neck pulled taut.

Mireya's head tilted. "Nah." Her voice dropped flat. "Let her say how she really feels."

Maria took a step forward, her arms recrossing tighter against her ribs. "¿Dónde está mi nieta? Has Caine taken her from you now that he's got all his football money with the drug money?"

Mireya's chin came up a fraction. "I'm sure you would love if he did that."

Maria's mouth pulled into something between a smile and a sneer. "You have no idea. Es un animal. Acabarán con él." Her eyes moved over Mireya's face, slow, measuring. "¿Y tú? Quizás le hagas un favor a mi nieta y te maten a ti también."

Carmen's hand flew to her mouth. "¡Ya basta, María!"

Mireya felt the words land in the center of her chest, felt them sit there with their full weight, and her teeth clenched until her molars ached. Her pulse knocked hard at the base of her throat. She swallowed once against the pressure of it.

"Tienes razón, perra." Mireya's voice came out low and even. "Prefiero morir antes que dejarte criar a mi hija."

Maria's chin came up. "God willing." Her eyes held Mireya's across the room, unblinking. "From your lips to the ears of La Virgen herself."

Mireya gathered the saliva in her mouth and spat on the floor between them. The sound of it hitting the tile cut through the room.

"Fuck you. I don't need this shit."

She turned and crossed the three steps back to the door.

"Mireya, wait, please."

Mireya’s hand found the knob and ripped the door open, the hinges catching hard against the wall, and she stepped through and slammed it behind her. The bang traveled through the frame and into the stairwell.

She ran a shaky hand through her hair as she took the steps down to the parking lot, her fingers catching in a knot near the ends and pulling through it. Her keys pressed sharp against her palm where she'd been gripping them since she'd walked in.

~~~


Caine pulled the glass door open and stepped into the lobby. The floor was polished concrete, the walls white and lined with framed black-and-white photos of athletes mid-motion, a sprinter breaking tape, a swimmer surfacing, a pitcher's arm cocked back at full extension. The space smelled faintly of espresso and something botanical he couldn't place.

The receptionist looked up from her desk, her fingers pausing over her keyboard. She smiled. "Good morning, Mr. Guerra. Tatum's in his office. Would you like some coffee, tea, kombucha or water?"

Caine shook his head. "I'm good, thanks."

He nodded once and turned down the hallway, passing the photos without looking at them. Doors lined the left side, most of them closed, voices behind one of them going back and forth over speakerphone. Tatum's office was the last one before the corner, the nameplate on the wall beside the frame reading TATUM REESE in small block letters.

Tatum stood at the window with his phone pressed to his ear, his free hand in his pocket. He wore a navy crew neck over slacks, the sleeves pushed to his forearms, a watch catching the light when he shifted his weight. Downtown filled the glass behind him, the buildings pale and sharp, the morning sun cutting hard across their western faces and throwing long shadows down into the streets below.

The office itself was clean without being empty. A desk pushed against the side wall instead of centered, two leather armchairs angled toward each other with a low table between them, a whiteboard on the far wall with names and figures written in dry-erase marker, half of them circled.

Tatum turned when he heard the footsteps. He smiled and lifted his chin toward the armchairs. Caine crossed the room and sat, settling into the leather, one ankle over his knee, his hands resting on the arms of the chair. Through the glass behind Tatum, a helicopter tracked north along the skyline, small and steady.

"Yeah, let's connect over lunch and get the paperwork hammered out," Tatum said into the phone, his eyes on Caine as he spoke. He paced a short line along the window, two steps and back, his free hand coming out of his pocket to punctuate something the other person was saying. "It should be pretty straightforward. Alright, talk soon."

He pulled the phone from his ear, tapped the screen, and slid it into his back pocket. He crossed to Caine and extended his hand. Caine took it, and they pulled in, shoulders bumping once before separating. Tatum dropped into the other chair and leaned forward, elbows on his knees, his hands clasped between them.

"Nike called me about the Spanish-language campaign they want you in."

Caine nodded. "They mentioned that shit when I did that last thing."

"It's all lined up if you want to pull the trigger on it."

"How much?"

Tatum held one hand up. "For Spanish? Seventy. I'm not accepting anything less from them." He tilted his head, one corner of his mouth pulling up. "They can go ChatGPT that shit if they don't want to pay it."

Caine shrugged, one shoulder lifting and dropping. "Works for me."

"Good." Tatum sat back, crossing one leg over the other. "I've been working some other things. But I wanted to check in with you to make sure we're not burning the proverbial candle at both ends."

"I ain't playing ball right now," he said. "I'll do a few hours of this shit everyday for tens of thousands of dollars, bruh."

Tatum laughed, his hands lifting off the armrests, palms out. "Fair enough. I just wanted to make sure." He brought his hands back down and tapped the leather twice with his fingertips. "You've only been in LA for three, four weeks. We still got at least another eight or nine months to make money."

"More than that if they fix that second year shit."

Tatum waved off the comment "I'm working on that. It'll be an easier argument once you start putting wins up in the fall, though."

He paused. His eyes moved to the window for a beat, tracking the same stretch of skyline Caine had been looking past since he sat down. When he turned back his weight shifted forward in the chair, his forearms coming to rest on his thighs again.

"So, let me tell you about this other stuff and see where you land on it."

Caine leaned back in his chair, his fingers curling over the ends of the armrests. "Let's hear it."

~~~


Tessa stood at the dresser with the polo folded over one arm, her reflection split between the mirror and the closet door behind her. She pulled the shirt over her head and tugged it down past her waist, smoothing the hem where it caught against her jeans. She picked up the brush from the dresser and worked it through her hair in short pulls, tilting her head to get at a tangle near her ear.

Behind her, E.J. lay in bed with the comforter pulled up past his chin, the fabric bunched over one shoulder, only the top of his forehead and his eyes visible above the edge. One arm hung off the side of the mattress, knuckles brushing the carpet.

Tessa set the brush down and walked into the bathroom. The light clicked on and the fan started with a low rattle. She picked up the perfume bottle from the counter and sprayed twice, once at her neck and once at her wrist, rubbing them together before setting the bottle back. She came back into the bedroom, her shoes already on, her purse on the chair by the door.

E.J. pushed the comforter off his face and sat up slightly, propping himself on one elbow. His eyes were narrow with sleep, lids heavy, the pillow creased into his cheek.

"Fuck you putting all that perfume on for?" he asked. "One of them UPS niggas?"

Tessa's hand paused on the zipper of her purse. "God forbid I want to fucking smell good when I'm around people."

E.J. sucked his teeth and dropped his head back down to the pillow, his face turning into the fabric. "Like y'all ain't known for smelling like dog anyway."

"Fuck you, E.J."

His voice came muffled from the pillow. "You don't even do that no more so tell your little rose fuck you."

Tessa's hand came off the purse. She turned from the chair, her weight shifting onto her back foot, her chin lifting. "Yeah because you've been a fucking bitch for almost a fucking year. You chose to come here. I had no problem coming alone."

E.J. rolled over onto his back, the sheets twisting around his legs, and pulled himself up until he was sitting against the headboard. The comforter pooled at his waist. "Don't act like you ain't fucking beg me to move to this motherfucker with you."

Tessa's voice went up, her hands spreading at her sides. "You could've said no!"

"Bullshit." E.J. jabbed a finger toward her. "How you were acting? Probably would've run to the jakes as soon as you was out the city."

Tessa took a step toward the bed, her arms crossing over her chest, her jaw set. "A criminal getting arrested for doing criminal shit. Oh no. What a fucking travesty. Fucking spare me."

E.J.'s hand dropped to the mattress. "Watch what the fuck you're saying, Tessa."

Tessa rolled her eyes, her head tilting back before coming level again. "Do I need to watch what I'm saying if I tell you it's time for you to get off your fucking ass and go get a motherfucking job?"

"I'm bringing in money." E.J.'s palm pressed flat against the sheet beside his thigh. "More money than you."

Tessa sucked her teeth, the sound sharp enough to cut across the room. "Go claim it on your taxes then."

E.J. waved his hand, a loose flick of his wrist. "I ain't trying to hear that shit."

"And I ain't trying to hear you fucking bitching any more but here we fucking are." Tessa grabbed her purse off the chair and slung the strap over her shoulder. She turned for the door and pulled it open hard enough that it knocked against the wall behind it. Her footsteps went fast down the hallway, shoes hitting the floor in a rhythm that didn't slow.

E.J. shoved the comforter off his legs and swung his feet to the carpet. "Tessa, get your fucking ass back here! I ain't done!"

The front door slammed. The sound punched through the apartment and then everything went still.

~~~


Caine cut through Alumni Park on the long side, his bag slung over one shoulder. The path split around a stand of trees ahead of him, students moving both directions, some with earbuds in and heads down, others grouped on the grass with laptops open and coffee cups wedged into the dirt beside them. The sun came through the branches overhead in broken pieces and laid patterns across the concrete that moved when the wind did.

Three students stood at the fork in the path with a folding table between them, a stack of pamphlets weighed down with a water bottle, and a clipboard resting on top. Behind them a hand-painted sign leaned against a tree trunk, the letters thick and uneven in red and black paint: DEFUND ICE. Two of them were talking to a girl who had stopped mid-stride, her backpack still half-zipped. The third turned toward Caine as he came up on them.

"Hey, bro. You got a minute?"

Caine slowed and changed his line, stepping off the path toward the table. He held his hand out and the guy placed a pamphlet into it, the paper glossy and folded in thirds. Caine opened it and scanned the inside. Photos of detention facilities, a block of text about deportation numbers, a QR code at the bottom linking somewhere.

The guy leaned in, one hand braced on the table's edge. "A lot of people have forgotten that the regime was sending ICE everywhere back in 2025 and 2026, but even if they get voted out in November, the next one needs to defund the fucking Gestapo, man."

Caine looked up from the pamphlet. He folded it once and held his hand out for the clipboard. "You ain't gotta convince me, bruh. Mi abuelo y abuela came here on a banana boat."

The guy's face changed. His chin pulled back and a grin broke across his mouth. "¿Eres latino?"

Caine nodded. "Sí, soy hondureño."

The guy reached out and took Caine's hand, pulling him into a one-armed hug, their shoulders bumping once before they separated. "Bro, soy nicaragüense. My name's Guillermo but everyone calls me Memo."

"Caine,” Caine said. "Tenemos que mantenernos unidos con todos estos mexicanos que hay por aquí.”

Memo's laugh came out loud enough that one of the other activists looked over. "Coño, lo sé, mano."

Caine took the pen clipped to the top of the clipboard and signed his name on the next open line, his handwriting small and angled hard to the right. He handed the clipboard back. Memo tucked it under his arm and pointed at Caine with the pen before dropping it into his pocket.

"Deberías venir a conocer el LSA."

Caine nodded. "Ya lo vi. Lo haré."

Memo dapped him up again, the motion quick. "I'll see you around, mano."

He turned to another student passing the table, already stepping into their path with his hand out and his pitch starting over. Caine folded the pamphlet a second time and slid it into his back pocket.

He turned around and Autumn was standing a few feet behind him.

Her eyebrow was up. Her arms were crossed low over her bag strap, her weight on one hip, her head tilted at an angle.

"It ain't polite to eavesdrop, you know," Caine said.

"Well, I don't speak Spanish so I don't think this would qualify as eavesdropping." The corner of her mouth pulled. "But you're just a bag of surprises, aren't you?"

"What you mean?"

Autumn shifted her bag higher on her shoulder and uncrossed her arms. "First you tell me you got a kid, which isn't all that surprising, but now I just walk up on you holding an entire conversation in a different language and signing petitions?" She glanced past him toward the table and the sign against the tree. "To defund ICE?"

Caine shrugged, one shoulder lifting. "Fuck 'em."

Autumn's mouth pressed flat, but her eyes stayed on his face, moving across it. "Not very brand aware if you're trying to reach across the cultural divide."

"Guess I'll just have to eat that L then because ain't no fucking way I ain’t for that." Caine's hand gestured toward the sign. "Even if you take everything else out, they still fucking pigs."

Autumn stared at him. The breeze moved a strand of hair across her forehead and she left it there. Students passed behind her on the path, their voices blending into the noise of the park.

"That's refreshing," she said.

"What?"

Autumn shrugged, then gestured with her chin toward the far side of the park, past the trees and the grass and the students scattered across it. "I'm heading to the Village. You want to come? Tell me how you know Spanish?"

Caine smiled. He nodded over his shoulder toward the path she'd pointed at. "Yeah, vámonos."

~~~


Mireya sat on the couch, one leg tucked under her and her elbow resting on the armrest, her phone face down on the cushion beside her. Gabe leaned toward her with one arm stretched along the back of the couch behind her head and the other draped across her body, his fingers resting against her far hip, keeping her turned toward him.

"You know I been trying to fuck with you since we were in high school," he said.

Mireya laughed, her head tipping back against his arm. "Please, Gabe. The only reason you wanted to do that was because you were trying to find someone to do your shit for you so they ain't kick you off the basketball team."

Gabe laughed, holding both hands up, palms out, the motion pulling his arm off the couch back for a second before it came right back. "A nigga could have multiple reasons to do some shit." His eyes moved over her face, then lower, then back up. "You badder now than you was back then though."

Mireya raised an eyebrow. "Back when I was a sophomore and you were a senior? I'd hope I'm badder now, baby."

A corner of Gabe's mouth tipped up. "We both grown now, though."

Mireya nodded, her chin dipping once. "That we are."

He leaned in. His mouth found hers and she let him press into her, his hand sliding from her hip down to her thigh and gripping, pulling her toward him until her back hit the cushion and he was over her, his weight braced on one arm beside her head. Her hands went to the hem of his shirt and pulled it up over his chest, over his shoulders, forcing them apart for the half-second it took to clear his head. He tossed it somewhere behind the couch and came back down. His hand ran up her body, fingers pushing the fabric of her hoodie up past her stomach, the cotton bunching against his wrist. Her skin prickled where the air hit it.

The front door opened.

Mireya's grip locked on his shoulders, her fingers digging into the muscle. Her heartbeat punched hard into her throat and her breathing cut short, each pull through her nose coming shallow and fast. The room narrowed at the edges. She kept her eyes on the ceiling above Gabe's shoulder and held herself there, held the shape of the room together, held the couch under her back and the weight on top of her as something she'd chosen.

Gabe looked back over his shoulder. Three bodies came through the door mid-conversation, Dillard basketball duffel bags hanging off their shoulders, one of them already kicking his shoes off at the threshold. The smell of gym sweat and cold air came in with them.

Gabe dropped his head, his forehead almost touching Mireya's collarbone. "Thought coach had y'all doing extra shit?"

The first one through the door, Avion, looked at Mireya on the couch and then at Gabe above her, his eyes tracking the scene in one pass. "Nigga, you acted like you was hurt to come get some pussy?"

Mireya's breathing evened out. Slow pulls through her nose, each one a fraction longer than the one before. Her heartbeat stayed in her ears though, the thud of it sitting behind everything else, too fast and too loud. Her fingers loosened on Gabe's shoulders, one at a time, but the tension stayed in her forearms.

Gabe pushed himself up from the couch and sat back, reaching for Mireya's hand. "C'mon. We'll go in my room."

Mike, the second one, dropped his duffel by the door and laughed. "Nigga had to show us he be getting bitches after Jakiyah shot him down."

Mireya laughed, the sound coming out easy even with the pulse still knocking at her temples. She stayed where she was, back to the cushions, hoodie pushed up. "Damn, Gabe. I'm a rebound?"

Gabe sucked his teeth, his jaw setting as he looked at his roommates. "Y'all blocking." The words came out through his teeth.

Justin, the third, set his bag down slow and shook his head. "Because you being selfish with your company."

Avion held his hand out, palm down, patting the air. "Chill, chill." He looked at Gabe. "We'll come back in an hour. Let you do your thing."

Mireya's pulse was still there, thudding behind her eardrums, each beat distinct. Her mother's voice threaded through it, the words from that morning sitting in her chest where they'd landed and stayed. She looked at Gabe, then past him at Avion, at Mike, at Justin. She let her eyes settle on each of them for a beat before she came back to Gabe.

She shrugged. "I'm down."

Gabe looked at her. "Down for what?"

Justin's hands spread wide, his head tilting. "Nigga, is you slow?" He gestured at all of them, the motion sweeping across the room. "She down."

Gabe raised an eyebrow and turned back to Mireya. "You for real?"

Mireya nodded, a smile pulling across her mouth. "If y'all can keep up, papi."

~~~


Autumn sat in the booth with her back against the wall and her cocktail glass held between two fingers, the ice shifting every time she tilted it. Jade was across from her next to Simone, both of them leaning into each other's space, and Brooke had the end of the booth on Autumn's side, her elbow on the table and her chin propped on her fist. The restaurant was loud enough that they had to pitch their voices over the tables around them, over the music coming from speakers mounted near the bar, over the clink of plates and the bartender calling out names for pickup. Empty appetizer plates had been pushed to the edge of the table and a second round of drinks sat sweating onto the napkins underneath them.

Jade set her glass down hard enough to rattle the ice. "Girl, I told that nigga Malachi that just because his boy got Rita stupid ass pregnant that he bet not even think I'm for that shit."

Simone's head was already shaking before Jade finished. "They always trying to lock something down with a baby knowing they ass gonna turn into a fucking ghost as soon as that baby here."

Brooke nodded, her chin lifting off her fist. "Facts."

Autumn brought her glass to her mouth and took a sip, the liquor sharp against her tongue. She set it back down and turned it once on the napkin, the condensation leaving a ring on the paper. "Y'all trust their asses too fucking much. That's the problem. Niggas see a big ass and some pussy and suddenly want to be a daddy."

Simone pointed at Autumn with her straw, the tip of it dripping onto the table. "Or in your case, they see how connected your daddy is and want to get in on that munyun."

Autumn rolled her eyes. "More reason not to trust these niggas. Just use them for what they're good for and fucking dismiss them." She picked up her glass again and gestured with it, the ice clicking against the rim. "All of these dumb ass bitches out here letting niggas put babies in them and drag them down. Couldn't be me. A bunch of fucking birds."

Jade laughed, her body folding forward, one hand coming to rest flat on the table. "Some bitches get dick drunk, Autumn. Everyone ain't as ruthless as you when it come to some good dick."

Brooke reached across the table with her palm up. Jade met it without looking, their hands connecting in a clap that turned heads at the next booth. "I know I fucking ain't," Brooke said. "Motherfucker could tell me to do anything for about three, four hours if it's good enough."

Simone covered her mouth with the back of her hand, her shoulders shaking. Jade was already gone, her laugh coming out in short bursts that made her grip the edge of the table. Brooke sat there with her eyebrows raised and her palms up, unapologetic.

Autumn dropped her head into her hand, her fingers pressing into her forehead, and shook it side to side. She leaned back against the booth, her arm stretching along the top of the seat. "There ain't a man on this planet that's worth all that."

Simone finished her drink in one long pull, set the empty glass down, and wiped the corner of her mouth with her thumb. "That's because you always fucking with those Bel Air ass niggas." She leaned forward, both forearms on the table, her eyes locking onto Autumn's face. "Go down to Crenshaw or Compton and get yourself a hood nigga and watch how he have you 'yes, daddy. Anything you want, daddy.'"

Jade slapped the table. Brooke's head dropped back against the booth, her laugh going up into the ceiling. Simone held her pose, her face dead straight, both hands still flat on the table, selling it.

Autumn sucked her teeth, the sound cutting through the laughter. "I could never."

Brooke wiped under her eye with her knuckle and pointed at Autumn. "You fucking missing out, girl."

They all laughed again, the sound of it layering over itself, Jade still gripping the table, Simone finally breaking and letting the grin take her whole face. Autumn rolled her eyes and reached for her drink.

Soapy
Posts: 15581
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 17 Apr 2026, 08:33

take this shit to telemundo, gang
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Captain Canada
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American Sun

Post by Captain Canada » 17 Apr 2026, 09:38

Carmen a fucking idiot for even thinking things were going to be civilized between Maria and Mireya.
Caesar wrote:
17 Apr 2026, 06:57
She shrugged. "I'm down."
Yeah, you're a devious ass dude. :drose:

You'll never gaslight me again.
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redsox907
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American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 17 Apr 2026, 12:04

Mireya trying to prove everyone right about here :pgdead:

getting passed around more than a peace pipe

Caine simping over a maneater ah? they made for each other.
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Caesar
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American Sun

Post by Caesar » 18 Apr 2026, 10:21

Soapy wrote:
17 Apr 2026, 08:33
take this shit to telemundo, gang
Most of the people in America speak Spanish. Image
Captain Canada wrote:
17 Apr 2026, 09:38
Carmen a fucking idiot for even thinking things were going to be civilized between Maria and Mireya.
Caesar wrote:
17 Apr 2026, 06:57
She shrugged. "I'm down."
Yeah, you're a devious ass dude. :drose:

You'll never gaslight me again.
You can't fault her for trying to get her sister to stop treating her niece like that.

People can't fuck these days :smh:
redsox907 wrote:
17 Apr 2026, 12:04
Mireya trying to prove everyone right about here :pgdead:

getting passed around more than a peace pipe

Caine simping over a maneater ah? they made for each other.
She just like sex.

What Caine do? :pgdead:
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Caesar
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Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 18 Apr 2026, 10:22

Inawika Pe Lepa-lepa / Ahmo Cate īhuān Nōhuiyān

Sara pulled the pen across the line the lawyer had tapped, her signature coming out tighter than she meant it to. The table was a long slab of dark wood that ran the length of the conference room, and the couple across from her kept shifting in their chairs, the woman's bracelet knocking the underside of the table every time she crossed her arms. A space heater murmured in the corner and the window behind the lawyer held a flat grey sky, the cold bleeding through the glass into the room.

The lawyer, a short woman in a wine-colored blazer, hair pulled back tight, reading glasses perched low on her nose, slid another form across the wood, her nails catching on the top sheet as she turned it. She tapped a line near the bottom.

"So, this just authorizes the sale of 3510 Octavia at the price agreed, nine hundred, twenty-five thousand dollars with a down payment of three hundred thousand dollars."

Sara drew a breath through her nose and held it before she let it out. She signed, her hand moving steady across the page.

She slid the form back. The lawyer nodded once and pulled the next one from the top of her stack, already tapping the line before it was fully in front of her. Sara bent her head and signed again. The pen scratched. Her wrist started a small ache from the shape of the letters. She'd been signing her name in full for over an hour now, the cursive pulling longer every time.

Nicole sat to her left with her legs crossed under the table, watching the lawyer's hands. She'd come in her own lawyer garb, charcoal slacks and a cream blouse, her own pen tucked into the spiral of a legal pad. Every so often her foot brushed Sara's ankle, a small steady contact, and Sara pressed back against it. Nicole had read every one of these pages an hour before in her office, a yellow highlighter cap between her teeth, her pen moving line by line down each sheet. Sara had sat across from her the whole time and watched her, her shoulders easing down a fraction for the first time all week.

The wife of the selling couple across the table had held her silence so far. She leaned forward now, her bracelet tapping the wood, and tilted her head.

"What was it that you said your son does again?"

Sara took another form from the lawyer's fingers, looked down at the line the woman had tapped, and signed it.

"He plays football."

The husband let a low whistle out between his teeth. He had a silver beard trimmed close and a navy quarter-zip, and his wedding band knocked the table when he set his hand down.

"Professional football? Like the NFL?"

"God willing," Sara said.

She signed her name again. The pen dragged a little at the top of the S and she started it over, pushed harder this time to get the ink moving.

Nicole leaned forward, one elbow on the table.

"Is she going to do the closing for the other one after this? For..."

She trailed off and glanced at Sara.

"5025 St. Bernard," Sara said.

Nicole nodded. "Yeah, that one."

The lawyer turned her head toward the doorway. Behind the front desk a young woman in a plum cardigan held up a second bound packet of closing papers and nodded back. The lawyer faced forward again.

"Yep. I think the seller will be here in twenty, twenty five minutes."

Nicole leaned in close to Sara's ear, her voice low enough that the couple across the table wouldn't catch it.

"Take a break if all those signatures start to blur together."

"Yeah," Sara said.

She signed the next page. Her wrist felt warm from the steady work of it, the pen tip running out its small pocket of ink faster than it should have. The lawyer slid her a fresh one without a word. Sara clicked the cap off with her thumb and kept going.

The wife pulled her phone from her purse and scrolled, her thumb moving in short flicks. She frowned. Her thumb stopped. She tapped something, held the screen closer to her face, and her mouth parted. She pinched at the screen with two fingers, widened whatever was on it, tilted the phone to cut the glare from the window behind her.

"You said 5025 St. Bernard?" She glanced up at Sara, then back at her screen. "Three seventy?"

She turned the phone toward her husband. Her bracelet knocked the wood again.

"Maybe we shouldn't have come down."

She said it flat, her thumb still hovering above the screen. The husband leaned in. His eyebrows lifted and stayed lifted. He gave a small single nod, and his hand came up to rub once at the back of his neck. His wedding band caught the fluorescent light from the fixture above the table and threw a small bright flash across the ceiling before his hand came back down to his lap.

Sara snorted a laugh through her nose. It came out before she could catch it, and she kept her eyes on the paper in front of her and pressed her pen down on the next line and signed.

~~~


Mireya pushed her hip against the counter and crossed her arms, watching Mari work. The stove had four things going at once, rice steaming in a covered pot, chicken browning in one pan, peppers and onions going soft in another, a small saucepan at the back with something red reducing down.

Mari moved between them in short fast turns, her wooden spoon tapping the edge of each pan before she set it on the rest. A row of glass containers waited on the counter, lids stacked beside them, a black marker and a roll of labels next to a cutting board smeared with garlic skins. The kitchen window was open a crack and the cold from outside cut against the warm coming off the stove, pressing a line of cool against Mireya's back through her shirt.

"Have you started looking at schools for Camila for next year?" Mari asked.

Mireya shook her head. "Figured I'd just play it by ear."

Mari snorted. She tipped the pan with the peppers, pushed them into a corner with the spoon and turned the knob on the stove down a notch.

"That's how you end not being able to get a spot for her at the school you want her at."

"I think my mouth got what it takes to make a principal change their mind."

Mari laughed. She shook her head at the ceiling, the spoon still hovering over the pan.

"Girl."

"I'm serious."

"I know you are. That's what's wrong with you."

Mari kept working. She pulled the chicken out of its pan, laid the pieces on a paper towel, and tilted the pan over the sink to let the fat run. Garlic and caramelized onion thickened the air in the kitchen. Mireya's stomach pulled once against her ribs, reminding her she hadn't eaten yet.

"I think I'm going to quit," Mari said.

Her voice stayed level. She kept her hands moving, kept breaking the chicken apart, kept her eyes on her fingers.

Mireya raised an eyebrow. "Dancing?"

"All of it." Mari reached for the peppers with a pair of tongs and moved them into one of the glass containers. The peppers slid off the tongs in a wet pile and she pushed them flat with the back of the spoon. "I just can't commit to it, and it takes too much out of me mentally to keep trying to do it with all the attention I need to give Graci."

Mireya uncrossed her arms and rested her palms on the counter behind her. She thought about Graciela, about the medicine on Mari's counter that kept getting more expensive.

"Why don't you just focus on turning tricks then? You can do that when Graci's at school. Couple hours in a week and you'll be fine."

Mari shook her head once, slow. She scooped rice into the container on top of the peppers and tapped the spoon against the rim. A few grains stuck and she flicked them off with her thumbnail.

"Those are even worse. I always feel dirty after." She moved to the next container on the counter and started filling it the same as the first.

Mireya rubbed at the side of her face with two fingers. Her ring caught the light and she dropped her hand.

"I don't know. I get where you're coming from but at the same time it just seems a little random."

Mari shrugged. "Life is random."

"Yeah, I guess," Mireya said. "But what are you going to do instead?"

"Get a normal job. Someone at Graci's school already put me in touch with their HR."

Mireya tilted her head back a fraction and stared at a spot on the ceiling above the stove. The saucepan at the back of the stove popped once and Mari reached over and stirred it. The red in it had gone darker, thicker, the spoon leaving a clean trail through the bottom of the pan before the sauce folded back over itself.

"I don't know if I could give it up before I graduated from college," Mireya said.

"I think you could."

Mireya shook her head. "I'm only worth something if people want to and can fuck me."

Mari rolled her eyes. She snapped the last bit of chicken off the bone, dropped it into the container, and wiped her fingers on the front of her apron.

"That's not true."

"It is. That's what I'm good fo–at." Mireya’s tone stayed flat, her eyes on the cooktop.

Mari's hands paused over the container. She pressed the lid down along the seal with her thumbs, working it in around the rim. Her mouth pulled in a small line and let go.

"You're selling yourself short," Mari said.

Mireya shrugged. "I guess, but I can see why you're giving it up even if I don’t really agree."

Mari looked over at her. She held the look for a beat, her tongue against the inside of her cheek, the container in her hands half sealed. Then she tipped her chin at the cabinet behind Mireya.

"Can you get that foil out the cabinet behind you?"

~~~


Caine stretched his legs out under the table and crossed them at the ankle, the sun sitting warm on his thighs through his joggers. The terrace ran the length of Cam's living room, wrapped in glass and steel, a long wood table at the center with four chairs pulled around it and a small bowl of dry cereal forgotten next to someone's phone and half-drunk iced coffee sweated on the railing.

Down below traffic moved in slow waves from the boulevard three blocks over, horns thin at this distance. Caine's penthouse was upstairs in the same building, bigger than this, and neither space existed inside anything he'd seen before he stepped off that plane.

Derron tapped the flat of his hand against his chest, the tap dull against the cotton of his shirt.

"I'm just saying that even though niggas fuck with the Raiders, I don't really see them as the hometown team."

Cam sucked his teeth. He scratched the back of his neck and squinted at Derron across the table.

"Nigga, if the Raiders ain't Vegas' team then who the fuck is?"

Derron leaned back and stretched, lifting both arms over his head and dropping them behind the chair. "Shit, I don't know. I been fucking with the Patriots since I was a lil' nigga."

Angel waved his hand at him, his voice rolling that Bay Area drag on the vowels.

"Nigga, it was the fucking Raiders before, too. Even when they were in the Bay." He counted the cities off on his fingers, one at a time. "They was in LA, Oakland and Vegas. Fuck you saying? Ain't nobody was fucking with the Rams or Chargers."

Caine pulled the hood of his hoodie lower against the sun and looked over at Angel. He sat forward a little and rested his forearms on the edge of the table.

"I wouldn't be riding for no team that up and moved out my city though. The Saints trash as fuck, but at least they ain't talking about moving them motherfuckers."

Cam made a short sound in his throat and Derron nodded at the table.

Angel lifted off the back of his chair and gestured with both hands, palms up.

"Gotta have some loyalty, bro." His head tipped side to side while he searched for the comparison. "It's like if a bad bitch left you but she let you fuck every so often, you gonna crack your old work, right?"

Caine let out a short breath through his nose and reached for the water bottle on the table. He cracked the cap and took a pull before he spoke, the plastic denting in his grip.

"Why she left? I feel like they got some situations that I ain't spinning back. Like it's only a handful of 'em that I'd even consider."

Angel's face pulled together at him. Caine shrugged one shoulder and set the bottle back down, turning the cap back on.

Cam laughed, his shoulders bouncing once.

"That shit don't even matter. Ain't nothing beat knocking down some old work again. You know if that pussy good or not." He dropped his feet down off the rail, the soles of his slides slapping the deck, and sat forward with his elbows on his knees. "As long as she ain't on some dyke shit, I'm fucking."

Derron set his phone down on the table. "That's why niggas used to run you out of neighborhoods back home." He held his hands up. "Or so I heard."

Caine's laugh came out of him in a short hard break. "No, huh? Don't tell me they had you running, brudda."

Cam sucked his teeth and leaned back, his arms crossing over his chest. "Ain't no way you believe that shit."

Angel pointed at Caine, finger cocked loose, his grin already starting.

"I believe it. Had some of them fucking goomba ass niggas running you off the strip."

"Boy, fuck you."

Derron's hand came down on the table and he rocked back in his chair, his laugh opening up from his chest. Angel's laugh came through his teeth, short and loud, and he slapped Caine on the shoulder with the back of his hand. Caine shook forward over his thighs from it, the hood coming down over his face. Cam was the last one to break, shaking his head at the sky before his shoulders gave and he laughed too

~~~


Ramon pushed through the front doors of the community center and caught a boy sprinting past his hip, backpack slapping against the kid's spine. Another one came behind, hollering something about being it, and Ramon stepped sideways to let them pass. A woman at the front desk lifted her chin at him and he lifted his back.

A little girl in two braids was dragging a plastic chair across the linoleum with both hands, pushing it with her whole weight, and an older woman called after her to cut it out. The heat was cranked too high for the building. He felt sweat gather at the small of his back inside his jacket before he'd gone twenty feet and he shrugged the jacket open at the chest to let some air move.

He slowed at Nina's door. She was at her desk, chin tucked, thumb moving slow across her phone screen, one leg folded up under her in the chair. The overhead light caught the gold hoop in her ear. A stack of manila folders leaned at her elbow and a half-drunk bottle of water sat next to her mouse. He knocked twice on the frame.

She looked up. "Hey, what's up?"

"Ain't shit." He leaned his shoulder into the doorway and stayed there. "I was just passing by and figured I'd pop up on you, see if you wanted something specific to cook tonight."

She shook her head and set the phone face-down on a stack of folders. "I got turkey necks in the slow cooker."

Ramon's eyebrow went up. "Who watching that?"

"No one gotta watch a slow cooker." She rolled her eyes and let her leg drop so both feet were back on the floor. The chair creaked when she shifted her weight forward. "That's the point of the damn slow cooker. But Asia there. She don't go to work until tonight."

He sucked his teeth. "Letting a crackhead watch your food is crazy work."

Nina breathed out through her nose. "You gotta stop talking about her like that."

"Even though she trying to get clean, she still a crackhead." He held his hands up at shoulder height. "Ain't that how it work for alcoholics? They say they that even after they stop drinking."

"That's how they describe themselves." She pulled the phone back toward her, then pushed it away again. She did it a second time and caught herself doing it and laid her hand flat on the desk. "But it's different when it's your brother calling you a crackhead."

He let the hands come down and ran his tongue over the inside of his cheek. A kid's voice carried from somewhere outside the office, high and laughing, and then another kid cut across it hollering a name, and Ramon waited until both voices thinned out down the hall. He rolled his shoulder against the doorframe and the wood gave a small pop under his weight.

"Alright, man. My bad. I'm learning this shit, too."

Nina reached for the water bottle, took a short swallow and set it back down in the exact ring it had left on the desk. She took a second before she spoke.

"You could go a long way if you'd get out of the streets and give her something positive to see."

His jaw set. "I ain't trying to hear all that. Asia older than me. She was smoking that rock long before I jumped off the porch."

Nina dragged her hand down her face. Her rings left faint tracks on her cheek before the skin settled. She took a breath in and held it a beat before she used it.

"That's not the point, Ramon. I'm just saying that if you want your sister to get better, you need to make some changes, too."

"Sound like you giving me an ultimatum."

"I didn't say nothing like that." Her voice flattened out. She lifted her eyes to his and held them. "If that's how you heard it then maybe there's a reason for that."

He shook his head. A slow shake, jaw working. He ran his palm over the top of his head, front to back, and let the hand drop against his thigh. Down the hall somebody dropped something heavy and a group of kids screamed laughing and an adult voice rose over them and cut the sound in half. He pushed off the doorframe with his shoulder.

"So, you don't want nothing else from the store for tonight?"

~~~


The bottle was something he'd never heard of before Tatum's assistant sent over a case of it as a welcome-to-the-city thing. Clear glass, black label, Spanish printed across it in a thin sans serif.

The box it had come in was still on the floor against the pantry door where he'd dropped it, straw packing spilled halfway out. Caine broke the seal with his thumbnail and poured two fingers into a rocks glass, held the glass up under the pendant light above the island, and turned it once to watch the tequila move against the walls. He brought it to his nose first. Something earthy underneath the alcohol, more agave weight than the stuff he grew up drinking. He took a small sip and held it at the back of his tongue before he let it down. He nodded once to himself.

He walked around the island to the panel on the wall next to the hallway and pressed his thumb against the slider until the recessed lights in the ceiling dropped to about a third. kitchen island kept a ring of brighter light around it from the pendants, and past the glass wall a slow grid of red and white taillights moved along Wilshire, the Hollywood Hills a dark ridge.

He came back to the counter and finished what was in the glass in one swallow. The second pour was a little heavier than the first. He walked down the hall, bottle in one hand, glass in the other.

Two voices came through the bedroom door before he got there. One of them said something low and the other one laughed, a short laugh that ran up at the end. He could smell the perfume they'd been wearing earlier in the elevator, a sweet thing that had been stronger on the brunette.

He shouldered the door open.

Peyton was propped up on one elbow over Elle, a small white t-shirt riding up on her ribs, her panties cut high on her hip. Elle was under her in just panties, one arm flung back over a pillow, hair spread out dark against the sheet. Peyton was saying something against Elle's mouth that broke when Elle laughed, and then Peyton leaned down and kissed her, slow, her hand moving from Elle's shoulder to her jaw. Elle's fingers came up and hooked into the hem of Peyton's shirt.

They registered him in the doorway at the same time. Peyton kept her elbow under her and turned only her head. Her mouth was red from the kiss. She held her free hand out toward him, palm up, fingers curling.

"You could've brought us glasses."

Caine snorted and walked the bottle over to her. "Could've. But I didn't."

She took it by the neck and brought it to her mouth and tipped it back. Her throat worked twice. Then she lowered it and tilted it over Elle's mouth, and Elle opened her mouth for it with her eyes on Caine, and Peyton let a small stream of tequila run down between Elle's lips. Some of it caught at the corner of Elle's mouth and slid toward her ear. Elle wiped it with the back of her wrist and swallowed, tongue running slow over her bottom lip after.

Caine turned and went to the armchair by the window. He dragged it across the rug by one arm of it, the wood legs catching on the weave once before he got it loose and set it down at the foot of the bed so the footboard cut the chair off at his knees. He sat, his right foot on the edge of the mattress, the bottom of his sock flat to the sheet and rested the arm holding the glass on his other thigh. He took another sip before he settled.

Elle pushed up onto her own elbow. The light from the nightstand caught her collarbones. Her eyebrow went up.

"You're not joining us?"

"In a bit." Caine lifted the glass a quarter inch off his thigh and let it sit back down. "Do y'all thing."

Peyton smiled at that. She brought the bottle up for one more pull and then leaned across Elle and set it down on the nightstand. The base of it knocked against the lamp stem and the lamp swayed once and settled.

Peyton stayed leaned over her. "You wanna give him a show?"

Elle laughed from underneath her. "Just don't tire me out."

Caine took a sip from the glass. He let his spine settle back against the chair, shoulder blades pressing into the leather, chin lowered. Peyton's hand was already moving, fingers walking up Elle's stomach, and then the two of them were kissing again, and Elle's knee came up between Peyton's, Peyton's hair falling forward across both their mouths.

~~~


Mireya came out of the bedroom barefoot in just a t-shirt, hair damp and pulled over one shoulder, the hem sitting high on her thighs. The TV was low in the living room, something Sena had put on.

She crossed to the kitchen. She opened the freezer and the cold fog rolled out around her wrist. A mini bottle of tequila sat on its side behind the ice tray. She took it out and held it flat in her palm while she reached up to the shelf above for the box of choco pies. The box was cold enough to bite when she tucked it against her ribs to close the door with her free hand.

Sena was on the couch, knees pulled up under her, phone against her thigh. She looked up when Mireya came in. Her eyes dropped from Mireya's face to the box and stayed there a second before they came back up.

Mireya dropped onto the cushion next to her, close enough that their thighs ran along each other from hip to knee. She broke the seal on the box with her thumbnail and flipped the cardboard flap open. One plastic wrapper came free with a small crinkle. She peeled the foil back and held the pie out flat on her palm to Sena. Her other hand was already working the cap off the mini bottle, a twist and the small metallic give of the seal breaking.

Sena's eyebrow went up. "How'd you know that's my favorite?"

Mireya shrugged and moved the palm a couple inches closer. "You're always eating them. And frozen, right?"

Sena nodded and reached for it. Her fingers brushed the inside of Mireya's wrist where she took it and stayed there a half second longer. Mireya leaned across her to the end table on Sena's other side for the remote, her arm coming over Sena's lap, her chest passing an inch from Sena's mouth before she straightened back up with the remote in her hand. She settled back into the couch, set her heels on the edge of the coffee table, and crossed her ankles. The mini bottle balanced between two fingers on her thigh.

Sena's eyes stayed on her through the whole reach.

Mireya thumbed the remote and pulled up The Pitt. "You better not have watched any more of this without me."

Sena laughed around the first bite of the pie. "I've already seen all of this."

"That's not the point." Mireya rolled her eyes. "I haven't. And you haven't watched it all with me."

Sena held her hand up, palm out, the pie wrapper still hooked on her pinky. "My bad."

Mireya nodded once and let her head rest back against the couch. The couch cushion was still warm where Sena had been sitting on the other side of her body, and she felt the heat of it through the back of her thigh. She brought the bottle to her mouth and took a slow sip, let the tequila ride the back of her tongue, swallowed.

The episode opened on an ambulance bay. The light from the TV moved across her collarbone and down into the neck of the t-shirt. Next to her, Sena bit into the choco pie and a flake of chocolate caught at the corner of her mouth and she brushed it off with the pad of her thumb.

Mireya glanced over. Looked away, looked back, then her head turned fully. She caught Sena's wrist, turned the hand up in the light from the floor lamp, and held it in front of her own face to look at the nails. Short, clean, unpainted, the edges filed soft but uneven where Sena had worked on them herself. Mireya ran her thumb once along the edge of Sena's thumbnail.

Mireya shook her head. "We're going to get your nails done tomorrow. I can't have people thinking I'm not paying you enough."

"I just do that myself."

Mireya let the hand go with a small wave. Her thumb dragged once across the inside of Sena's wrist before she pulled back. "We'll go to a salon. I got a regular nail lady."

Sena watched the side of her face for a second. "Anyone ever told you that you give off masc vibes?"

Mireya turned her head, slow. "Like a lesbian?"

"Yeah."

Mireya shook her head. "No, I'm straight. Are you?"

"Am I what?"

"A lesbian."

Sena shook her head. "No. You just remind me of some of my friends who are."

Mireya laughed and looked back to the screen. "They must not get a lot of bitches if they like me. I heard they don't like us straight bitches playing gay."

Sena held there a second. Her hand with the pie went still. Sena shook her head once to herself and looked back at the TV.
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Post by Captain Canada » 18 Apr 2026, 13:55

Mireya giving Trell energy over Sena, I won't lie to you :drose:

I always get distracted by how much of a hoe Mireya is to remember just how much of a hoe Caine is. It's a shock that Camila doesn't have siblings if we keeping it a bean.

/hate.
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Post by redsox907 » 18 Apr 2026, 21:40

Captain Canada wrote:
18 Apr 2026, 13:55
Mireya giving Trell energy over Sena, I won't lie to you :drose:

I always get distracted by how much of a hoe Mireya is to remember just how much of a hoe Caine is. It's a shock that Camila doesn't have siblings if we keeping it a bean.

/hate.
curious that Sena only mentioned the couple trying to get in her pants and not Mireya, who is starting to treat her just like Jas. Minus the sex lol

just shows how desensitized she is

also, kind of ironic that Caine don't know if he asked nicely, or payed, he could get the same show with his BM :kghah:

curious what the other house is. Caine's abuelas house, or Mireya's? :hmm: It can't be Sara's because Nicole would have known the address
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Post by Caesar » 18 Apr 2026, 23:52

Captain Canada wrote:
18 Apr 2026, 13:55
Mireya giving Trell energy over Sena, I won't lie to you :drose:

I always get distracted by how much of a hoe Mireya is to remember just how much of a hoe Caine is. It's a shock that Camila doesn't have siblings if we keeping it a bean.

/hate.
As Sena said, she giving masc. She'll have to go find her some lil' weak-minded man because a strong-willed man and Mireya is oil and water.

Hey Siri, where can one find adequate birth control to ensure you don't create any unwanted children?
redsox907 wrote:
18 Apr 2026, 21:40
Captain Canada wrote:
18 Apr 2026, 13:55
Mireya giving Trell energy over Sena, I won't lie to you :drose:

I always get distracted by how much of a hoe Mireya is to remember just how much of a hoe Caine is. It's a shock that Camila doesn't have siblings if we keeping it a bean.

/hate.
curious that Sena only mentioned the couple trying to get in her pants and not Mireya, who is starting to treat her just like Jas. Minus the sex lol

just shows how desensitized she is

also, kind of ironic that Caine don't know if he asked nicely, or payed, he could get the same show with his BM :kghah:

curious what the other house is. Caine's abuelas house, or Mireya's? :hmm: It can't be Sara's because Nicole would have known the address
Mireya is friendly without someone not in the life and y'all call it trying to get into her pants. :smh:

Caine don't pay for no pussy. He just hit up two bitches at Cal State LA and he's the QB at USC who is a millionaire who lives in a penthouse who is a good looking fella. Wham bam, let's see you eat that pussy ma'am. He could but Jaslene would make him pay for it and therefore, he would not pursue that.

Now, if we know anything about grandparents it's that that generation ain't leaving what they got. But :hmm:
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Post by Caesar » 19 Apr 2026, 00:08

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