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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 19 Jan 2026, 23:29

Ultra Regressum

The Lexus GX sat tucked at the far side of the church lot where the building threw a long strip of shadow and the sun hit the asphalt in a pale glare. The day was bright without being warm.

From where they were parked, the daycare side of the church was close enough that sound carried. A door opened and shut. A child squealed, then laughed. Someone rolled a cart over a seam in the concrete and it clacked twice before the wheels found smooth again. Every so often, a car moved through the lot slow, looking for a spot closer to the entrance, then kept going.

Inside the SUV, it was close and warm. The tinted windows turned the sunlight into a dull wash. The third row didn’t give much space. Leather held heat. The air smelled new, that replicated factory smell that hadn’t faded yet.

Caine and Laney sat back there facing each other. The second row was pushed forward enough to make a gap. Caine’s shirt had been tossed on the floor. It lay bunched near the base of the seat, one sleeve flattened under itself. Laney’s dress was unzipped and pulled down off her shoulders, bunched at her waist. Her legs were stretched across Caine’s lap.

He rubbed her calves in slow passes, palms working from ankle to knee and back again. His thumbs pressed in and slid, steady. Laney let her heels rest against his thigh and didn’t move much. The silence sat between them.

Laney stared at him for a moment, then shifted her gaze toward the front seats, the windshield, the bright lot beyond it.

“I thought you were gonna pull up in somethin’ with 28 inch rims on it when you said you got a new car.”

Caine snorted a laugh, the sound tight and quick. “A box Chevy like I’m from Houston, huh?”

Laney smiled, small and pleased. “Somethin’ just like that.”

Caine kept his hands on her legs. He looked down at where his fingers spread against her skin, then up at her face. “I got this for this reason right here, so I can fuck you without having to lay on the floor of your van’s trunk.”

Laney shoved him with her leg, a blunt push that made his shoulder shift. “Ain’t nothin’ wrong with my van.”

“It’s clean,” Caine said. His hands didn’t stop. “That’s about all you got going for it, but you can’t tell me you didn’t prefer it on an actual seat.”

Laney rolled her eyes and let her head lean back against the seat. “I done fucked in more uncomfortable places than a van.”

Caine shook his head once. He kept rubbing, slower now. Outside, a burst of voices rose and fell, the muffled cadence of adults calling to kids, then a door shutting again.

Laney watched him work her calves for a few seconds. His hands were warm. The pressure was firm. She flexed her foot once, then let it go slack again.

“I caught Blake shootin’ up the other day,” she said.

Caine’s hands paused for half a beat at her shin, then kept going.. “You gonna make him get out of your backyard?”

Laney shrugged, her shoulders lifting. “That’s a Tommy call.”

Caine’s mouth tightened at one corner. “So, he ain’t getting out of your backyard.”

Laney looked at him, eyes narrowing. “Why you say that?”

“Because Tommy knows that his brother on that shit,” Caine said. “And he still let him stay.”

Laney’s mouth pressed flat. She nodded once. “Yeah, that’s ’bout the long and short of it.” She breathed out through her nose, then tipped her head a little. “There is a silver linin’ though.”

Caine raised an eyebrow. “What?”

Laney’s voice stayed low. “I ain’t got to worry ’bout him constantly bein’ in Tommy’s ear about us ’cause he’s worried I’ll figure out a way to convince Tommy to tell him to leave.”

Caine laughed, a short sound that barely filled the car. “You think Tommy still relying on him to tell him how to feel about this?”

Laney shook her head. “No, but one less thing don’t hurt none.”

Caine opened his mouth, about to answer, then stopped. His eyes cut toward the windshield. His hands tightened on her legs and he pulled.

Laney slid down fast, her calves slipping off his lap as her back hit the seat. The leather squeaked. The sudden shift dragged her dress higher where it was already bunched. She caught herself with one hand.

“What the fuck?” she said.

Caine’s voice dropped. “Mr. Charlie is in the field right in front of the car.”

Laney’s stomach went tight. She turned her head toward the front without lifting too much, trying to see through the tint. “Fuck me. Doin’ what?”

“Talking to Mrs. Ethel,” Caine said.

Laney kept her body low, shoulders tucked. “How dark is the tint on these windows?”

“They told me zero on every window but the driver’s side,” Caine said.

Caine scooted down the seat himself, careful and controlled, putting most of his head behind the headrest in front of him. From that angle, he could look out without showing much. Laney stayed still, knees bent now, feet tucked closer, her bare skin prickling where the air hit it.

“What they doin’ now?” Laney asked.

Caine watched through the gap between the headrest and the window. Sunlight flashed on something outside, then steadied. “Looks like they walking away.”

He turned his head just enough to look at her. He smiled when she shook her head, a tight, annoyed motion that still carried a hint of amusement because of how stupid the situation was.

Caine reached down and found his shirt on the floor. “I’m gonna get out first,” he said. “Wait like fifteen minutes and then you sneak out.”

Laney nodded once, sharp.

He pulled the shirt on, threading his arms through, tugging it down over his torso. The fabric stuck for a second against warm skin, then settled. He shifted forward between the rows, careful not to bump anything hard enough to make the car rock.

“Another reason your van is worse,” he said as he moved.

Laney kicked him, a quick jab to his side that made him grunt under his breath, a bit of a laugh in it. He kept going anyway, sliding between the seats and then out, stepping down onto the lot.

~~~

The bell had already gone off, but the hall still held that last burst of movement. Doors stayed propped open. Teachers stood half in, half out, holding the threshold with their bodies and their eyes. Sneakers squeaked against waxed tile.

Saul walked in the middle of it, shoulders set, chin up. He kept his pace steady even when the flow jammed up near the lockers. Trent was on his right, long stride eating space, mouth set in a line. Javi drifted on Saul’s left, the honeybun still in the plastic, top already mashed from where he’d squeezed it. He tore off a piece with his teeth and chewed with his mouth open, cinnamon and glaze on his fingertips.

Saul looked ahead, then leaned his head just enough for them to hear him.

“Caine told me how to make some money.”

Trent didn’t miss a step. His eyes stayed on the gap between two clusters of students.

“Did he tell you to get a fucking job because that’s what I would’ve told you.”

Saul shook his head at first, quick. Then he gave a small shrug that softened it.

“Yeah,” he said, “but that ain’t all he told me.”

Javi lifted his head off the honeybun. His eyes went sharp for a second. He swallowed.

“Whatever it is, I’m in.”

Trent let out a breath through his nose. He finally looked over at Saul.

“Fuck y’all want to play gangster so bad for?” Trent asked. “Do y’all not remember all the shit with Pedro?”

The name sat there between them as they kept walking. A girl in a uniform skirt brushed past, shoulder bumping Saul’s arm. Saul didn’t turn. He kept moving forward, shoulders square.

“I didn’t even tell you what he told me to do,” Saul said.

Javi waved the honeybun a little, crumbs shaking loose. A couple pieces stuck to the glaze on his thumb.

“Yeah,” Javi said. “Let him finish before you start trying to keep us broke. Everyone ain’t trying to work at McDonald’s.”

Trent’s mouth tightened. He tilted his head toward the classroom doors as they passed them, toward the teachers standing there.

“Working at McDonald’s better than going to jail.”

Javi waved that off. He took another bite and talked around it.

“Jail ain’t even that bad,” he said. “My cousin did a few months in OPP and came out fine. Right, Saul?”

Javi angled his face toward Saul, eyebrows up, waiting for Saul to back him up. Saul didn’t even look at him. He kept his eyes forward and shook his head once.

“He said what we gotta do is find whoever Ethan gets his weed from,” Saul said, “and then let him know that person’s name and he’ll take care of it so we can be the middle man.”

Trent slowed half a step from surprise, then caught up again. His eyes narrowed.

“How you even find out some shit like that?”

Saul shrugged. It didn’t come with a plan.

Javi’s grin came fast, teeth showing.

“We could beat it out of him,” Javi said. “Just gotta find some phonebooks or something.”

Saul sucked his teeth, loud enough to cut through the hallway noise for a second. He finally turned his head, just a fraction, and gave Javi a look that didn’t match the grin.

“C’mon, bro,” Saul said. “This ain’t no movie. There gotta be a way though.”

Trent didn’t even hesitate.

“The way is to just go get a job, man.”

Javi’s shoulders rose with a short laugh. He shook his head hard, like Trent was embarrassing himself.

“Bro,” Javi said, “you being a bitch. Man up.”

Trent’s eyes cut toward him. He didn’t stop walking, but his jaw worked like he wanted to bite the comment in half.

Saul let out a sigh that wasn’t loud, but it showed in his shoulders. He kept them moving down the hall, away from the classrooms with teachers watching and into the stretch where the lockers were tighter and the crowd pressed in.

Javi licked glaze off his finger and looked around. Trent’s hands flexed once at his sides, then settled back into his hoodie pocket.

They threaded between a couple students who were moving slow, talking loud. Saul angled his shoulder and slipped through without breaking stride. One of them glanced back, then kept walking.

The flow thinned near the intersection where two hallways met. Light from the windows at the end of one corridor cut across the tile. The noise shifted as a door opened somewhere, a teacher’s voice snapping, then fading when the door shut again.

Zoe and Mia came toward them from the other direction, moving with the same between-class urgency but not rushing. Zoe’s hair was down, long and neat, and she had a book hugged to her chest. Mia walked beside her, phone in her hand, thumb moving. They stayed close together, taking up their own lane through the crowd.

When they got close enough to pass, Zoe looked up. Her eyes landed on Saul. She didn’t stop. She didn’t say anything. She just offered him a polite smile, quick and clean.

Saul’s face didn’t change much, but his eyes followed her for the half second it took for them to cross. Then Zoe and Mia were gone, swallowed by students moving the other way, their shoulders disappearing behind backpacks and locker doors.

Saul turned back around.

He lifted both hands and hit Javi and Trent with the backs of his hands, light but sharp. It made Javi stumble a half step. Trent glanced at Saul, was already irritated again, but he stopped listening to whatever was in his head.

“I think I got an idea.”

~~~

Somewhere in the street below, tires hissed over wet pavement. A bass line drifted through the window glass, soft and distant, then fell away. Sirens stayed far enough not to matter, but they were still there, rising and dropping like the city was clearing its throat.

Sara sat angled into the corner, one knee up, wine glass steady in her hand. The stem warmed under her fingers. Nicole lounged on the other end with one leg folded under her, the other stretched out, heel hooked on the edge of the cushion. The bottle sat on the coffee table between them, half full, a damp ring widening under it.

Nicole took a sip and shook her head before she even put the glass back down.

“Okay,” she said. “So. Karlie.”

Sara lifted her brows. “Mm.”

“It was a disaster,” Nicole said. The words came clipped, like she was trying not to laugh at herself. “From beginning to end. I’m talking the whole damn thing.”

Sara’s mouth pulled into a smile. She shifted her knee, fabric whispering against fabric.

Nicole leaned forward, elbows on her thighs, wine glass balanced in one hand. The other hand moved as she talked, palm up, then palm down.

“I knew it was off,” Nicole said. “I knew it.”

Sara gave a small hum, still smiling, waiting.

Nicole stared into her glass, then looked back at Sara. “And the cherry on top,” she said, “her husband showed up.”

Sara blinked once. “Her what?”

“Her husband,” Nicole repeated, slower this time, like saying it twice would make it sound less ridiculous. “He pulls up to pick her up. Like it’s normal. Like it’s scheduled.”

Sara’s laugh hit quick, a burst she couldn’t hold back. She leaned forward, shoulders shaking, careful not to spill. “No,” she said, still laughing.

“Yes,” Nicole said. She rolled her eyes hard enough to make her head tilt with it. “And he’s standing there looking at me like I’m the one who’s confused.”

Sara laughed again, louder. She lifted her glass a little, then set it down on her knee again.

Nicole kept going, voice steady now that she’d started. “He suggests I should come with them to their place,” she said.

Sara’s laugh cut off into a surprised sound. “Oh lord.”

Nicole pointed at Sara with her glass. “ “And Karlie,” she added, “Karlie’s right there pushin’ it too. Like I’m supposed to be flattered. Like I’m supposed to say yes.”

Sara covered her mouth with the back of her hand, eyes watering from laughing. She leaned back into the couch, shoulders still moving.

“And I thought I had it bad,” Sara said. “I haven’t been asked anything like that since back when me and Calvin, Caine’s dad, first started dating.”

Nicole made a sound through her nose and leaned back. “Yet,” she said.

Sara dropped her hand from her mouth, eyes still bright. “Yet?”

“Yet,” Nicole said again, and rolled her eyes. “You haven’t been asked anything like that yet. It’s coming. Just wait a little while longer and you’ll see. They can’t help themselves.”

Sara laughed one more time, softer, and lifted her glass to take a drink. The wine tasted sharp for a second, then smoothed out. She held it in her mouth a beat before swallowing.

The room settled. The street noise filled the gaps. Nicole reached for the bottle and topped both glasses off, the liquid dark and slow as it ran down the side of the glass.

Sara looked down into her wine. The surface caught the light and shifted when she tipped it. Her thumb rubbed once at the base of the stem.

“Speaking of dating,” she asked, voice quieter now, “did you find out anything about Devin?”

Nicole shook her head. “Nothing came up,” she said.

Sara’s eyes stayed on the glass. She didn’t move much, just listened.

Nicole added, “You know if Devin’s a nickname or something?”

Sara shrugged, the motion tight in her shoulders. “That’s what’s on all his paperwork for being an agent.”

Nicole nodded. “If he has a record, it could be from when he was a kid and it’s been sealed,” she said. “Or he’s gotten it expunged. I’ll keep looking but as far as I can tell, he’s clean.”

Sara nodded once. She held the glass in both hands now, fingers wrapped around the bowl.

“Is it hypocritical that I’d have a problem dating him if he did?” she asked.

Nicole didn’t jump in. She let Sara finish.

“I mean,” Sara said, “Calvin had done a couple bids. And Lord knows that he probably could’ve ended up doing a lot more time.” She shifted on the couch, the cushion giving under her. “You know Caine’s legal troubles. I don’t know. I just feel like I don’t have room to judge.”

Nicole didn’t answer right away. She looked at Sara’s face, then at the glass in Sara’s hands. The quiet stretched long enough for the bass outside to thump once, then fade again.

Nicole reached over. Her hand landed on Sara’s knee, warm through the fabric, a steady weight.

“You get to choose who you let in your life because of who you are today,” Nicole said, “not because of what you allowed twenty years ago.”

Sara looked down at Nicole’s hand for a moment, then back at Nicole’s face. She let out a quiet breath.

“I suppose you’re right,” she said.

Nicole’s hand stayed where it was.

Sara tipped her head, the question already forming. “So,” she said, “why do you think Devin acts all weird?”

Nicole’s mouth twisted. She shrugged one shoulder. “Ex-wife?” she said.

Sara’s brows lifted.

“Kids?” Nicole added. She picked her glass up and finally drank. “I don’t know.”

Sara watched her, waiting for more.

Nicole lowered the glass and glanced at Sara over the rim. “I give men a much shorter leash than I do women,” she said. “So, I don’t experience that kind of shit.”

Sara laughed, short and sharp. “Well, excuse me.”

Nicole smiled, slow, then took another sip. “You’re excused.”

~~~
Mireya pushed out of the esthetician’s door with the receipt still warm in her hand. The bell over the glass gave one tired jingle behind her. Inside had been bright and clean and too quiet, air heavy with a sweet wax smell and a faint burnt edge. Outside was a strip mall parking lot with old oil stains and cracked lines.

She walked toward her car with her keys already threaded through her fingers. The sidewalk in front of the shops was uneven where the concrete had buckled. A couple of carts sat corralled near the grocery entrance, one of them tipped. Farther out, a loud truck idled in a space it didn’t fit, bass low enough to make the air feel thick.

Her phone buzzed against her palm when she brought it up. She opened her messages and found Trell’s name. Her thumb moved quick, nails tapping the glass.

I just finished with my wax

She hit send and kept walking. Wind pushed at the ends of her hair. A thin strip of sun slid out from behind clouds and hit the hoods of cars in clean flashes, then dulled again.

She reached the edge of the row where her car sat and stopped just long enough to shift the receipt into her jacket pocket. Her phone buzzed again. She looked down and saw the new message.

Good, cause I’m gonna need that pussy bald next week.

Mireya rolled her eyes. Her mouth twitched anyway. She didn’t type words back. She sent a string of laughing emojis instead.

She waited a beat then her phone pinged with an Apple Pay notification. $250.

She held the phone up, arm extended and turned her head just enough to catch her own face in the front camera. She made her lips soft, blew a kiss at the screen, and snapped the selfie. She sent it to him.

When she lowered the phone, she saw Paz first, walking in the opposite direction with her shoulders squared and her bag tucked tight under her arm. Next to her was a girl Mireya didn’t recognize.

Mireya lifted her hand and waved, putting a little motion in it to make sure Paz caught it. Paz’s head turned. Recognition hit her face and she waved back.

Mireya crossed the row of parked cars, stepping around a puddle that held a thin sheen of rainbow oil. Her heels clicked on the concrete.

“Hey, what you doing over on this side of town?”

Paz gestured to her eyebrows. “Going get my brows threaded.”

She looked to the girl beside her and shifted her weight. “This is Roxie. Roxie, this is my… friend, Mireya.”

Mireya clocked the hesitation on friend. She didn’t let it show on her face. She lifted her hand again, smaller this time, and waved at Roxie.

Paz’s eyes went to Mireya’s hands, then to her jacket, then back to her face. “Where are you coming from?”

Mireya nodded over her shoulder, chin tipping back toward the esthetician’s door behind glass. “Same place. Waxing. I was supposed to come the week before last but I was in Georgia so my schedule’s thrown off.”

Roxie’s eyes widened. “Damn, girl. You got a waxing schedule? We need to talk because I’m trying to get like you!”

Paz narrowed her eyes, the look sharp, not playful even if her mouth tried to keep it light. “Yeah, Mireya is full of secrets.”

Mireya laughed off the accusation. She stepped close and placed her hand on Roxie’s arm. Her fingers rested there easy.

“Just go find one of those mom Facebook groups and steal the coupons when they post them. That’s what I do. Haven’t paid full price for a Brazilian yet.”

Roxie laughed and tapped her thumb and index finger together. “I know that cookie good.”

Before Mireya could answer, someone on the next row of cars over called Roxie’s name. Roxie turned her head toward the sound, smiled, and lifted a hand back.

She looked at Paz and Mireya both. She just excused herself with her body, stepping away and walking toward the voice.

Mireya waited until Roxie was out of earshot. She watched her weave between two parked cars and disappear into the gaps of moving people. Then Mireya turned back to Paz, her smile gone.

“You’re going to stop accusing me of shit, Paz.”

Paz didn’t flinch. She lifted her chin a little, eyes steady. “Are you feeling guilty?”

Mireya raised an eyebrow. The look was slow on purpose. “What would I have to be guilty about? You’re the one using the motherfucker you’re fucking to try to get dirt on people. Do you know what Tyree does to make money?”

Paz nodded once. “He’s told me.”

Mireya’s mouth pressed into a line for a second, then eased. She kept her voice even. “So that doesn’t bother you, but God forbid I have a little pocket change to treat myself.”

Paz rolled her eyes, the motion full of old frustration. “It’s because you’re lying. But sooner or later, it’s all going to come out.”

Mireya held her stare. The air between them felt tighter than the cold. Cars moved at the edge of the lot, tires hissing over wet pavement.

“You keep fucking with me and sooner rather than later, I’m going to knock you the fuck out.”

Paz snorted a laugh, quick and dry. “You don’t even know how much you’ve changed.”

Mireya shook her head once, small, dismissive, as if she was brushing lint off her own sleeve. “Maybe I’m still the same and it’s you that changed up on me.”

Paz rolled her eyes again and brushed by Mireya, shoulder grazing close. She headed in the direction of the shop.

Mireya watched her for a moment, long enough to see her slip past the storefront window and the reflection of herself caught in the glass. Then she turned and headed toward her car.
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redsox907
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Post by redsox907 » 20 Jan 2026, 11:42

Caesar wrote:
19 Jan 2026, 23:29
“I think I got an idea.”
he gonna turn into Trell and get a honeypot? :pgdead:

Trent the only smart one. He the Tre of the group. Javi gonna be dopeboy, and Saul is RICKY

Nicole dating women isn't a surprise after one of their previous interactions where she told Sara not to knock it. Caine's momma and baby momma bout to be on the other side lol

oh and to answer your response from previous, its the way she always has an excuse lined up. Pre-thought out and prepared when questions get asked, they don't feel organic. And that's why its a red flag :smart:

Paz picks it up
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Post by Caesar » 20 Jan 2026, 22:51

redsox907 wrote:
20 Jan 2026, 11:42
Caesar wrote:
19 Jan 2026, 23:29
“I think I got an idea.”
he gonna turn into Trell and get a honeypot? :pgdead:

Trent the only smart one. He the Tre of the group. Javi gonna be dopeboy, and Saul is RICKY

Nicole dating women isn't a surprise after one of their previous interactions where she told Sara not to knock it. Caine's momma and baby momma bout to be on the other side lol

oh and to answer your response from previous, its the way she always has an excuse lined up. Pre-thought out and prepared when questions get asked, they don't feel organic. And that's why its a red flag :smart:

Paz picks it up
Now if there's anything Saul ain't built for it's THAT

Image

Wouldn't that be on the same side since they'd all be fucking women (according to your absurd assertion)?

And if she hesitated they'd be saying she was lying because of that. Lose-lose situation
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Post by redsox907 » 20 Jan 2026, 23:22

Caesar wrote:
20 Jan 2026, 22:51
And if she hesitated they'd be saying she was lying because of that. Lose-lose situation
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Post by Caesar » 20 Jan 2026, 23:31

Praeteritum Tenet

Caine leaned over the counter with a binder open under his forearms. The plastic sleeves caught the overhead light and threw it back in dull streaks. He flipped through the pages one by one, slow, thumb catching the edge of each sleeve and lifting it. Roses. Lions. Portraits. A full sleeve that turned into smoke around a wrist.

Dwight and Keanon were shoulder to shoulder behind him, looking down over his back.

On the other side of the counter, the tattoo artist stood with his elbows resting on the glass display case. The artist had a black beanie pulled low and a beard. His own arms were covered, sleeve work that disappeared under his T-shirt and came back out at his wrists.

“So, what are you think?” he asked.

Caine didn’t look up right away. He turned one more page and stopped on a spread of filler work, small symbols and background shading that made the bigger pieces feel tied together. He stared at it for a beat, then lifted his head.

“To be real with you, I don’t know,” he said.

Dwight made a small sound in his throat, a huff of a laugh. Keanon didn’t say anything. He just leaned a little closer.

Caine lifted his arm off the binder and gestured at it, elbow bent, sleeve riding up. “I really just want all this filled in with what I got there.”

The artist nodded, eyes dropping to Caine’s arm, then back to his face. “What you got already?”

Caine shifted his stance, hoodie bunched at his waist where he leaned. He pointed to his chest and shoulder through the fabric. “I got a macaw over here.” Then he pointed at his other arm. “And some Louisiana shit over here.”

Dwight snorted. Keanon’s mouth pulled at one corner and then settled.

The artist’s eyebrows lifted just a little. “Let me see that macaw.”

Caine straightened. The counter edge creaked under the change in weight. He pulled one arm out of his hoodie and then hooked his fingers under the hem of his shirt. He lifted it enough to show the ink on his chest. The macaw sat there bright and steady, wings spread, color holding even under fluorescent light.

The artist leaned forward. His eyes traced the lines and then the shading.

“I can work with that,” he said. He pushed back from the counter and nodded toward the back. “Give me an hour or so to draw something up. I think you’ll like it.”

Caine let his shirt fall back into place and slid his arm into his hoodie. “Bet.”

The artist’s tone stayed easy. “That sandwich place across the way is good if y’all want to get some grub while you wait.”

Dwight’s head snapped up. “Shit, you know a nigga hungry.”

Keanon shook his head, and Caine adjusted his hoodie so it sat right. The three of them turned toward the door. The bell chimed again when they pushed out.

Caine started walking first, hands back in his hoodie pocket. Dwight and Keanon fell in on either side of him.

“Man,” Caine said, watching the crosswalk count down, “it’s crazy how fucking bored I am right now. I don’t remember it being like this in high school in the offseason.”

Dwight laughed. “That’s ‘cause the season ain’t like it was in high school. We going 100 miles an hour in August. Back in high school, walking pace.”

Keanon kept his gaze on the traffic, waiting for the gap. “That’s why them boys in Athens be getting in so much trouble. That fall off from the season to the offseason be fucking them up.”

The light changed. They stepped off the curb together and crossed, shoes tapping against the painted lines. A truck rolled by slow, the driver glancing at them through the windshield.

Caine snorted a laugh, looking ahead at the sandwich shop door. “Ain’t like we got anything more to do here than they do up there. We just too broke to all have fast cars to speed around the boonies in.”

Keanon shook his head and looked at Dwight. “It’s crazy that he talking about being broke like he ain’t the highest paid motherfucker at this bitch.”

Dwight hit the shop door first and pulled it open, holding it wide for them. The smell of bread and meat and onions hit their faces as they filed in.

“He ain’t wrong,” Dwight said. “Buying Lexus trucks, getting tatted. I gotta nickel and dime my little NIL money.”

Caine angled his shoulder past him, brushing Dwight’s arm on purpose. “Nickel and dime it because you be spending it all on food with your hungry mouth ass.”

Keanon laughed as the door shut behind them. The shop was narrow, a line already formed along a taped path on the floor. A cooler hummed near the wall, bottles stacked inside. Somebody at a table tore open a bag of chips and the smell of vinegar drifted.

Dwight shook his head, turning so he could walk backward for a few steps and keep talking. “Here I was, thinking we were getting close and then you try to clown me. You know I gotta stay above 300.”

Caine sucked his teeth. “Who told you that?”

Dwight laughed. “I did ‘cause I ain’t about to be starving out here. Ain’t no one asking me to run no sub 5 forties.”

Caine and Keanon laughed as the three of them moved up with the line, shoulders loose, the place loud with small talk and the scrape of chairs.

They reached the front together, stepping into the open space at the counter to order.

~~~

Trell, Ant, Shad, Dez, and Yola stood at the top of the parking garage with the city laid out under them. Sun bounced off the glass faces of the towers and the wind pushed across the open level in steady gusts, carrying exhaust and fried food up from the street. Far below, cars slid through the CBD, stopping and starting at lights that never stayed green long enough.

Dez’s car and Yola’s car sat backed in near the wall. The wind worried a corner of a plastic bag caught in the chain-link and snapped it until it tore free and floated off.

Trell leaned on the wall with his forearms resting on the rough top edge. His shoulders stayed loose. He stared out over the street, watching.

The sun kept sliding across the garage floor. Traffic noise rose and fell in waves depending on the light changes below. A security camera sat mounted high on a pole.

After a long minute, he pushed off the wall without hurry and turned around. His eyes went to Shad first, then Dez, then Yola.

“Boogie the nigga who robbed the stash back a few months ago,” Trell said. “He the only one that knew who was gonna be there and could change who they had on the lookout.”

Yola shook his head, slow, looking out past Trell. “Man, it really be your own people, huh?”

Dez’s hands came together again, knuckles rubbing, palms sliding. He wrung them once and then forced them down, elbows stiff. “What we gonna do?”

Trell didn’t answer him. He looked at Shad instead and asked it back, calm. “What we gonna do?”

Shad blinked. His hands came up, palms out a little. His voice came out uneven. “Kill him?”

Trell’s mouth pulled into a small smirk. He nodded once. “Yeah, lil’ brudda. That’s exactly what we gonna do.”

Ant’s voice cut in. “We know he ain’t do the shit alone, though.”

Shad’s hands went up higher immediately. “I already told y’all I ain’t have nothing to do with it.”

Trell didn’t raise his voice. He let Shad’s hands hang there and watched him until his shoulders stopped rising with his breath.

“Calm down, lil’ nigga,” Trell said. “We believe you. That’s why we can’t do nothing yet. We gotta figure out who else involved because depending on who it is, we might have some heat come down on us. And we gotta be ready for that.”

Shad’s hands lowered, slow. He swallowed and kept his eyes on Trell.

Yola shifted off his car and crossed his arms, looking between Trell and Ant. “Who you think it was?”

Trell looked at Ant for a moment, then back at Yola. “We got some ideas, but with how much he got up out there in a little bit of time, I’m guessing he had at least four, five niggas with him that night.”

Dez’s heels scraped when he shifted his weight. “We probably shouldn’t have killed Junebug.”

Ant raised an eyebrow, the only reaction he gave, and it was small.

Trell stared at Dez for a beat and then spoke, quiet and flat. “You really starting to make me think you ain’t built for this life, Dez. Junebug ain’t respect nothing so Junebug had to go. Boogie know that. This how he decided to handle it. Now, Boogie gotta go. Is that fucking okay with you?”

Dez’s throat worked. He looked down at the concrete between his shoes, then up again. “P wouldn’t have done it like this.”

Trell’s voice stayed even. “Well, that’s why P fucking dead, nigga. You wanna be in the ground next to him?”

Dez dropped his head and took a step back. “My bad, bro.”

Yola glanced at Dez for a second, eyes flat, then turned back to Trell and sucked his teeth. “Just let me know what you need me to do, big bro. Can’t let no one going against the family slide like that.”

Trell’s gaze moved to Shad.

Shad nodded once. “Yeah, T. Whatever you need, I got you.”

Trell let the words hang. He turned away and walked back to the wall. His hands went to the top edge again and he leaned out, looking down at the street, the cars threading through the light changes, the whole grid working the way it always did.

He kept his back to them when he spoke, voice carrying easy in the open air. “We gonna let y’all know when we moving. Streets might get hot. Just be ready.”

~~~

Mireya sat with her back half to the flow of students through the Union. Her backpack sat on the floor by her heel. She kept one hand on her phone and the other wrapped around a plastic cup sweating against her palm. The cup was mostly ice now. Water slid down the side and pooled on a napkin that had already torn at the corner.

Sena sat across from her, elbows on the table, fingers laced and then unlaced and then laced again. Her nails tapped a soft rhythm on the laminate when she forgot to keep still. Frankie sat to Mireya’s left, turned sideways in her chair, one knee up against the seat.

“Mireya, girl, you have got to come clubbing with us. I don’t want to hear nothing about no working, no school work, nothing.”

Mireya looked at Sena before she answered. Sena lifted both hands, palms out, in a quick surrender.

“I agree with her. We always have a good time and Frankie and Erica make sure that we never have to buy a single drink.”

Mireya laughed once, short, then tipped her cup to drain the last of the melted ice into her mouth.

“I don’t think I’ll have a problem getting men to buy me drinks.”

She shifted her eyes to Frankie. Frankie’s mouth opened as if she was about to cut in fast, but Mireya kept going, the tone light even as she held Frankie’s stare.

“You didn’t say anything about me using my kid as an excuse to not come though.”

Frankie shook her head. “Nope. You already told us that your baby daddy’s mama don’t even ask for money when you ask her to watch your daughter. I don’t want to hear that either.”

Mireya’s jaw set.

“Daughter’s father.”

Frankie waved a hand in the air. “Baby daddy, daughter’s father, same shit.”

Across the table, Sena’s eyes slid to Mireya’s face and caught the way Mireya’s mouth flattened for half a second, then slipped away again.

Mireya rolled her eyes. “Alright, next week, though. I’m already booked up this weekend.”

Sena’s attention drifted past Mireya’s shoulder, tracking movement in the walkway.

Jordan and a few guys moved through the Union in a loose line, cutting between tables, shoulders bumping and separating.

Jordan’s head turned first. His eyes caught on her, and even from where she sat, she saw him hesitate. He peeled away from them without saying anything she could hear and walked over, stopping near the edge of their table. He stood, hands loose at his sides.

“Can we talk?”

Mireya lifted her eyes to him and didn’t answer. She watched him wait.

He swallowed and tried again, softer. “Mireya, please, can we talk?”

Sena’s voice cut in before Mireya moved, dry and immediate.

“Don’t make him beg. It’s pathetic.”

Frankie leaned forward. Her smile showed teeth. “No, girl, make that motherfucker beg.”

Jordan cut Frankie a look.

Mireya exhaled through her nose. She pushed her chair back, the legs squealing against the floor for a second. She just walked a short distance away, far enough that the words wouldn’t carry.

Jordan followed, staying half a step behind until she stopped near a column by the windows. The light there was brighter, sun washed through glass and made the tile look pale.

Jordan reached for her hand. Mireya let him take it. His fingers closed around hers, thumb rubbing once over her knuckles.

“Look, I’m sorry about all that stuff alright? I shouldn’t have listened to my sister. She’s a bitch. That’s on me though.”

She kept her posture still.

“You’re right. You shouldn’t have listened to her when I’m being real with you about all the interrogating you were doing.”

Jordan’s shoulders lifted and fell in a breath. He nodded once, fast. “It’s tough, because you’re so different from other girls I’ve dated. You’re… harder… harder to read. But I really am trying.”

Mireya watched his mouth shape the words. She nodded once, slow.

“Doing a shit job of it, though.”

Jordan let out a small laugh. He glanced past her shoulder, then brought his eyes back. “I know, but I’m just asking for a chance to make things right.”

Mireya didn’t answer right away. She let the pause stretch. She looked at their hands, his fingers wrapped around hers, and let the seconds pile up until his grip tightened just a little.

Jordan shifted his weight. His throat worked.

Mireya finally looked back up at him.

“Alright, I accept your apology. I know men are stupid.”

Jordan’s mouth twitched. He gave a small shrug, taking the hit.

“Sometimes.”

Mireya shook her head once.

“I didn’t say that.”

Jordan sighed.

“Well, at least let me take you out to dinner or something to really apologize.”

Mireya’s answer came easy.

“Alright.”

Jordan smiled. He stepped closer and pulled her in by their linked hands, guiding her body the last few inches. He leaned down and kissed her.

Mireya let him do that as well.

“Next time, keep your sister’s thoughts to yourself.”

Jordan laughed, small, and nodded.

“Alright, you got it.”

~~~

Ramon, Tyree, and E.J. stood along the levee with the Mississippi spread out in front of them. Wind came off the river in short pushes that smelled like mud and diesel. Down below, a ship moved slow and steady, stacked with containers, its horn low enough to feel in the ribs.

They watched the ship drift toward the port and listened to the city behind them.

Ramon kept his hands in his jacket pockets. His jaw worked once. Tyree leaned back against the rail, one heel hooked on the concrete edge, eyes tracking the ship. E.J. stood a half-step off them, shoulders loose.

Ramon finally broke the quiet.

“Your girl figure out how she gonna get that fucking pig to stop fucking with us?” he asked E.J.

Tyree let out a breath through his nose.

“Yeah,” Tyree said. “Because you know I been itching to put two in that bitch ass cracker chest.”

E.J. kept his eyes on the river a second longer before he looked at Tyree.

“Where you think you catching him that he ain’t gonna have a vest on?” E.J. said.

Tyree shrugged. “Two in his chest to knock him down then a closed fucking casket then, nigga,” Tyree said.

E.J. turned more fully toward him. His voice stayed flat. “We ain’t killing no fucking cop, nigga.”

Ramon’s head tipped, small.

“That’s why we been waiting for your girl to do something but it’s been months, nigga,” Ramon said. “I’m tired of riding around waiting to get sent back to OPP.”

E.J. shook his head once. “Any cop can send you to OPP if you riding dirty, bro.”

Ramon stared out over the water, then back at E.J. The ship kept moving. A gull cut across the sky and disappeared behind the containers.

“Yeah, but I might be able to talk my way out of some shit with a random cop,” Ramon said. “I’d be lucky if I just go to the parish with this motherfucker. He might just shoot us.”

Tyree nodded once. “For real,” Tyree said.

E.J. rubbed his thumb along the edge of his phone in his pocket.

“Her mama raised that nigga, man,” E.J. said. “She not gonna just fuck him over on the drop of a dime.”

Tyree’s head snapped toward E.J.

“Because she fucking that nigga,” Tyree said. “Motherfucker digging all in your bitch pussy.”

E.J.’s hand shot out. He shoved Tyree hard enough to make Tyree’s shoulder bump the rail.

“Chill the fuck out, nigga,” E.J. said.

Tyree straightened off the rail, eyes narrowed for a second. E.J. turned away from Tyree and faced Ramon.

“Give it another month and then we’ll figure out if we need to come up with some new shit to do,” he said.

Ramon looked past them toward the city side, toward the streets and the buildings. He ran his tongue across his teeth.

Ramon shook his head. “Nah,” he said. “We ain’t gonna wait. I got a way.”

Tyree’s eyes cut back to him.

“What we gonna do?” Tyree asked.

Ramon lifted a hand and dragged it down his face, palm rough over his cheek and mouth.

“Gonna get his ass put out NOPD and thrown in jail,” Ramon said.

E.J. raised an eyebrow.

“How the fuck we gonna do that?” he asked.

Ramon’s gaze stayed on him.

“Plant something on him,” Ramon said. “It ain’t gonna be easy and you ain’t gonna like what I’m gonna need your girl to do.”

E.J.’s head snapped.

“Nah,” E.J. said. “Tessa ain’t getting involved in this.”

Tyree scoffed. “Nigga, stop putting a white bitch ahead of the clique,” Tyree said.

E.J. stepped toward Tyree. His fists balled. His shoulders tightened. Tyree didn’t step back. He tipped his chin up.

“Hey!” Ramon shouted. “Chill the fuck out, man. Shit.”

The ship’s horn sounded again, long and low, and for a second it covered the quiet that followed.

Ramon stepped between them just enough to make them both look at him.

“All I need her to do is get him to somewhere I know he gonna be,” Ramon said.

E.J. breathed out through his nose. He looked away from Tyree and back to Ramon.

“I’ll see,” E.J. said. “Soon as you tell me what the fuck we doing.”

Ramon glanced back out toward the river, then turned to them.

“Alright,” Ramon said. “Look. This what we gonna do.”

~~~

Caine pushed through the kitchen door and let it swing shut behind him. The warmth from inside dropped off fast once he stepped out into the open air.

He kept his shoulders loose as he walked off the small back porch and onto the sidewalk that ran along the building. His hoodie sat heavy on him. Under it, the plastic wrap on his arm held tight against his skin. It tugged when he moved. His fingers wanted to find the edge of the wrap and scratch where it itched, but he kept his hands down and kept walking.

Caine angled toward the shed and slowed as he got close. The doors were shut. The chain ran through the handles. He leaned in and checked the lock with two fingers, not yanking, just testing it. He looked again at the latch and the seam where the doors met, then stepped back.

He turned and headed toward the far side of the lot where his Lexus sat. Halfway there, the church door behind him opened. Light spilled out in a rectangle and landed on the concrete. A moment later, a voice cut through the quiet.

“Caine.”

He stopped and turned.

Pastor Hadden stood in the doorway with his coat on, the collar turned up. He didn’t step all the way out at first. He held the door with one hand and looked across the lot as if he’d been watching Caine leave.

Caine waited. The pastor came down the steps and onto the walk, shoes tapping once, twice. He took his time crossing the space between them. When he got close enough, his eyes went straight to Caine’s left arm.

“I see you been messing with that arm all day. You alright, son?”

Caine nodded. He lifted his left forearm just enough to pull the sleeve up a few inches. The plastic wrap shone under the lights, tight and wrinkled where it had been taped down. “Just got some new tattoos today. That’s all.”

Pastor Hadden’s mouth flattened. His eyes didn’t leave the wrap. He shook his head once, slow.

“You shall not make any cuts on your body for the dead, nor make any tattoo marks on yourselves. Leviticus 19:28.”

Caine let his sleeve fall back down. The hummingbird on Laney’s thigh flashed through his mind. He shrugged. “You know I ain’t real up to date on the Bible, Pastor.”

The pastor’s gaze stayed on him. “I’ve been hoping you’d change that after a year working here with us.”

Caine didn’t say anything. The wrap under his hoodie itched again. The itch spread across his forearm in a slow crawl. He ignored it and kept his face steady.

Pastor Hadden drew a breath through his nose. He shifted his weight, then spoke again, voice even.

“You know I know you’ve been close with Rylee since you got here, and I don’t pretend to know what that means for the two of you.”

Caine raised an eyebrow. He let the pastor keep going.

“And while you might not be a theologian, I’m sure you know that lying is amongst the gravest sins.”

Caine nodded once. “Yeah, I know.”

The pastor held the silence a fraction longer, then stepped a little closer. The pastor’s eyes moved over Caine’s face, then down again, stopping on the arm under the hoodie.

“I tolerate a lot of things from Rylee Jo. She got lucky that we were a bit older by the time she and Jessie came around. But what I’m never going to put up with is,” he gestured at Caine, “This. If you know what I mean.”

Caine nodded. He kept his eyes on the pastor’s face.

“I got you,” he said. “Rylee and me just friends, though. You ain’t got nothing to worry about with me.”

Pastor Hadden stared at him for a moment. His eyes narrowed a touch, then widened again. He gave a terse nod. He lifted his chin toward the Lexus and flicked his hand that direction.

“Don’t let me keep you here all night. I just wanted to have this little talk with you.”

Caine nodded once, turned, and started walking again.

The distance between them opened back up. The pastor stayed where he was.

Once he was a bit into the parking lot, he snorted a quiet laugh, knowing the pastor’s concern was for the wrong daughter.

~~~

The last of the house settled after the boys went down. The hallway light stayed on, dimmed low, spilling a thin strip under their doors.

Laney stood with the basket hooked on her hip, shoulders tight from the day. She tipped it forward and fed shirts and socks into the washer, one handful at a time.

When she reached the bottom of the pile, Tommy’s fatigue pants came up heavy and stiff. She held them by the waistband and gave them a short shake, the legs falling straight. Her fingers went to the pockets. She pinched the pocket open and dug in.

Paper slid under her fingertips.

She pulled it out and unfolded it with both hands. The receipt had been creased once, then shoved in hard. The ink was still dark. A florist’s name sat at the top. Savannah. Beneath it, a line item for a bouquet of roses.

Laney’s lips pressed. The paper crackled between her fingers. She folded it back on itself, smaller and tighter, and shoved it into the pocket of her pajama pants.

She closed the washer lid with a firm push, turned the knob, and started the machine. Water kicked on behind the door with a sudden rush, then the drum shifted and began its steady churn.

Laney wiped her palms on her thighs once and left the laundry room.

The bedroom was darker than the rest of the house. The curtains were pulled. The ceiling fan turned slow, pushing the same air in a lazy circle.

Tommy sat in the chair by the window, one leg crossed over the other, phone in his hand. His face caught the glow from the screen. His thumbs moved in small, precise taps. He didn’t look up when Laney came in.

Laney stopped at the dresser. She leaned down and found a small gold earring on the floor near the baseboard. She picked it up between two fingers, set it on the dresser top, then straightened.

She faced Tommy.

“Why you ain’t tell Blake he gotta go yet?” she said, chin tipping toward the window behind him.

Tommy’s eyes stayed on his phone. “Because he’s not going anywhere.”

The fan clicked faint overhead.

“I saw him shootin’ up God knows what with a random naked woman and you sayin’ he ain’t goin’ no where? What if that woman was walkin’ ‘round naked and one of the boys saw her?”

Tommy didn’t bother to lift his head. His thumb paused, then kept moving. “They didn’t so it’s irrelevant.”

Laney’s breath pushed out through her nose. She clenched her fists then let her hands hang loosely. “That’s bullshit and you fuckin’ know it. If it was anyone else, you wouldn’t give ‘em a second chance.”

Tommy’s phone dropped a fraction in his hand. “It isn’t someone else. It’s my brother. Now fucking drop. You’re already testing my patience even questioning me considering what you’re getting up to.”

Laney’s chin lifted. “If you got somethin’ to accuse me of, fuckin’ say it, Tommy. I’m tired of playin’ this damn game.”

Tommy just shook his head. The chair creaked under the shift of his weight and his thumb went right back to the screen.

She exhaled and pulled the paper from her pajama pocket. She walked over and threw it on his lap. It landed across his phone hand and his thigh, the corner catching on the fabric.

“Funny you accusin’ me when you’re out buyin’ your lil’ bitch fuckin’ flowers. Consider yourself lucky I gave that back since you so paranoid ‘bout me lettin’ your bosses know you’re violatin’ UCMJ by fuckin’ some random bitch.”

Laney turned to walk toward the bathroom.

Tommy jumped up and caught her before she could take a second step. His hand clamped on her shoulders. He spun her with a sharp jerk and slammed her back against the wall. Her shoulder blades hit first, then the back of her head thudded against drywall. The air got forced out of her lungs and she gasped, mouth open, eyes blinking fast.

Tommy held her by the shoulders as he leaned toward her, close enough that his breath hit her face.

“You know why Claire bothers you so much?” he said. “Because she’s better than you. In. Every. Single. Fucking. Way. Every way, Delaney. If you didn’t give me my sons, you’d be fucking worthless. You know that right?”

Laney raised her chin and didn’t look away. “And what that make you?”

Tommy jabbed his finger at her forehead, pushing her head back.

“This is how I knew you were fucking them before. You start forgetting yourself. Start thinking and acting like them. But like your daddy says, do unto others, right?”

He stepped away, turning his back on her.

Tommy walked back to the chair and sat down, shoulders settling into it. He picked his phone back up.

“Stop asking me about Blake,” he said. “This is my fucking house. He stays.”

Laney stared at him for a moment. The receipt had slid off his lap and lay half-folded near his foot. The fan kept turning. The house stayed quiet. The boys stayed asleep.

“Fine,” she said.

She turned and walked into the bathroom.

The light snapped on overhead, bright and flat. Laney stepped to the sink and stared at herself in the mirror. She wiped her hand under one eye, kept looking at her own face.

Then she turned on the sink to brush her teeth.

~~~

Mireya stayed on the man’s lap until she heard the song ending. The last chorus thinned out, the beat dropping as the DJ faded it. She kept her hips moving, smaller as the music ran out, keeping her rhythm steady.

When it was done, she leaned back on his knees. “Time’s up, papi.”

The man’s hand moved toward the end table. He didn’t touch the money yet. He just pointed at it, eyes on her. “I got more money for more dances.”

Mireya smiled, leaning in slightly. “Alright,” she said, “but after I come back. Gotta use the baño.”

She slid off his lap, heels finding the carpet. The robe she’d dropped earlier was still on the floor, pooled near the couch. She bent and grabbed it, tossing it over her shoulders.

The man watched her, mouth half open.

“I’ll pay you to watch you piss, too.”

Mireya stopped with her hand on the door handle. She turned her head, eyebrow raised. “Seriously?”

“Yeah,” he said. “How much?”

Mireya let out a short laugh through her nose. “I don’t know, papi. I’ve never been asked that.”

He grabbed two twenties from the pile on the table and held them up between his fingers. “This enough?”

Mireya paused. “Let me think about it, baby,” she said. “I’ll be right back. Don’t go anywhere.”

He sighed and leaned back against the cushions. Mireya opened the door and stepped out.

The hallway outside the VIP rooms was narrow and dim, carpet worn thin where heels and shoes had cut the same line. Sound leaked from behind other doors, quick laughs, a man’s voice low.

A door opened ahead and Sydney stepped out of another VIP room. She stumbled a little, shoulder catching the wall. When she saw Mireya she lifted a small wave, her hand drifting in the air.

Mireya pointed at Sydney’s hand, then Sydney’s.

Sydney blinked, looked down, and her jaw dropped a bit. “Oh shit.” She rubbed her hand against the wall, hard enough that the skin went pink.

Mireya closed the distance and looked straight into Sydney’s eyes. Even in the dim, Sydney’s pupils were pinned.

“You good?” Mireya asked.

Sydney nodded, quick. “I just gave the guy a handjob so that was some easy money.”

Mireya shook her head. “That ain’t what I asked you, Syd.”

Sydney shrugged. “Yeah. I’m fine.”

Mireya grabbed Sydney by the arm and started walking her toward the back corridor where the dressing rooms had been set up in this venue. Sydney let herself be moved, feet catching and then finding a steadier rhythm as she followed.

They hit a patch of brighter light near the back, bulbs overhead that made every smear and scuff on the wall show. Mireya moved Sydney into it and tilted Sydney’s head back, holding her face for a second so she could watch her eyes.

“You need to go sit down for a bit and sober up,” Mireya said.

Sydney’s eyebrows furrowed when Mireya let her go. “I haven’t been drinking.”

“I know you haven’t been drinking,” Mireya said. “You’ve been snorting that shit with C.J. again.”

Sydney shook her head. “No, it was Brooke this time.”

Mireya rolled her eyes. “Just come sit down for like 30 minutes.”

Sydney walked with her, jaw working. She tried to pull a smile over it. “I just saw how much y’all were making at that party but I can’t just do it. I need some courage. You never needed a little boost?”

Mireya didn’t slow. “The money is the boost I need.”

Sydney’s gaze flicked around. Mireya kept her hand on Sydney’s arm.

“You don’t know where they’re getting that shit from,” Mireya said. “It could be full of fetty.”

Sydney looked at her, confused. “What’s fetty?”

“Fentanyl,” Mireya said.

Sydney blinked, the word landing slow. “Oh.” Then she said, “I always forget that you’re studying to be a nurse.”

Mireya snorted a laugh. “I wish that’s why I knew what fetty was.”

They reached the dressing room door and stepped inside. Mireya made Sydney sit down.

Mireya looked at Mari, sitting a few seats down along the vanity, and asked “Can you watch her?”

Mari raised an eyebrow, then nodded anyway.

Mireya shook her head and headed back out to the go to the bathroom. She had to get back before the man got tired of waiting and disappeared.

Soapy
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Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

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Post by Soapy » 21 Jan 2026, 08:01

Gaslit us about Jaslene and Mireya for no reason lmao

surprised Caine and Laney's secret has yet to blow up from someone outside of Blake since it's a relatively small town and he's a recognizable face

mireya getting mad at jordan for accusing of her OF when she does much worse is #peak
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redsox907
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Post by redsox907 » 21 Jan 2026, 13:12

Caesar wrote:
20 Jan 2026, 23:31
Trell’s voice stayed even. “Well, that’s why P fucking dead, nigga. You wanna be in the ground next to him?”
Dez pack gas or what?

Mireya playing Jordan like a violin :smh: at least she learning how to be a better manipulator from Trell
Caesar wrote:
20 Jan 2026, 23:31
But what I’m never going to put up with is,” he gestured at Caine, “This. If you know what I mean.”
still quietly hopping for the Hadden family pack :romeo:
Caesar wrote:
20 Jan 2026, 23:31
Tommy jumped up and caught her before she could take a second step. His hand clamped on her shoulders. He spun her with a sharp jerk and slammed her back against the wall. Her shoulder blades hit first, then the back of her head thudded against drywall. The air got forced out of her lungs and she gasped, mouth open, eyes blinking fast.
tell me again how he ain't abusive :cmon:

I'm seeing a trend - the harder Caes defends something the righter we are :kghah:

How long did he beat that drum Mireya wasn't going to be a stripper?
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Captain Canada
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Post by Captain Canada » 21 Jan 2026, 17:39

Just played a whole lot of catchup. Mireya fucking gross and you ain't gonna gaslight me out of thinking that. Nasty.

Laney playing a brave ass game fuckin' with Tommy like this. This shit is going to erupt, for sure.
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djp73
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Post by djp73 » 21 Jan 2026, 20:43

She do it for $40 or what?
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Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
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Post by Caesar » 21 Jan 2026, 22:48

Soapy wrote:
21 Jan 2026, 08:01
Gaslit us about Jaslene and Mireya for no reason lmao

surprised Caine and Laney's secret has yet to blow up from someone outside of Blake since it's a relatively small town and he's a recognizable face

mireya getting mad at jordan for accusing of her OF when she does much worse is #peak
No more in a relationship than Angela and Paige were. Image

Laney's reputation prevents the rumors. No one is going to think a woman that is such a perfect example of Evangelical wives and mothers that she walks behind her husband everywhere they go is cheating on him. Add in muddying those waters by people only seeing them together in work contexts and people having seen Caine in public at bars and what not with Rylee and boom. "The prim and proper church lady is cheating on her husband with the dude her little sister is fucking" sounds crazy.

As i said previously, is she mad or is she playing the role needed to keep that compartment of her life from collapsing? :hmm:
redsox907 wrote:
21 Jan 2026, 13:12
Caesar wrote:
20 Jan 2026, 23:31
Trell’s voice stayed even. “Well, that’s why P fucking dead, nigga. You wanna be in the ground next to him?”
Dez pack gas or what?

Mireya playing Jordan like a violin :smh: at least she learning how to be a better manipulator from Trell
Caesar wrote:
20 Jan 2026, 23:31
But what I’m never going to put up with is,” he gestured at Caine, “This. If you know what I mean.”
still quietly hopping for the Hadden family pack :romeo:
Caesar wrote:
20 Jan 2026, 23:31
Tommy jumped up and caught her before she could take a second step. His hand clamped on her shoulders. He spun her with a sharp jerk and slammed her back against the wall. Her shoulder blades hit first, then the back of her head thudded against drywall. The air got forced out of her lungs and she gasped, mouth open, eyes blinking fast.
tell me again how he ain't abusive :cmon:

I'm seeing a trend - the harder Caes defends something the righter we are :kghah:

How long did he beat that drum Mireya wasn't going to be a stripper?
Is Dez's time on Earth going short? :hmm:

10 updates ago, he was just pussy drunk. Now, he being manipulated. Pick a lane :smh:

This man really want this woman to lose her whole ass family.

I never said he wasn't abusive. I said he doesn't beat her which he hasn't done. Jostling her around isn't beating.
Captain Canada wrote:
21 Jan 2026, 17:39
Just played a whole lot of catchup. Mireya fucking gross and you ain't gonna gaslight me out of thinking that. Nasty.

Laney playing a brave ass game fuckin' with Tommy like this. This shit is going to erupt, for sure.
What the fuck she did that was "gross???????????" If you're referring to that last scene, she didn't do that. It says so. :pgdead:


djp73 wrote:
21 Jan 2026, 20:43
She do it for $40 or what?
It literally says she went to the bathroom elsewhere. Everyone got a line they ain't crossing. :smh:
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