American Sun

This is where to post any NFL or NCAA football franchises.
Post Reply
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 12111
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 10 Oct 2025, 00:31

Soapy wrote:
09 Oct 2025, 08:15
she might as well wear the stripper shit like a badge of honor cuz everyone is going to find out anyway
Give her some time, damn. She still a new stripper
redsox907 wrote:
09 Oct 2025, 13:52
Caesar wrote:
09 Oct 2025, 06:49
Laney moved without being told. She served Tommy first, arranging chicken and beans and greens like she had a list in her head. Across from her, Caleb tipped greens onto Gabrielle’s plate, the spoon catching the rim and ringing once. Laney glanced at the sound and went back to her work.
:smh:

Sounds more and more like Laney forced into being a dotting housewife, explains why she acts older than her age and why Rylee determined to be wild.

Tommy low key the type to beat the wife and act like its normal - haven't even seen him that much but he got that vibe. Caine clapping him up eventually would be no loss
We'll see if that's the case with how Laney became the person she is :hmm:

You over here saying Tommy needs to get got and Soapy saying Tommy needs to keep a gun for Caine. Y'all both plotting on Caine's downfall :smh:
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 12111
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 10 Oct 2025, 00:41

God Shall Forsake You

The air held that thin gray before sun showed itself. Dew clung to the seams of the turf and beaded on his laces. Caine set his phone down at the sideline with the screen face up and the volume low. The beat thumped under the hum of the field lights that hadn’t clicked off yet. Nobody else was out here. The stadium seats were dark shapes, the goal posts chalked in the half light.

He started with the line drill. Left, right, reset. Back pedal, plant, shuffle across, plant, climb. He let the cadence live in his feet and not his head. Toes quiet. Hips loose. Shoulders square. Every reset pulled the air in and pushed it out clean. The ground still kept the night’s cool, but his shirt gathered sweat at the spine.

Five yards forward, two shuffles, hitch. He mirrored the same work to the other side. The music on his phone rolled through a hook and into a verse and then fell under his breaths. He didn’t count reps. He worked until the movement felt like it belonged to him and then he worked it again.

He set two discs at different depths and ran the drop to each. Three quick, hitch, eyes up, weight under him, then a hard stop and a slide to the next spot. The only sound was his feet and the short slap of rubber when he checked down to an imaginary outlet. He reset the discs and repeated the pattern without looking for a clock.

The targets sat twenty yards out, light steel frames with pockets hung in faded canvas. Somebody from the building had dragged them out for him and left them by the numbers. He walked to them and straightened the nearest strap, then came back to the top of his mark.

Three step. Ball high. Wrist clean. He put it through the low right pocket and watched the fabric jump. Ball back to his hand. Same drop. Mid pocket now. He missed a touch left, the ball catching canvas and sliding out. He didn’t frown. He reset his feet and hit it twice in a row until the pocket gave the right thud.

He moved the targets a yard apart to tighten the window. The sky shifted toward blue and the edges of the bleachers took on shape. He rolled to his right with short steps, shoulders level, ball tight, then squared and fired to the high pocket. The frame shook once, metal complaining under the canvas. He jogged out, tugged the legs back to true, and jogged in.

From the opposite hash he worked the quick game. Catch, set, out to a taped square on the sideline. Catch, set, slant into the middle pocket. He kept his base under him and his front shoulder quiet so the ball left without a hitch. The music changed to another song he liked. He didn’t touch the phone.

He backed to the thirty and ran the full progression on air. Eyes through the first window to the second to the third. Feet matched his eyes. Ball out when it needed to be. He chased balance, not speed. The air held a wet green smell and the first gnats found him and then lost him when he moved again.

He took a knee long enough to roll his ankles and feel for any bite that would slow him later. Cleat points clicked against turf when he stood. He slid into a sprint to the far numbers and back, then ran a ladder of drops down the yard lines. Three and hitch. Five and hitch. Seven. Reset. Seven and a climb. The work stacked without comment.

He brought the targets closer and raised one to make an off-platform throw matter. He drifted left, opened his hips late, and drove the ball through the high pocket. Again from a different landmark. Same throw to the low pocket, shoulder closed, wrist quick. The canvas answered each time.

The skin on his fingers felt rough where the laces had ridden them. He turned the targets a quarter step and set them deeper to steal back a yard the sun had given the field. The song on his phone hit the chorus. He let it run and started over.

He set cones to mimic traffic and worked around them. Slide, plant, two hard steps, square, throw. He pictured nothing beyond the shape of the pocket he made with his feet and the space he held with his shoulders. He took one off his back foot to punish the lazy habit, then ran it again the right way until the bad one felt like the stranger.

He jogged forward, scooped a stray ball with one hand, and flipped it up without looking. The ball settled where it was supposed to settle. He knew he would be asked to be late and on time in the same breath when camp opened. The only answer he had was this. Feet exact. Ball honest. Again.

When the sun finally cleared the lip of the stadium, he toed the phone a little farther back into the shade, gave the targets one last pull into line, and started another cycle at the top. Early morning still held. Statesboro stayed quiet enough that the music and the ball were the only things talking.

~~~

The traffic barely moved. Heat pushed through the windshield and pooled in the car. Ramon let the seat take his weight and closed his eyes for a breath, head tipped back, jaw slack the way it did when he was trying not to grind his molars. His fingers tapped out a pattern on the wheel without him thinking, finding the pocket under the low thump spilling from the radio. The speakers buzzed on bass drops and cleared again. The smell of river water and exhaust drifted in through the cracked window.

Tyree rolled his own window down two inches and leaned out to see the lane ahead. Brake lights stacked in a line that felt endless. He slid back in and stared through the glass. “I don’t know why we suddenly working with these niggas. They ain’t cliqued up. That mean they ain’t loyal to nobody.”

E.J. shifted in the passenger seat. The pistol sat wedged between the seat and the console where his thigh could find it without looking. His fingers touched the handle and then lifted off. He did it again. “I ain’t even gonna lie. You ain’t wrong. They been around but a nigga get out of prison now we fucking with them?”

Ramon cracked an eye at him and then at Tyree in the rearview. He let his hand rest on the top of the wheel. “Duke said he know that nigga Trell daddy or some shit.”

Tyree sucked his teeth. “That don’t explain why we goin’ get shit from his ass.”

Ramon gave a small shrug. He looked at the line of cars, at the steel arch ahead, the sun bleaching everything until it felt hard to touch. “Guess y’all better keep them guns on you.”

A horn blew somewhere behind them. The line lurched and settled. The radio cut to a commercial bark and then slid back into the playlist. Tyree drummed his knee against the back of Ramon’s seat. E.J. checked it with a quiet click and set his palm over the grip. The bridge whined above them. From the open windows came the whiff of hot rubber and somebody’s loud argument in a car over.

They inched forward. Ramon rolled his shoulders and let his head rest again. He kept his eyes open this time, counting the gaps as they opened and closed. No one spoke for a minute. The song on the radio ate the silence.



Ramon pulled to the curb outside the house in Marrero and cut the engine. The block sat quiet except for music leaking from a backyard a few houses over. The last time they had stood on this street, the bass had thumped through walls and a dozen voices had been shouting over one another. Now, it was just daylight and cut grass and the broken bottle at the mouth of the driveway. A door opened and the sound carried, then stopped.

Ant, Dez, Trell, and two other men stepped out together.

Trell looked at them and didn’t make a face. “Y’all late.”

Ramon lifted his shoulders. “Traffic.”

Trell let the word hang, then turned without answering and walked along the side of the house. Ant jerked his chin for them to follow. Ramon glanced at Tyree and E.J., then moved.

The backyard was squared off and beat down to earth in places. A shed sat in the back corner. Trell stopped in front of it and turned to face them. He didn’t say anything. Ant and the other two moved to the concrete slab that ran along the shed’s threshold. They slid fingers to the edge, bent their knees, and lifted the front lip together. The concrete shifted and held, heavy enough to make their arms tremble.

Dez crouched and reached into the shadow under the slab. His forearm disappeared to the elbow. He came back with a sealed plastic bag full of capsules that knocked together in a soft rattle. He wiped grit off the bag with his palm and handed it to Trell.

Trell didn’t check the count. He set the weight in his hand a second, then passed it to Ramon. The bag felt dense and cold from the ground. Ramon gripped it once to settle it and let his hand fall to his side.

“Duke sent my money,” Trell said.

Ramon nodded. He didn’t add anything to it. He shifted his stance so the bag hung behind his thigh. Tyree and E.J. already had their feet pointed back toward the driveway.

They turned to go. Ant stepped in front of Ramon and pressed a hand to the middle of his chest, flat and not hard, just there. The touch held him. Ant’s eyes stayed steady. “I know where to look if something goes missing.”

Ramon met his look and nodded once.

Ant pulled his hand back and stepped aside. Ramon moved past him, the bag loose at his leg, Tyree close enough that his shoulder brushed Ramon’s arm. E.J. kept the doorway framed with his eyes as they crossed back through.

They climbed in the car and shut the doors. Ramon set the bag on the floor behind his calves and started the engine. Tires scratched the gravel and then found the asphalt. They slid down the block past a row of mailboxes leaning at angles.

Down the street, Tyree stretched his neck and looked out at the yards. He tucked his chin and spoke without looking at anyone. “You know that nigga Ant would be less scary if he was 6’4” or some shit.”

E.J. laughed, short and surprised. “What?”

Tyree tilted his hand back and forth. “That nigga 5’7”. He just gonna shoot you.”

E.J. shook his head and pressed his knuckles to his mouth. The laugh got away from him anyway. Ramon snorted and coughed out air that wasn’t a full laugh but felt close enough. He made the turn at the corner and the house dropped out of the rearview.

~~~

The boutique’s AC rattled and breathed warm, the kind of breath that only moved heat around. Mireya stood at the center table with a pile that had been destroyed in three minutes by a girl who left without buying anything. She pinched the hems straight and squared corners until the stack looked new again.

Paz worked a return rack a few feet away, sliding hangers into their sizes, tags facing front. The plastic sleeves clicked against the rod each time she nudged one home.

“These people don’t know what a small is,” she said, mostly to the air.

The office door cracked and Trina came out with her keys on a long strap. She clocked Mireya first.

“Girl, I was able to cover for your ass,” she said, not lowering her voice. “But don’t be calling out for two weeks no more. Arelle was on my ass all weekend about that shit.”

Mireya kept her hands moving. “My bad,” she said. “I’ll give you some more notice next time.”

Trina nodded like she had already decided to let it ride. “It’s all good. I don’t like this shit ass job either.” She laughed and let the strap bounce against her thigh as she walked the perimeter to look busy.

Paz cut her eyes over, then drifted closer with an armful of dresses.

“What’s going on with you?” she asked, voice pitched casual. “You been acting weird for a minute.”

Mireya shook her head. She tucked a tag under and pressed the top shirt smooth with her palm. “Nothing’s going on. I’m just getting used to working my new job.”

“How hard can cleaning be?” Paz said. She said it light, teasing, like she wasn’t trying to make it a thing.

Mireya’s hand stalled for half a breath. The stage came back in a flash—the looks on the customers’ faces as she danced for them. She blinked it away and shifted the stack.

“It’s not the work,” she said. “Just the hours.”

Paz made a face that was almost sympathy and almost side-eye. “Ask them to put you on days then,” she said. “So you not dragging in here.”

“I just gotta adjust,” Mireya said. She flipped the top she had smoothed and started the whole stack over, letting the muscle memory take the thinking out. She angled herself so she could see Paz’s nails, fresh and square, the cheap top coat catching the light.

“How’s the apartment with Angela?” she asked, like the question had just come to her.

Paz’s mouth softened. “It’s been fun,” she said, and the word carried the little pride of a new couch on layaway and a shelf they put up slightly crooked. “You gotta come back over now that everything’s set up.”

“Mm,” Mireya said, half smile showing. “Y’all got that smell out of that closet?”

“Girl, no,” Paz said, laughing. “But it’s cute. Angela got these dumb lemon curtains in the kitchen. You’ll see.”

Trina reappeared by the fitting rooms, pushing a curtain aside with two fingers, then letting it fall.

“Y’all see that one girl tore this place up and didn’t buy nothin’?” she called. “Had the nerve to ask for a discount ‘cause a thread was loose.” She snorted and disappeared again, her voice already rising at whoever was on her phone.

The speakers kept up their loop of soft songs that made the store feel expensive even when the AC couldn’t win. Outside, a bus exhaled at the corner and the windows shivered a little, sending the street’s heat smell into the room. The returns rack creaked. Paz clicked her tongue and moved another hanger down the rod.

“You sure you okay?” she asked, lower now. “You barely been here.”

Mireya didn’t look up. “Yeah, I’m good.”

Trina came across the floor again.

“I’m taking ten,” she announced, already headed for the back even though she had been gone most of the hour. “Y’all watch the front.”

The storeroom door shut behind her and her voice went sweet through it, baby talking to a man on FaceTime.

The heat sat on them. Mireya fanned herself with a folded return slip and then tucked it under the register mat. She took the messy stack apart again, shaking out each top so the fabric settled clean. Her phone buzzed where she had hidden it behind the counter. She didn’t reach for it.

Paz set the last return where it belonged and stepped back to look at the rack. She nodded to herself.

“It’s been fun,” she said again, thinking of the apartment, the lemon curtains, the smell of bleach that meant clean on purpose. “You have to come back over now that everything’s set up.”

Mireya let the smile open this time. She nodded. “Just let me know when.”

~~~

The first ball left the machine with a low cough and a rising hum. Laney set her weight back, tapped the barrel twice at the toes of the plate, and let the pitch come. The bat met the ball with a hard pop that ran up the aluminum and into her hands. The net shook high where the ball kissed the black rope and dropped straight down.

She reset without looking anywhere but the plate. Toes even. Hands stacked. The next pitch came hot and she loaded, heel down, stride true, hips driving through. Tuck the back elbow. Finish high. Another clean sound. The ball rode into the top of the net and settled in the pocket of a frayed square.

She breathed through her nose. No thoughts pressed in, nothing outside the tunnel of the cage and the machine and the small white circle coming at her. She tapped the plate again, one side then the other, and lifted the bat to her shoulder. The feed wheel hissed and turned. She rocked, planted, and turned the swing loose. Contact. Net. Reset.

Load. Stride. Drive the hips. Tuck. Through.

The rhythm sat in her wrists and in the line of her shoulders. Sweat gathered at her hairline and threaded down past her ear. A sting lived in the pads of her fingers where the grip tape bit. She slid her palm along the handle and settled again. The machine spit. She answered. The ball snapped off the bat and climbed.

She didn’t chase distance. She didn’t reach. The swing stayed inside the lane she gave it, hands quick, head quiet. Another pitch, and then another. Clockwork. She stepped out one beat, rolled her shoulders, and stepped back in. Tap tap. Set. See it. Go.

Clean again.

She let the bat tip forward and caught it in the same breath, a small correction she didn’t think about. The machine’s motor held a steady drone under the fluorescent lights. Rubber crumbs from the mat stuck to the knees of her jeans when she bent to tighten a lace. The smell of leather and oil hung under the sweet of old sports drink left open somewhere.

Another pitch arrived. She loaded, drove, finished. The ball found the same square at the top of the net and dropped. She eased a hand under the hem of her T-shirt and wiped her face. The cotton came away damp. She pulled her jeans higher on her hips and pulled the bat into her hands once more. Tap. Set.

The next three pitches came in a tight row. She matched them without hurry. One, two, three. Each landed high and true. She breathed, stepped out of the box, and slid the bat into the rack with the others. The machine wound down to a hush that still owned the room. Her pulse steadied in the quiet it left behind.

She pushed the cage door open with her forearm and walked through the long aisle toward the exit. The fans overhead turned slow and did almost nothing. She passed a bucket of scuffed balls, a pair of batting helmets with the foam cracked at the edge, a poster curling at one corner. Her hand found the metal bar of the door and the wet heat of the afternoon leaned in when she opened it.

Outside, the lot held heat in waves over chalked lines. She wiped her forehead with the back of her wrist and felt salt at her lip. Her phone rang from her pocket, the sound thin in the open air. She thumbed it on and lifted it to her ear.

“Yeah, baby? I’m on my way home now. Yes, I’m cookin’ chicken risotto for you, somethin’ else for the boys. Okay, see y’all there. Love you.”

She ended the call and slid the phone back into her pocket. The van waited two spaces down, sun beating on the windshield. She pulled the door and it gave on the first tug. The seat was warm. She set both hands on the wheel, looked once in the rearview at the empty rows, and turned the key. The engine caught and held. She buckled, rolled her shoulders once, and eased the van into reverse.

~~~

The apartment held its breath after the video call ended. The little blue light on the tablet winked out and the bedroom door stayed shut. Mireya lay on the couch with one ankle tucked under the other and the afghan bunched near her ribs. Camila’s soft, steady breathing came through the wall like a tide she didn’t want to disturb.

The knock landed too sharp for the hour. She sat up fast. The room tilted once before settling. She slid her feet to the floor, toes finding the seam in the rug, and moved to the kitchen without turning on a light. The drawer hissed open. She wrapped her hand around the knife handle and let the cool of the metal put her spine back in place. Another knock. Three beats. She eased to the door, out of sight of the peephole, then angled in until her eye met the glass.

Jaslene. Alejandra behind her shoulder. Hayley on the end with too many glossy bags looped over one wrist. Lakeside logos glowed in the hall light.

Mireya rolled her eyes and let the chain catch the door. “Camila’s asleep.”

“We’re gonna be quiet,” Jaslene whispered, lifting a bag the way people lifted offerings. “Promise.”

Hayley nodded, smile already soft. “We got manners.”

Mireya stood there one more breath, the knife still warm in her palm, then slid the chain and opened the door wide. She angled her head toward the bedroom. “Just go sit.”

They flowed in on a hush of perfume and mall air. Alejandra’s bracelets clicked.

Hayley looked around and said, “Your place is nice,” in that bright way she always had when she wanted a room to feel easy.

“Thanks,” Mireya said, closing the door with a thumb on the bolt. She set the knife on the counter and wiped her hand on her shorts before joining them.

That was when she really saw the bags. Not one or two. A small storm. Alejandra put hers on the coffee table with a satisfied little sigh. “It’s for you.”

Mireya frowned. “What?”

Jaslene dropped onto the couch and crossed one leg over the other. “We were going to take you shopping. Something told me you would be stubborn about it. So, we did it for you.”

Hayley set her bags down last, like placing a cake. “We got some good shit, too.”

“I can’t pay y’all back for this,” Mireya said.

“It’s a gift to our new friend,” Jaslene said, easy.

She reached into the nearest bag and pulled out a top that looked the opposite of shy. Thin straps. Short hem. Mireya lifted it by two fingers. “Y’all sure y’all got the right size?”

Alejandra slid into the armchair and tucked one foot under her. “Mexicana, we’ve seen you naked.”

Hayley grinned. “I used to work at VS. I got a good eye for sizing.”

Mireya sat next to Jaslene, the cushion sinking them closer than she expected. She sifted through tissue and tags, the paper whispering as she moved it. Colors she didn’t usually reach for. Soft things. A dress that would need a certain walk. She set it down and glanced at the closed bedroom door, then back to the bags. “Where am I supposed to wear this stuff?”

“Wherever you want.” Jaslene’s arm settled along the back of the couch. Her fingers found the tail of Mireya’s ponytail and began to toy with it without thinking.

“I don’t know if that’s me,” Mireya said, with a small gesture that took in the table and the couch and the whole stack of new.

“Yes, it is,” Alejandra said.

“Life’s too short to not wear pretty things,” Hayley added. “I mean, what else is it for?”

The room didn’t push her to answer. The AC clicked. A car slid by on the street, music low. Mireya looked down into another bag and touched a skirt that felt like water. She pulled her hand back and asked, “Why y’all not working?”

“Because I’m not going to Hammond,” Hayley said.

“Yo tampoco,” Jaslene said, no hesitation.

Mireya snorted. “That’s why I skipped out on tonight, too.”

Alejandra leaned her head back against the chair and made a face. “I don’t know why Stasia doesn’t keep the shit in New Orleans. The money is always so bad in those country places.”

“That’s a boss question,” Jaslene said.

Mireya nodded, the math running itself. She lifted her eyes. “Can I… ask how y’all keep the money consistent enough for—” she tipped her chin at the bags “—doing this kind of shit?”

“You gotta do private dances,” Hayley said. “VIPs.”

Alejandra nodded. “The men? They love seeing everything up close and person.”

“I don’t know about doing all that,” Mireya said. “Like, that’s a lot.”

“That’s why it’s a guarantee,” Jaslene said.

“Hay otras maneras,” Alejandra said, switching lower, a little too casual.

“Ignórala, está borracha,” Jaslene cut in, quick like a hand over a glass.

Hayley blinked. “Y’all forgetting I don’t speak Spanish?”

That broke the line. Mireya laughed, and Alejandra did too, and Jaslene pressed her fingers to her mouth as if to keep the sound from spilling down the hall. Hayley laughed last, shaking her head, eyes bright.

Mireya let herself sink back, crossing her arms over her chest like she was holding heat in. A nail found her teeth. She watched the bags with their neat little ropes and thought about space and how close a stranger would be in a room with the door shut and the music on. She bit the nail and tried to picture the first step, the second, the weight shift, the place to put her hands, where a customer would put his hands.

Jaslene pointed at a dress and started telling Hayley how she’d get the same one if she was shorter. Alejandra drifted into a story about some guy in a bar that she punched for touching her. It washed over her. Mireya stayed quiet, breath shallow, eyes on the bags, the thought opening just enough to feel its edge.

~~~

The TV threw a soft blue across the room and washed the couch in a dim pulse. Netflix kept the movie moving even when the plot went thin. Rylee lay on his chest, legs tucked up, ankle crossed over ankle, the toe of her sock tapping now and then against his thigh. Caine had his feet stretched toward the coffee table. A folded napkin sat on the wood where a cup should go.

Rylee reached forward without lifting fully off him and found her drink. Ice clicked. She took a slow sip and set the cup back, an inch to the left of the napkin. The water left a bright circle that started to bloom.

He leaned forward, which made her head slide. He moved the cup onto the napkin and set it down with three fingers at its rim.

“My bad,” he said.

She looked at him for a beat, amused, then settled her head back where it had been. The movie went on. A chase that didn’t need to be chased. Her breath laid a steady weight on his shirt. He kept his hand easy at her shoulder and watched the light change on the wall.

A few minutes later she reached for the cup again. She drank. She set it back off the napkin again, a little farther away this time.

He leaned and slid it over. The napkin took it back like it had been waiting.

Rylee’s laugh slipped out. “It ain’t that serious, Caine. It’s a raggedy Wal-Mart coffee table.”

He nodded once. “Yeah, you right.”

The quiet settled again. Traffic on the main road outside turned into a soft rush and then disappeared. The AC breathed and then held. The movie’s volume ran low enough that their own breathing sat on top of it.

When she reached for the cup a third time, she did it slow. She set it even farther from the napkin, then sat up, eyes on him. She waited.

He leaned forward and brought it back to center.

“You got OCD or somethin’?” she asked, folding a knee under herself and leaning on the armrest now.

“Nah.” He kept his eyes on the screen and shrugged.

She tipped her chin toward the kitchen. “You got them boxes lined up in there like they ’bout to ship out. You measure that with a ruler or what?”

“I don’t think that’s OCD. That’s just being neat.”

“There’s bein’ neat and there’s what you do.” She pointed past his shoulder. “Look at your little box of notebooks over there. Stacked up perfect.”

He reached down and slid the small box farther behind the couch with the back of his hand. The edge of cardboard rasped against the floor. “Just like shit put together, where it go.”

She stood and carried the cup to the kitchen. Water hit the steel with a quick note when she dropped the ice out and left the cup in the sink. She came back and folded herself against him again, her head finding the same place on his chest like it had its own memory.

“You just like Laney,” she said. “She always cleanin’ shit. Probably how you lasted so long workin’ there. Both of y’all some OCD motherfuckers.”

He laughed under his breath. “You could learn some things about cleaning.”

“I’d rather die than spend more than ten minutes cleanin’ tables, floors, all that shit.” She stretched out and put her toes under his calf for warmth.

He let the thought of a house where ten minutes was the cap pass through his head. He kept his mouth straight and his eyes on the TV. The napkin held the cup’s place neatly on the table, its edges squared to the wood grain.

Rylee traced a line at the hem of his T-shirt, picking lint and flicking it away. “You ain’t even watchin’ this,” she said, not a question.

He smiled without showing teeth. “It’s on.”

“Mmm.” She breathed out, a little sigh that matched the AC’s soft push. She turned her face toward his neck and spoke into his skin. “You gotta admit it’s kinda borin’.”

He didn’t rush to agree or disagree. He lifted the remote and eased the volume down until the soundtrack dropped into the background of the room.

“See?” she said, grinning. “Better already.”

Her eyes went to the kitchen again. The counter boxes sat in a clean row. The dish rack held two pans, a plate, a glass turned mouth down. The light over the sink put a thin shine on the faucet. She looked back at him. “You really got it all set up in here, huh?”

“You acting like being clean is crazy.”

“That is crazy, honey.” She put a finger to his chest and tapped twice. “But you cute so no one gonna say nothin’.”

He let the taps move the fabric and didn’t catch her hand. On the TV the hero finally made a choice that should have happened twenty minutes ago.

Rylee pushed up to sit. “This shit borin’,” she said, head cocked, mouth gone playful. “You wanna go to your room?”

Caine let the remote rest on the couch cushion. His hand fell back to his thigh.

He shrugged a little. “Yeah.”
User avatar

Captain Canada
Posts: 5318
Joined: 01 Dec 2018, 00:15

American Sun

Post by Captain Canada » 10 Oct 2025, 10:05

Slow playing a dangerous game is still playing. Caine never learn :rg3:

redsox907
Posts: 2199
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 10 Oct 2025, 16:37

redsox907 wrote:
08 Oct 2025, 12:04
Rylee messy and that's going to be a problem for Caine down the line
just a reminder I called it when she's bat shit. IYKYK
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 12111
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 10 Oct 2025, 19:35

Captain Canada wrote:
10 Oct 2025, 10:05
Slow playing a dangerous game is still playing. Caine never learn :rg3:
Caine: :whatido:
redsox907 wrote:
10 Oct 2025, 16:37
redsox907 wrote:
08 Oct 2025, 12:04
Rylee messy and that's going to be a problem for Caine down the line
just a reminder I called it when she's bat shit. IYKYK
Now why she gotta be bat shit?
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 12111
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 10 Oct 2025, 19:35

The Lord Hasn’t Saved Me Yet

The box fan rattled in the back window and pushed warm air around like it had given up trying. Fluorescents buzzed overhead. The smell of dry-erase hung under the faint bleach in the tile, that school-year stink that didn’t leave even when the halls were empty. Quentin Landry sat on the edge of the desk at the front, sleeves rolled, a water bottle sweating a ring onto the wood.

The boys had spread themselves across the room in that way young men did, pairs and trios, a few in the back with their chairs leaned on two legs, a couple up front with notebooks open and pens clicking. A sneaker tapped. Someone coughed, then swallowed it.

“Alright,” Landry said. His voice carried without trying. “Hot as hell outside and y’all still showed up. That’s grown-man work already.” A few grins flickered. Heads tilted. He let that land and didn’t hurry the room.

He rested his palms on his thighs. “We’re talking about what it means to stand up in this country wearing your skin. Here. Not in a textbook. Here.” He pointed down, then toward the window where the glass wavered with heat. “Louisiana got a long memory. Old chains dressed up as new rules. Jim Crow didn’t die. Just started the War on Drugs.”

No one laughed. One boy tipped his chin, listening harder. In the back a phone lit up and went dark without a touch.

Landry reached into his bag and lifted a paperback, edges bent from too many hands. “This one helped some of my students name the thing that had its fhand on their neck.”

The cover flashed matte gray and white. The New Jim Crow. A murmur moved through the front row.

“I gave this to a young man a while back,” he said. “He and I met in a way I wouldn’t wish on nobody. He was looking at dying in prison. I never blamed him for what happened. I sat with him. I brought him books. I called a lawyer I trusted. He did the work. Now he’s on a field somewhere, wearing a college jersey, and he still reads. He’s beating what this book talks about everyday.” He didn’t offer a name. The quiet in the room shifted from restless to intent.

A boy near the window raised a hand halfway, then spoke without waiting to be called. “So that was enough? A book?”

Landry shook his head. “Nothing’s enough by itself. Not the book. Not me. Not one choice on one afternoon. Systems got weight. They stack it on you from the jump. But you add up the small right things and sometimes the scale moves enough to breathe.” He looked at the faces in front of him. “That’s why I’m here. Y’all got the right to breathe.”

The fan clacked and stuttered. Outside, the sound of subwoofers beating in a trunk rolled down the street. Someone’s deodorant mixed with old sweat and the sugar stale of vending-machine cookies. One of the boys dragged a sleeve across his forehead and left a darker stripe.

“Tell the truth,” Landry said. “How many of y’all got family that’s been locked up?” Hands went up. Not all, but most. He nodded, not surprised.

“How many had a teacher tell you you sound wrong when you wrote how you talk?” A couple hands rose with the slow, embarrassed courage of people used to being corrected. “Mhmm.”

He slid off the desk and walked toward the whiteboard, the soles of his shoes whispering against the tile. He wrote two short words and capped the marker. WORK. HISTORY. He stood with his back to the board a beat, letting them see both at once.

“Being a Black man here means this,” he said. “You’re a person and you’re a file. They will try to make the file heavier than you can bear. We’re not letting them.”

In the second row, a kid in a Saints cap said, “How?” It wasn’t a challenge, just a tired kind of want.

“By knowing what you’re walking into,” Landry said. He lifted the book again, then set it on the desk, almost gentle. “By calling things what they are so they can’t call you what you’re not. By understanding the ground you’re standing on and what’s ahead of you.”

The lights hummed louder, or maybe the room had gotten quieter around them. Landry took a sip from the bottle and checked the clock without making it look like he wanted out.

“You’re here because you want a job, or a skill, or that chance to step onto a campus,” he said. “Some of y’all are caring for folks at home. Some of y’all are already working nights. I see it on your faces. I know the kind of tired that lives in your bones. It’s the same tired I carry.” He let a corner of his mouth move, almost a smile. “But tired doesn’t mean we stop.”

A chair scraped. The room settled again. Landry scanned them, not rushing, taking the temperature like he did with any class he cared about. He saw the ones pretending not to care and the ones who wanted to write everything down but didn’t know what mattered yet.

“Alright,” he said, setting the water down and rubbing the chalk from his fingers. “Let’s talk watchouts when you’re applying for jobs.”

~~~

The fan on the desk rattled and pushed air around to try to help the struggling A/C. Concrete dust had filmed the keyboard since the last time she sat there. Mireya settled into the chair and let her hands find the old routine—slips, stamps, a calculator that stuck on the four. The yard outside sang its layered noise through the doorframe, reverse beepers in a thin chorus, a driver cussing at a chain that wouldn’t catch. Diesel lived in the back of her throat. She swallowed, wrote a truck number, checked the date, pressed the stamp.

“Girl,” Denise said, headset crooked, eyes on the monitor while her mouth went. “This man told me that he wasn’t going to wash his dirty drawers anymore because that’s woman’s work.” She snorted. “I go post about it on Facebook just to joke about it and everyone’s in my comments talking about I need to divorce him. That’s the problem with these kids these days. Don’t wanna fix anything.”

Mireya slid a slip under the binder clip, the metal biting down with a soft click. “Sign and print,” she told a driver through the window and tapped the line with her nail. Denise kept going, voice bright like she was reading a weather report.

“And why you want to divorce a man just because he doesn’t want to do the laundry? Just go on and wash the damn drawers.” She laughed, a quick slice that softened as she typed a plate number. “You know what I’m saying?”

“Mm-hm.”

The screen door gave its hinge-complaint. Jamie came out of his office, papers in hand, the yard on his boots. His eyes caught on Mireya and held. He stopped just long enough to make the pencil in her fingers feel heavier, then tipped his chin toward the lot and kept moving. Sun poured in behind him and burned a stripe across the floor. Denise’s story didn’t slow.

“…and my sister was the worst of them all. I don’t know why she’s got anything to say. I took him from her.” She smiled to herself. “You know I’m playing.” She wasn’t playing.

Bootsteps thudded up the trailer stairs. The air shifted before the door opened all the way. Leo stepped in like the room belonged to him, eyes taking a small walk across the desks until they landed on her. He jerked his chin toward the hall. No words.

Mireya pushed back from the desk. The chair’s legs scraped. Denise paused mid-sentence and looked between the two of them. Mireya followed Leo down the narrow hall. Jamie’s door sat crooked in its frame. Leo ducked inside and she did too. He turned and closed the door with his palm, easy. Latch clicked.

She started to say something and he stepped into her space before the sound had shape. The wall found her shoulder blades. He leaned one hand past her head, breath warm and stale with coffee and the yard. His shirt had a dark stripe down the middle. Sweat, dust, something from the river. His mouth tilted without smiling.

“You think you better than me?”

“What are you talking about?”

“You’re a fine piece of ass,” he said, voice low and clean of heat, “but you think you’re more than that.”

Her eyes didn’t drop. “It make you feel better to say that?”

He watched her a beat, then dug into his pocket. Bills came out folded, thumb worn black at the pad. He peeled off two hundreds and held them in his fingers, close enough she could see the creases. “You want it?”

“I told you I’m good.”

He rocked back half an inch. “Good? At sucking dick?” He let the question sit. “Or being a broke spic whore?”

She nodded once, slow, like she was laying a card on the table. “You done?”

For half a second his gaze flicked to her mouth, then to the door. He stepped back, opened it, held it with his knuckles. “You should try staying on my good side more,” he said, not loud. “Or you might regret it. Kike told me your man left you so don’t bother with that empty threat again.”

Mireya met his eyes and held them. Nothing moved in her face. The hum of the office settled back in, the thin AC wheeze, a phone ringing somewhere and cutting off. She pushed off the wall with two fingers and walked past him. The heat from his arm reached but didn’t touch. Out in the hall the light felt harsher. She didn’t look to see if he followed.

At her desk she slid into the chair and squared the stack. A corner sat out of line. She fixed it. Denise’s headset had gone quiet. Her mouth worked once, closed, opened again, then stayed shut. The door to Jamie’s office slammed a breath later, the sound rolling the fan’s rattle into a new pitch. The screen door at the front of the trailer banged hard and let a bar of heat inside. Denise kept her eyes on the screen.

She didn’t go back to her story.

~~~

The plant workers filled the doorway in a red line, backs broad, pants tucked into boots, the FR suits streaked with dust where they had wiped their hands. Grease hung in the air with the smell of chopped cilantro and onion. Saul came off the gravel and into the line, cap shading his eyes, shirt stuck to his shoulders from the roof they had just done.

The girl behind the counter moved fast, wrist flicking over the hot top, a stack of corn tortillas warming at her elbow. She glanced up once when he stepped in. It was a quick look that landed and left. He stayed behind the plant men, tracing the menu board with his eyes even though he already knew what he was getting. The red suits made the room feel hotter. One of the men tugged at his zipper and breathed out like he had been holding air all morning.

Saul’s turn came and the girl reached for a basket without asking. “What you want?”

“Four tacos,” he said, tipping his chin toward the window where Hector’s truck idled. “Just put a little bit of everything on them.”

“Everything,” she repeated, mouth crooked. She set to it. Meat hit metal with a wet sizzle and the smell climbed over the room. She dusted the tortillas with oil, flipped them once, then built each taco with steady hands. He watched the way she layered it so nothing spilled until you wanted it to.

He caught himself staring and turned his head toward the ice chest, the hand-lettered sign for aguas, the taped corner peeling. She was pretty, almost the opposite of Zoe in every way. He felt the thought arrive and sit down. He didn’t push it away.

She looked up at him through the glass. “You work at the plants? I don’t think I’ve seen you.”

He shook his head, flicked a glance at the line of red behind him. “Nah. I’d sweat to death in them suits.”

She laughed, a short sound that hit and vanished. “Yeah, they do.”

The grill hissed. Somebody dropped coins on the counter and the clatter ran along the metal edge. Saul leaned an elbow to the counter.

“You from around here?” he asked.

“St. Amant,” she said.

He nodded like he knew, then told the truth. “I don’t know where that at.”

She lifted her chin toward the highway and some houses going up beyond it, the new roofs bright in the sun. “Over there.”

She boxed the tacos tight and slid the baskets into a brown paper bag. The top went soft where it picked up steam. She wrote the total on a scrap of receipt tape and set it down, fingers tapping it once.

Saul pulled cash, left a couple singles more than he had to. “I’m from New Orleans,” he said, easing the bag toward him. The heat soaked the thin paper. “Can I get your IG or something?”

She hesitated half a breath, then held out her phone with the camera open. He scanned the code and watched the handle bloom on his screen, a first name in lowercase with a string of numbers.



Hector had the bag open before Saul’s seatbelt clicked. He peered in the top and made a face. “These white people tacos?”

Saul shrugged, easing back into the seat. “We could’ve gone to Taco Bell.”

“That’s even fucking worse.” Hector folded the bag shut with a palm and set it between them, then gripped the wheel. He checked both mirrors and eased the truck into reverse. Gravel crunched under the tires. The new development stretched out clean and raw, cut grass still showing lines.

Saul’s phone buzzed. He opened the app and scrolled the page he had just followed. A profile picture sharpened. Ava. He tapped where the photos started, a run of pool days and selfies and two cousins squeezed into a booth at a birthday spot he didn’t know. The sun struck the dash and threw light across the screen. He tilted it with his hand and kept scrolling while Hector backed them out and nosed the truck toward the road.

~~~

The couch had a soft sag in the middle that brought them closer without trying. The window unit hummed against the wet New Orleans air and pushed a breath that was cooler than the room by a little. A candle sat dead on the coffee table. The wine did the real work. Nicole sat cross-legged, back to the armrest, bottle between her heel and the cushion. Sara angled in the other corner with one knee up and her glass balanced on it.

Nicole tipped the bottle and refreshed her own glass, then Sara’s. “That last date I had? It was so, so bad,” she said, not smiling. “I don’t even know why I keep putting myself through these things. The second I say I’m trying to be a lawyer, most people run for the hills.”

Sara took a drink and set the rim against her lower lip for a second before answering. “Imagine telling them you clean toilets all day.”

Nicole huffed and scratched at a faint ring left by the bottle. “Depends on if you trying to date men or women. Men these days would love that with all that red pill shit.”

Sara turned her head. “Red pill shit?”

Nicole leaned back and let her shoulders drop into the cushion. “The manosphere. Podcasts and clips with guys huddled up around microphones telling each other what women want because single men told them that. You tell them that you don’t make a lot of money and they’ll think that can control you.”

Sara slid her finger under the base of the glass to catch a drip. She watched the surface settle and felt the unit’s push cool the sweat at her hairline. She rolled the glass a quarter turn so the wet would not mark the fabric and set it down on a coaster that had lost its cork edge.

Nicole tucked her toes deeper into the cushion. She turned the empty bottle in her hand and read the label.

“That man had a whole list,” she said, tone flat in a way that told the story without repeating it. “Soft voice, soft smile, never argue, never say this, never say that. He asked if I could be ‘easier.’ Then had the audacity to talk about fifty-fifty.”

Sara let a breath out that was not quite a laugh. “Easier for who?”

“For him,” Nicole said, snorting a laugh. She lifted her glass. “I’d expect this if I was still in my 20s, but we’re talking about men who aren’t too far from needing their prostate checked every few months.”

Sara looked at her and then at the wine. The hum filled the space between their words. A car slowed outside, then kept going. A pan settled in the kitchen and clicked as it cooled. The apartment carried the small noises of a day being put away.

Nicole felt Sara watching and met it. She shrugged once with one shoulder and let it fall. She nudged the bottle into the light, considering if there was a last pour worth chasing, then left it where it was. The glass left a wet circle on the table. She pressed a fingertip into it and wiped it away.

Sara’s mouth shifted. “Sounds like a bunch of men into men.”

“That’s what everyone with sense says,” Nicole said, quick. “But the women aren’t any better with the fuckery they think.”

Sara raised an eyebrow. The AC clicked into a louder run and then settled.

“You gotta hedge your bets sometimes, girl,” Nicole said, laughing. She reached for the bottle again, poured for herself, then tipped it over Sara’s glass until it rose half an inch and stilled.

Sara shifted her heel under her, easing deeper into the cushion’s dip. The cold from the glass moved across her palm. Wine rose up the sides and slid back to level. The unit gave another click and dropped to a softer drone that blended into the building’s steady breath.

Sara picked up her glass again, shrugging. “Anything’s better than nothing, I guess.”

~~~

The church kitchen held the end of the day in its chill hum. Fluorescents buzzed above a scuffed table where a cheap chess set waited between two Styrofoam cups that sweated onto the wood. Caine sat with his elbows clear of the board, shoulder loose, watching the plastic pawns shine under the light. Mr. Charlie cracked his knuckles and eyed the pieces like they had mouths.

Down the hall, the daycare girls whooped at a birthday inside the break room. A pop song leaked through the door and fell flat in the cinderblock. Somebody clapped on the off beat. Somebody said they were going out after. They had told Caine that earlier with smiles that carried an invitation. He had laughed and called it “some white sorority girl shit,” and Mr. Charlie was still chuckling about it now.

“Youngsters don’t know how to play a thinking man’s game,” Mr. Charlie said, settling his hat back with two fingers. “Y’all just know that, what’s it called? Madden?”

Caine pushed a pawn because a pawn looked safe. “Yeah, but you gotta think playing that shit too, OG. It ain’t like the game does the shit for you.”

Mr. Charlie made a face that said he didn’t buy it and took one of Caine’s pieces with a slow slide. “Them video games ain’t doing nothin’ but rotting y’all brain. That’s why y’all act the way y’all do. Got mush for brains. Just chasing tail and playing video games.”

“You ain’t wrong,” Caine said, amusement sitting warm in his chest. He studied the board, that neat grid that still felt new.

Footsteps crossed the tile. Hannah and Chelsea came in with two paper plates balanced in their hands, icing shining under the light. Hannah had a smear of pink on her wrist. Chelsea kept her chin tucked, like she’d been laughing a second ago.

“Y’all want cake?” Chelsea said. “Got two slices left.”

“My doctor ain’t gonna like it with my diabetes,” Mr. Charlie said, “but I’ll take it.” He grinned and took a plate from her, plastic fork already in his hand. “Thank ya, darlin’.”

Caine didn’t say anything. Hannah set the other plate in front of him. Her palm landed on his shoulder for a quiet second and stayed there. “Something sweet for you to eat tonight,” she said low, just for him, breath warm on the edge of his ear.

He lifted an eyebrow. The fork on Mr. Charlie’s plate clicked. The AC rattled once through the vent.

“See,” Mr. Charlie said as the women left, “tail and video games.”

Caine shook his head and stood, taking the plate. Frosting wobbled and settled. He pushed through the door into the hall, the smell of crayons and disinfectant drifting from the playroom. The building held the last heat of evening at its corners. He walked soft toward Laney’s office, plate in hand, the fork bouncing once with each step.

Her door stood open. She sat at the computer with her head bent, paperwork stacked in square piles that matched the edge of the desk. The blinds were straight. The books on the shelf lined up with inch-perfect precision. He stopped just at the threshold and waited until she looked up.

Caine lifted the plate so she could see it.

“Oh no, that’s yours,” Laney said, hands still on the keys.

He didn’t step in. He leaned forward from the doorway, far enough to reach the corner of the desk without crossing the line she kept. His fingers set the plate down on the edge, far from the papers. “You welcome, boss lady.”

“That’s for you,” she tried again, mouth starting to open on another word he didn’t let her finish.

“Have a good night,” he said, palms up in surrender, already straightening back from the room. He gave her a half smile and moved off before she could say anything else. The hallway light hummed. Somewhere a chair scraped in the fellowship hall.

Back in the kitchen, Mr. Charlie had his glasses on the end of his nose and icing at the corner of his mouth.

“You gonna figure out what you doin’?” Mr. Charlie asked, tapping the king with a forefinger.

Caine sat and looked at the board one more time. The lines looked cleaner than when he’d left, even though nothing had changed. He lowered his hand and tipped his king so it lay on its side. “You got me,” he said.

Mr. Charlie chuckled and wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. “Course I do.” He set the fork down and patted his stomach. “Next time, we playin’ for money.”

“I ain’t got it like you so you can’t hustle me,” Caine said, eyes a little bright. He reached and squeezed the old man’s shoulder, the fabric soft under his palm. “See you tomorrow, OG.”

He turned for the door. The kitchen fell into the low sounds it always kept—the vent, the light, the building breathing. The girls in the daycare laughed down the hall, the sound thinning as the door swung shut behind him.

Outside, the last heat leaned in from the lot while the church settled for the night.
User avatar

Captain Canada
Posts: 5318
Joined: 01 Dec 2018, 00:15

American Sun

Post by Captain Canada » 11 Oct 2025, 11:25

Nice, more light-hearted update despite the intense subject material at the beginning.

Which means some SHIT is on its way.

Soapy
Posts: 12239
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 11 Oct 2025, 14:39

She still needs to work at the shipping yard? damn, they ain't paying her shit at them other jobs

Saul a sucker for love
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 12111
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 11 Oct 2025, 15:15

Captain Canada wrote:
11 Oct 2025, 11:25
Nice, more light-hearted update despite the intense subject material at the beginning.

Which means some SHIT is on its way.
Or everyone could be turning the corner and brighter days are on the way. Ever thought of that?
Soapy wrote:
11 Oct 2025, 14:39
She still needs to work at the shipping yard? damn, they ain't paying her shit at them other jobs

Saul a sucker for love
Need is subjective. Maybe she just trying to maximize her revenue streams. More money is never a bad thing :smart:

Saul said
User avatar

Captain Canada
Posts: 5318
Joined: 01 Dec 2018, 00:15

American Sun

Post by Captain Canada » 11 Oct 2025, 15:39

Trying to maximize money by hanging around a shipyard where you used to throat dick for money is... a choice.
Post Reply