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: 13814
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 22 Jan 2026, 05:40

Non Negavit

Saul pushed through the cafeteria doors, the noise behind him spilling out into the open air. He stepped into the courtyard and stopped short, letting the crowd move around him. He lifted his chin and scanned.

Tables were scattered across the square, benches bolted down, kids packed in tight with fries and chips and styrofoam clamshells. A couple boys argued over a phone, shoulders bumping. Saul’s eyes kept moving.

He spotted Zoe on the far side.

She sat with Mia at a table that caught more sun than shade. Zoe’s hair was down, long and neat. Mia’s phone sat in her hand, thumb working, her elbow planted, posture settled. Saul swallowed once, then started walking.

Zoe looked up when his shadow hit the edge of their table.

Saul stopped at the end of the bench and looked down at her. “Can I talk to you right quick?”

Mia’s head snapped up from her phone. She pulled her lips to one side and leaned back, arm draped along the table. “Talk to her about what? Y’all don’t got anything to talk about.”

Zoe’s eyes stayed on Saul. She gave a small shake of her head and nudged her chin toward the empty bench a few feet away. “Nah, it’s cool.”

She slid her book into her lap, pushed back from the table, and stood. Saul’s fingers flexed as he stepped out of her way as she moved past.

He followed her over, keeping his pace even. At the other bench, Zoe sat first, angled forward, knees apart. Saul lowered himself onto the bench next to her. The metal was cold through his jeans. He adjusted once, then still.

He turned his head toward her. “How you been?”

Zoe didn’t look at him right away. Her gaze stayed on the courtyard, on the movement, on the noise. She picked at the corner of her book cover with a nail, then finally answered, eyes still forward. “Straight. Just trying to get through these last months then I’m moving to Mississippi.”

Saul blinked hard. His eyes widened. He leaned back a fraction, shoulders stiffening. “Mississippi? For what?”

Zoe rolled her eyes and turned her head enough to give him a clean look. “School, fool. I get into Alcorn State.”

Saul let out a short laugh, the sound catching in his throat. His hand went up and rubbed the back of his neck, fingers pressing into skin, then sliding. “Oh, right. We are about to graduate.”

Zoe shifted on the bench, turning her body a little more toward him now. Her knee bumped his once. “What about you?”

Saul’s mouth opened and closed. His fingers tapped his thigh once, then stopped. “Well… well, I got a kid on the way?”

Zoe’s eyebrows jumped. Her eyes widened and she leaned back to look at him, taking in his face. “Are you fucking with me right now?”

Saul shook his head, slow. His jaw worked before the words came out. “No, my girlfriend is due in like July.”

Zoe’s mouth opened on a laugh. It came out awkward, half air, half sound. She sat forward again and blew out through her nose. “Damn Saul, you really wanted that kid.”

Saul’s shoulders rose in a small shrug. He stared at a crack in the concrete between his shoes. His hands slid together, palm to palm, then apart. “It kinda just happened.”

Zoe’s eyes cut to his hands, then back to his face. She tilted her head. “Yeah, kinda just happened because you were fucking.”

Saul’s lips pressed together. He nodded once, quick. “Right.”

The silence between them held for a beat. On the near side of the courtyard, somebody slammed a soda bottle down on a table. Saul shifted his weight on the bench, metal creaking under him, and pulled his elbows onto his knees. His fingers laced, then un-laced.

He looked at Zoe again. “Anyway, can I ask you something?”

Zoe lifted one shoulder in a shrug, her palm turning up. “Sure.”

Saul swallowed. He glanced past her shoulder, checking the distance to Mia without turning his head all the way. Mia sat where she’d stayed, phone still in hand, eyes up now, watching them through the bodies in the courtyard. Saul’s gaze came back to Zoe. “Do you know who Ethan gets his weed from?”

Zoe’s eyebrows pulled together. She leaned back. “Ethan Lasseigne?”

Saul nodded.

Zoe’s lips parted and she stared at him. She lifted her chin. “Why? You gonna start selling?”

Saul’s head moved side to side fast, too fast, and he forced himself to slow it down. He looked at her. “Nah. I was just wondering.”

Zoe’s mouth tightened. She leaned in a little, forearm resting on her knee. “You better not be trying to become a dopeboy.”

Saul lifted both hands, palms out, fingers spread. “I’m not swear. It’s just he’s always got some and he–”

Zoe cut him off before he finished. She sat up straight and her eyes stayed locked on his. “If you trying to get on, just say that, Saul.”

Saul’s shoulders dropped. He let out a breath. His hands fell to his thighs and he stared down at them, at his own fingers. “Yeah, I need the money.”

Zoe didn’t answer right away. She looked back out across the courtyard, eyes tracking a couple kids walking past with food piled high on trays, laughing, shouting over each other. Her jaw shifted once. Then she looked back at him. “Yeah, I know.”

Saul’s head lifted. The question came out quick, almost clipped. “You do?”

Zoe nodded once. Her mouth pulled in on itself for a second before she spoke again. “My boyfriend. Kayjuan.”

Saul’s eyes flicked to her mouth, then away. He shifted closer on the bench, then caught himself and stopped. His knee bounced once, then stilled. “You can give me his number or something?”

Zoe stood up. For a second she looked down at Saul. Then she turned and started walking back toward the table.

She didn’t look over her shoulder until she was already halfway there. Her voice carried back without slowing her steps. “I’ll think about it.”

Saul stayed on the bench. He watched her cross the courtyard, watched her slip back into the space beside Mia. His fingers curled on his knees. He shook his head once, slow, and kept watching.

~~~

Ramon walked out of Nina’s house, letting the door ease shut behind him. The latch caught with a soft click. Cold air sat on his face, damp enough that it clung. He kept his hands in his pockets for a second, shoulders loose, eyes moving.

The street in front of the house looked quiet. A mail carrier’s truck sat down the block with its flashers on, the little amber blinks steady. The carrier moved in and out of view between parked cars, dropping envelopes into boxes, then stepping up to porches to set down packages.

Ramon stepped off the porch and headed toward his car. Gravel shifted under his shoes. His gaze slid from the truck to the corners of yards, to the mouth of the street, then back again.

He stopped at his trunk and popped it. The lid lifted with a dull thump and a creak. He leaned down into the open space and pulled back the fabric at the back of the seats. His fingers found the seam and worried it open. He reached his hand inside.

The space behind the lining was tight. His knuckles rubbed against metal and foam. He dug around for a moment. His fingertips caught plastic.

He pulled out a cellphone wrapped in a sandwich bag. The bag crinkled in his hand. Moisture from the cold air beaded on the plastic right away. Ramon straightened, the phone held low near his hip for a beat as he looked around again.

The mail truck was still there. The carrier had moved closer, head down, sorting. A package hit a porch step with a soft thud. Ramon kept his body turned so the trunk lid blocked some angles from the street.

He slid a small power bank out of his pocket and plugged it into the phone through the bag. The wire bent and then settled. He hit the power button and waited.

The screen stayed black for a second, then flashed. Ramon held it steady, his thumb hovering. The phone took its time.

When it powered up, he tapped in the passcode. His fingers moved, muscle memory. The bag shifted and crackled. The phone unlocked.

No service showed in the top corner.

He pulled up the photos. The gallery loaded slow, thumbnails trying to appear and then staying gray. He flicked his thumb across the screen. It didn’t show him anything clear, but he could see the count still there.

He flicked again, quick this time, and watched the screen lag behind. He backed out of the photos and checked another folder, then went back. He hit the side button and the screen went dark.

Ramon lifted the hem of his shirt and wiped the phone down. The cold glass met his shirt. He rubbed the screen, the edges, the back, his movements careful and practiced.

He slipped it back into the sandwich bag and pressed the air out with his palms. The bag flattened. The plastic stuck to itself.

He leaned back into the trunk and pushed the fabric aside again. His hand found the gap behind the seats. He tucked the phone back into the hidden space, pushed it deeper until it sat where he wanted, then pulled the fabric back over it and smoothed it down.

He shut the trunk. The latch clicked. He ran his palm once along the edge then stepped away.

He walked back to the house and went inside.

Nina stood at the counter with a plate in front of her, moving food around with a fork. She turned her head when he came in, eyes on him.

Her voice came even. “Did you get the mail?”

Ramon shut the door behind him and let the sound settle. He shook his head once and moved past her toward the sink.

“They ain’t get to the house yet,” he said. His mouth stayed relaxed. “Still way down the street.”

Nina nodded, looking back down at her plate. “Alright.”

She carried the plate to the table and sat. She pulled the plate closer and started eating.

Ramon went to the refrigerator and opened it. Cool air washed over his fingers. He scanned the shelves, then grabbed a drink and shut the door with the back of his hand.

Nina chewed. Her fork clicked against ceramic. The house made its own quiet. The refrigerator hummed as it cycled.

Nina swallowed and looked up at him again. “I’m gonna be back late tonight. We have a candlelight vigil for that man who got shot in the East last week.”

Ramon nodded. “Yeah, me too,” he said. He walked to the table. “I gotta make a run to Boutte with Tyree and E.J. Might be back later than you.”

Nina nodded again. She ate another bite. Her shoulders stayed level.

Ramon pulled the chair out across from her and sat down. He set the drink on the table and popped it open. The seal hissed. He took a slow sip.

Nina kept eating. The fork kept moving.

He took another slow sip and let it sit in his mouth before he swallowed. Nina’s eyes stayed on her plate. Ramon’s eyes stayed on her face.
~~~

Mireya lay on the living room floor with one arm bent under her head and the other stretched out toward Camila’s pile of toys. The floor pressed into her chest. Camila sat a few feet away with her legs tucked under her, hair falling into her face as she worked two plastic animals together.

Camila lifted a tiger up in both hands and held it out at Mireya’s eye level, waiting until Mireya looked. “This one says rawr, mami.”

Mireya’s mouth pulled into a smile. She pushed herself up on one elbow and tapped the tiger’s nose with her fingertip. “It does, baby.”

Camila made the tiger bump the floor twice. Mireya’s gaze slid to the zebra lying on its side near Camila’s knee. She reached and hooked it closer with two fingers, turning it so the painted eye faced Camila.

Mireya pointed at it. “What about this one?”

Camila shrugged, shoulders rising up to her ears. She turned her face serious, looking from the zebra to Mireya. “I don’t know. What does it say?”

Mireya rolled the zebra between her palms, the cheap plastic warm from Camila’s hands. “They sound like a pig and a donkey together.”

Camila stared at her for a beat, then her laugh burst out quick and high. She shook her head hard enough that her hair slapped her cheeks. “Uh uh.”

Mireya laughed too, the sound pushing out of her. She tipped her head back. “En serio. They do.”

Camila scooted closer on her knees and grabbed the zebra, holding it tight to her chest. She frowned at Mireya in that stubborn way. “No, they sound like a horsey.”

She lifted her chin and made a loud, breathy neigh, then did it again, longer, a smile spreading across her face.

Mireya kept laughing, shaking her head.

A knock hit the front door.

Mireya’s laughter cut off mid-breath. She stayed on the floor for half a second, listening. The apartment went quiet around it, the small sounds still there under everything.

Mireya rolled onto her back and braced her palms against the floor to sit up. She reached over the edge of the coffee table, grabbed her phone, and tapped the screen.

No new texts.

The second knock came sharper, closer together.

Mireya pushed to her feet. She stepped around Camila’s toys and moved to the door. Her hand went to the deadbolt then stopped. She leaned in and looked through the peephole.

Her mother stood on the other side.

Mireya’s breath went out through her nose. Her mood dropped in a single clean motion. She unlocked the door, the chain sliding, the bolt turning under her fingers.

When she pulled it open, Maria stepped inside almost immediately, not waiting, her purse tight on her shoulder. The air from the hall came in with her, carrying a stale smell.

Mireya shifted back to give space. She looked over her shoulder toward the living room. “Mi amor, come say hello to your Abuela Maria.”

Camila had frozen where she sat, tiger in one hand, zebra in the other. She looked from Mireya to Maria, then got up and walked over in quick little steps. She wrapped her arms around Maria’s legs and pressed her cheek to Maria’s thigh. “Hola, Abuela Maria.”

Maria bent at the waist and kissed the top of Camila’s head. Her lips landed on hair, quick and practiced. “Hola, Camila.”

Mireya watched it from a few feet away, jaw tight. She kept her hands at her sides so she didn’t cross her arms.

She spoke to Camila without taking her eyes off Maria. “Go in your room for a bit, baby. After me and Abuela Maria talk, I’ll take you to get some chicken tenders.”

Camila’s arms loosened. She leaned back just enough to look up at Mireya. “From Cane’s?”

Mireya nodded once. “Si, mi amor. Go on now.”

Camila turned and walked down the hall toward her room. She glanced back over her shoulder once, then again when she reached the doorway. She disappeared into the room slowly.

Mireya waited a beat after she was gone. Then she turned back to Maria.

“What the fuck do you want?” Mireya’s voice came out flat.

Maria’s gaze moved over Mireya in a slow sweep, taking in the PSD set Mireya wore, the bare skin, the fit of it. Her mouth tightened.

“Is this how you dress around your daughter now, too?” Maria asked. She shifted the purse strap higher on her shoulder. “Medio desnuda. Con el culo al aire y los pechos también.”

Mireya’s jaw set, her lips pressed tight. “Get to the point. I’m tired and not in the mood for your shit today.”

Maria made a sound through her teeth, half scoff, half dismissal. She opened her purse and dug inside with quick fingers. Paper rasped. She pulled out a packet thick enough to bend at the edges and held it out, arm straight.

Mireya didn’t take it. She stared at the papers, then at Maria’s hand. “What’s this?”

“Tax forms,” Maria said. “It’s almost the end of February.”

Mireya let her eyes close for a second. Her jaw tightened. She opened her eyes again and dragged her hands up through her hair. “We’re doing this again? I keep telling you that I’m not doing that shit.”

Maria clicked her tongue, then walked past Mireya into the apartment. Her shoes made a small, hard sound on the floor. She stopped near the living room area, eyes scanning what was left out.

She bent and picked up a pair of red bottoms from beside the couch. The heels dangled from her fingers, bright against her skin. She turned them over once, slow, then looked at Mireya over the top of them.

“¿Sabes qué formularios fiscales necesitas para declarar que eres una sugar baby?” Maria asked.

Mireya crossed the space in two steps and ripped the shoes out of Maria’s hand. The leather squeaked under her grip. She threw them down near the edge of the couch.

She turned and walked to the kitchen. The chair legs scraped when she pulled one out. She stepped onto the seat, reached up and opened the cabinet above the refrigerator.

The cabinet door thudded against the wall. A folder sat shoved back behind other paper. Mireya pulled it free and climbed down, keeping it clamped tight in one hand.

She walked back into the living room area and stopped in front of Maria. She snapped the folder open and held it out so Maria could see.

A W2 from a cleaning company sat on top, the numbers printed clean and plain. Forty-three thousand for the year.

Mireya held it steady and kept her face hard. “¿Esto satisface su curiosidad, mamá?”

Maria reached for it, fingers already stretching out.

Mireya pulled it back before Maria could touch it. She shut the folder with a sharp clap. “Now, that you know I’m not worried about filing my own taxes, you can stop hanging it over my head as a threat.”

Maria’s eyes stayed on the folder even after it closed. Her jaw worked once. She dropped the packet of papers onto the coffee table. The stack slapped wood and slid an inch.

“That only proves you have a job,” Maria said. She took a step closer, close enough that Mireya could smell her perfume, sweet and heavy. “It doesn’t prove where you get these gifts from.”

Maria leaned in another inch, voice lowering without getting softer. “When I find out what you’re doing, I’m going straight to CPS and getting custody of Camila.”

Mireya’s hands clenched around the folder so tight her knuckles went pale. She stared at Maria’s face, at the set of her mouth. “Fuck you. Over my dead body.”

Maria let out a short laugh through her nose. Her eyes flicked once toward the hallway, toward Camila’s room, then back to Mireya. “That might not be out of the question with how you’re living, mija.”

She turned and walked to the door. She pulled it open and stepped out, purse swinging once at her hip.

Mireya followed far enough to slam it behind her. The door hit the frame with a crack that rang through the apartment.

For a second Mireya stood with her palm on the door, breathing through her nose, shoulders held up around her ears.

Camila’s head poked out from her room down the hall, hair sticking up in a soft mess. Her voice came small. “Mami?”

Mireya dropped her hand from the door and let her shoulders fall. She pushed air out slow, then turned her face toward Camila. “Coge tus zapatos, mi amor. We’ll go get you something to eat.”

~~~

Caine popped the trunk on Laney’s van and leaned in, shoulders crowding the opening. He dragged the first box forward by its taped seam, the cardboard rasping against the trunk liner. He stepped back into the gravel and set it down beside the dolly, then reached in again.

Laney stood a few feet off, keys looped around one finger. She kept sweeping the lot, then the door, then the lot again.

Caine pulled another box out and stacked it on top of the first, palms flattening the corners until they lined up. He glanced over his shoulder as he reached for the next one.

“You know you can just get this shit delivered here, right?” he said.

Laney rolled her eyes and shifted her weight, the heel of her shoe grinding a small crescent into the gravel. “I don’t know if someone gonna steal my packages from here. I know they ain’t gonna take them off my porch.”

Caine leaned back into the trunk and dragged a third box toward him, arms tightening under the weight. He straightened and set it on the stack, then slid his hand over the tape.

“Sounds like y’all little town unsafe,” he said. He tipped his chin toward the building. “I ain’t never had to worry about my packages getting taken back in the city.”

Laney made a quiet sound through her nose and reached into the trunk for the last box before he could. She hugged it to her chest, walked it over, and set it on top with a careful neatness.

Caine shoved the dolly’s lip under the bottom box and rocked the load back until it balanced. He started toward the side entrance with one hand braced against the stack to keep it from shifting.

Laney fell into step behind him, shoulder close to the boxes when the walkway narrowed.

They pushed into the church and the daycare sound wrapped around them. A child squealed, sharp and excited. Another cried for two seconds and then stopped, cut off by an adult voice too low to catch. Somewhere a cartoon jingle leaked out and then got muffled by a closing door.

Caine steered the dolly straight down the hall, shoulders squared, then checked the hallway ahead and the reflections in the glass.

Laney gave the woman a quick nod. Her expression stayed calm, but her eyes didn’t stop moving.

Mrs. Ethel came out with a dish towel in her hands, looking up at the sound of wheels. She lifted her fingers in a quick, practiced wave over Caine’s shoulder.

Laney lifted her own hand and waved back, smile flashing and gone in a beat.

Caine turned the dolly toward the storage room. The boxes swayed once and he corrected it with his palm, then pushed through the doorway with his elbow and let the door swing almost shut behind him.

Laney waited a moment in the hall. She stayed angled toward the daycare traffic, listening for footsteps. When a pair of workers passed with a bin between them and kept going, she stepped in and remained at the doorway, her back against the jamb.

Caine lifted the top box down and carried it toward the back of the room. He set it on the floor near the shelves, then dropped onto it.

“You know the pastor talked to me the other day,” he said.

Laney’s eyes flicked to him, then to the crack of hallway she could still see. “My daddy?”

Caine snorted and pushed his palm against the box top as he leaned forward. “You know any other pastors that would be walking around here?”

Laney’s mouth tightened, then she lifted her chin at him. “’Bout what?”

Caine dragged another box closer by the tape edge.

“That he ain’t like a Black dude fucking on Rylee.”

Laney sucked her teeth and looked out toward the hall again, holding her attention there a second longer, then pulling it back in. Her fingers tapped once against the doorframe.

“You don’t seem surprised,” Caine said.

Laney’s eyes came back to him, flat and tired. “I ain’t surprised. I love my daddy. God bless him, but he’s ass backwards. An ignorant man. Always has been. Always will be.”

Caine let out a short laugh and stood, the box creaking as his weight came off it. He turned toward the shelves and started shoving boxes into place, sliding them along the metal until they sat square.

“So basically, me and Mr. Charlie good enough to work out in them fields but ain’t good enough to fuck his precious daughters?”

Laney laughed once, short and flat. Her face didn’t change. “I don’t think Mr. Charlie fucking anybody. His wife included.”

Caine paused with his hands on a box and turned his head just enough to look at her. “You dodging the question.”

Laney’s shoulders rose and fell once. She didn’t move from the doorway. “I ain’t dodgin’ shit. I told you that man ignorant. But you don’t care anyway. I can see if on your face.”

Caine slid the box the last inch, then shrugged, loose. He turned back toward her, eyes steady.

“Because he worried about the wrong one of y’all.”

Laney’s head snapped toward the hallway. She leaned out a fraction, listening, then pulled back in and kept her hand planted on the jamb. “Hope you ain’t think to tell him no foolishness like that.”

Caine lifted his chin and spread his hands a little, palms up, a quick show. “I’m a lot of things, but stupid ain’t one of them. I would’ve been on the first thing smoking back to New Orleans to serve my full bid.”

Laney’s mouth twitched at that then she let it go. Her eyes stayed on him.

Caine hooked his fingers under another box and lifted it. He carried it to the shelf and set it down.

“So, that’s how you ended up with a man who hate you?” he asked as he pushed the box back. “Needed to appease daddy after letting the bruhs hit for years?”

Laney’s jaw worked once. She shifted off the jamb and stood straighter, shoes planted. “It was more complicated than that. But my daddy got what he wanted and that’s all that matter to him.”

Caine’s eyes tracked her face, then slid to the door, to the hallway beyond. He stacked another box on top of the last one and stepped back.

“Until Rylee bring one of us home for family dinner.”

Laney snorted a laugh, short and sharp. She shook her head once. “Rylee bringin’ anyone home is more absurd than what that man look like. Her whole personality is bein’ the opposite of me.”

Caine put the last box on the shelf and pressed his palms flat to it. He turned back toward her.

“Except for y’all wanting the same man right now.”

Laney’s eyes cut to the hallway again. She held the look there, listening for a cart wheel or a voice. When nothing came, she stepped fully into the room and shut the door behind her.

The latch clicked. The daycare noise dropped into a muted hum.

Laney crossed the short space between them, shoes quiet on tile. She wrapped her arms around his waist and looked up at him.

“I’m sorry if my racist ass daddy hurt your feelin’s.”

Caine laughed quietly and dropped his hands to her back, fingers spreading. “Compared to my PO back home, some old ass man telling me he don’t approve of me fucking his daughter is square one shit.”

Laney rolled her eyes and tightened her arms once, deliberate. “Here I was ‘bout to offer myself to you for a whole weekend,” she said, mouth tipping at one corner, “’cause Tommy takin’ the boys fishin’ in Alabama but I guess you fine.”

Caine pulled her closer, a smile on his face. “Nah, I’m actually about to cry right now on second thought. Most traumatizing shit I ever been through.”

Laney slapped him in the chest and said, “Dick.”
User avatar

djp73
Posts: 11489
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 13:42

American Sun

Post by djp73 » 22 Jan 2026, 06:51

Would Mireya have Maria taken out to keep Camilla?
:yup:

when you said bottoms I thought you meant underwear, like you just leaving that all over the place Mireya??

Soapy
Posts: 13694
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 22 Jan 2026, 08:39

djp73 wrote:
22 Jan 2026, 06:51
Would Mireya have Maria taken out to keep Camilla?
she's done it before

:metsnbd:
User avatar

redsox907
Posts: 3796
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 22 Jan 2026, 12:53

Saul's ex-GF would be fucking the plug lmao

Mireya ain't going to get Maria left in the swamp, but Trell will without asking and act like he knew nothing

that Maria pack finna be gas

curious whose phone Ramon had :hmm:
User avatar

Captain Canada
Posts: 6137
Joined: 01 Dec 2018, 00:15

American Sun

Post by Captain Canada » 22 Jan 2026, 12:54

Mireya needs to just give the site what we want and snuff Maria in her shit. She a degen now, its no longer beneath her character
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 13814
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 22 Jan 2026, 22:40

djp73 wrote:
22 Jan 2026, 06:51
Would Mireya have Maria taken out to keep Camilla?
:yup:

when you said bottoms I thought you meant underwear, like you just leaving that all over the place Mireya??
Could just let Sara beat her ass again.

:cmon:
Soapy wrote:
22 Jan 2026, 08:39
djp73 wrote:
22 Jan 2026, 06:51
Would Mireya have Maria taken out to keep Camilla?
she's done it before

:metsnbd:
Did what before?!
redsox907 wrote:
22 Jan 2026, 12:53
Saul's ex-GF would be fucking the plug lmao

Mireya ain't going to get Maria left in the swamp, but Trell will without asking and act like he knew nothing

that Maria pack finna be gas

curious whose phone Ramon had :hmm:
Saul's ex-GF's current BF*

Here y'all go wishing death on someone else.

Real nooticers would know :curtain:
Captain Canada wrote:
22 Jan 2026, 12:54
Mireya needs to just give the site what we want and snuff Maria in her shit. She a degen now, its no longer beneath her character
I'm still confused as to how she became a degen and murder not being beneath her :pgdead:
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 13814
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 22 Jan 2026, 22:40

Ultro Acceptum

The meeting room smelled faintly of detergent and old turf. The lights overhead buzzed low. Rows of chairs faced the front wall where a screen hung slack, cords coiled neat under a table that held a stack of packets and a few pens.

Players started filing in from the hall in loose lines, slides on feet, backpacks thumping against shoulders. The door stayed propped open, letting in the sound of the building.

Caine came in with the flow. He let guys pass when they wanted to. He took in faces. Returning bodies moved toward familiar seats. New ones hesitated at the doorway for a second, eyes moving over the room. A couple of underclassmen stayed close together, shoulders tight.

He kept his hands in his hoodie pockets and found the lower rows.

Matt slid in at the same time he did. He dropped into the seat beside Caine with a heavy exhale, backpack hitting the floor between his shoes.

Caine sat back and let the chair creak under him. A row up, Dillon and Terrell had claimed two seats side by side. Dillon leaned forward with his elbows on his knees, already grinning. Terrell sat back with his forearms crossed.

More players kept coming in behind them. The room filled in waves, bodies squeezing past knees, hands tapping shoulders.

Dillon turned in his seat, looking down over the row at Matt. His grin widened. “When you start seeing how bush league we is compared to Washington in action, you gonna be regretting coming down here.”

Matt’s mouth twitched once. He shifted his backpack with his foot so it sat under his seat, then leaned back and let his shoulder brush the chair. “You say that like I didn’t tour all this shit before making my decision.”

Terrell’s laugh came out short. He tipped his chin toward the front of the room, then toward the walls. “It’s one thing to tour it. It’s another thing to experience it.”

Caine shook his head and leaned back farther until the chair pressed into his shoulders. He lifted his foot and set it on the back of an empty chair in front of him, ankle loose, posture open. “Y’all acting like they got shit to make you play better at them big schools. We got projectors just like they do.”

Matt lifted a hand, palm out, the gesture stopping the air for a second. He sat forward a little, elbows on the armrests. “Whoa, pump your brakes there. There is a reason power conference schools better and it start in rooms like this.”

Caine let out a slow breath through his nose. He tipped his head back toward Matt. “I ain’t worried about none of that shit. We going back to the playoffs next year and them boys could all get the smoke.”

Dillon leaned farther over the row, reaching down across the gap. His hand came over Caine’s shoulder. He dapped Caine up. “Fuck yeah, nigga. Make sure all the baddies on us again this year.”

Caine looked back over his shoulder at Dillon. He let the corner of his mouth pull for a second and dropped it. “That’s all you worried about?”

Dillon spread his hands in a small shrug, shoulders lifting. He rocked back in his seat and hooked one ankle over the other. “I’m at the bottom of the depth chart, my nigga. What else is there to worry about? If they gotta put me in the game, they gonna make a movie about us.”

Terrell’s laugh came fuller this time. He leaned forward and slapped Dillon’s knee once, quick and familiar. “Rudy ass nigga.”

Caine shook his head again, the motion slow. “We are Georgia Southern head ass.”

Matt’s shoulders bounced once with a laugh. Dillon laughed too, louder, head tipping back for a second. The sound rolled through their little pocket and then got swallowed by the growing room as more guys poured in.

A few seconds later, footsteps came more measured. Voices stayed lower. The coaching staff stepped into view at the open door. Backs straightened. Knees pulled in. Phones disappeared into pockets. Conversations cut off mid-sentence and died.

Coach Aplin walked in first, shoulders squared, clipboard tucked under one arm. Aplin’s eyes moved across the room as he walked. He stopped at the front and turned, letting the silence finish settling.

Coach Aplin looked around once more, then nodded. “Good to see y’all all back in here. Better be ready to work, because we got high expectations this year after what we did last season.”

He let the words hang for a beat. Somebody in the back cleared their throat and then stopped. Aplin’s eyes moved again, scanning, then landed on Caine.

Caine didn’t react. He held the look.

Aplin’s mouth tightened. “I’m gonna be putting a lot of pressure on the guys who were with us last year to help get everyone else up to speed with the 30, 35 days we got y’all for the spring.”

He shifted his weight and the clipboard edge tapped against his hip once. An assistant behind him reached to the table and straightened the stack of packets, fingers precise.

Aplin kept going, voice steady, filling the room. “The goal is to be able to hit the ground running in July. Sound good?”

The response came fast and together, a wave of noise. Chairs squeaked as guys sat up straighter. Heads nodded in rows. A couple fists thumped knees in agreement.

Coach Aplin nodded once, and set the clipboard down on the table. He reached for the top stack of packets with one hand, thumb sliding the corner free. “Good, let’s get started.”

~~~

The TV threw a blue wash across the living room and kept shifting, bright to dark to bright again as the movie played. The volume stayed low, more background than anything.

E.J. sat sunk into the couch with his shoulders wide and his back pressed into the cushion. A crinkled bag of pork cracklin sat open in his lap, grease already darkening one corner where his fingers kept going back in. He ate slowly. He kept one hand under the bag, catching the crumbs that tried to fall, but a few still made it to his shirt and the couch.

Tessa lay turned toward the TV with her legs thrown across his lap. One heel kicked up now and then, absent, timed to something on the screen. Her toes brushed his thigh through his shorts when she shifted, skin warm. She kept her eyes on the movie, mouth relaxed.

E.J. tried to keep it that way. The bag crinkled under his grip. His jaw worked around the last bite, and his eyes slid sideways to Tessa’s face.

She was close enough that he could see the small movements. The way her lashes flicked when the screen flashed. The way she bit the inside of her cheek once, then let it go. He stared for a beat, then moved his eyes back to the TV.

A minute later, he did it again. His fingers went back into the bag, found another piece, and he chewed louder than he meant to. The sound made him pause. He swallowed and shifted the bag down his thigh, trying to settle.

Tessa’s head turned without her moving anything else. Her eyes found him, steady.

“What?” she asked.

E.J. kept his eyes on the screen for a half second longer. He licked a bit of salt off his thumb and cleared his throat.

“So, I don’t want you to get mad at me off rip but–”

Tessa’s face tightened before he even finished. She let her head fall back onto the armrest, blond hair fanning out a little. Her knees stayed draped across him, but her body went heavier.

“If it’s something stupid then just keep it to yourself because we been having a good day.”

E.J. stared at the TV. His tongue pressed against the inside of his cheek. He reached down and pinched a crumb off his shirt and flicked it toward the floor. He shifted his thighs under her legs.

“It ain’t stupid.”

He paused, then let his shoulders roll back against the cushion. His hand tightened on the bag until it crackled again.

“Well, it might be a little stupid, but we just trying to wrap up our pig problem before it become a bigger one.”

Tessa exhaled hard through her nose. Her eyes squeezed shut for a moment, and she dragged one palm down her face. When she opened them again, she stared at the ceiling instead of him.

“E.J., for the love of God.”

He shifted forward an inch, elbows moving toward his knees. A piece of cracklin stuck to his fingertip. He looked at it, then at her, then rubbed it off on the inside of the bag.

“C’mon, bae. You know we can’t just let this go ‘cause it ain’t gonna get any better.”

Tessa’s legs tensed across him. Her ankle flexed, heel digging lightly into his thigh. She turned her head back toward him, eyes sharper now.

“For the thousandth time, I don’t know why y’all can’t just stop doing illegal shit. If you don’t want to have problems with cops then that’s the easiest fucking way to do it.”

His mouth pulled to one side.

“Making money aside, you really think that our Black ass ain’t gonna get bothered by the jakes just ‘cause we being some square ass nigga?”

Tessa’s lips pressed together. She stared at him. Her hand came up and picked at a loose thread along the seam of the couch cushion near her head. She tugged it once, then let it go.

“No, but it lowers the chances.”

E.J. let the silence sit for a beat. He reached down, set the bag of cracklin on the couch beside his thigh, and brushed his palms together. Crumbs rained off his fingers onto his shorts and the floor. He wiped the last of it on his knee, then leaned toward her, closing the space where her legs crossed him.

“Bae, all we need you to do is get Brent to like a hotel or something and let us in so we can plant something on him.”

Tessa’s eyebrows pulled together. She lifted her head off the armrest, neck tense. Her knees drew in just a fraction.

“Plant what on him?”

E.J. lifted one shoulder in a shrug that tried to look casual. His eyes cut away for a second, then back to her.

“I don’t know. Ramon ain’t tell us so we can’t say we knew if we get caught.”

Tessa’s mouth opened, then shut. She swallowed. Her fingers found her own nail, and she started worrying the edge of it with her teeth, small and quick. Her gaze held him, then broke to the TV for half a second, then came back.

“This sounds like you’re trying to set me up, too. What you think he’s gonna think if I say I want to go to a hotel with him?”

E.J. leaned back a little. His hands spread open over his thighs, palms up.

“I know, but just say you got the BGs if he try something and leave. We’ll be in and out.”

Tessa’s teeth sank into her nail again. She pulled her hand away, looked at the bitten edge, then pressed her thumb hard against it. Her eyes didn’t soften.

“What y’all trying to do with planting something?”

E.J. looked at her legs across him and let his hand rest on her shin. He kept his voice steady.

“Get him fired.”

Tessa blinked, slow. Her head tilted a fraction. Her eyebrows stayed drawn.

“That’s it?”

E.J. nodded once, firm.

“That’s it. We ain’t gonna hurt him or nothing. He just gonna have to go work in Metairie.”

Tessa’s fingers went back to her mouth. She bit at her nail again, then stopped and stared at the TV. Her breathing got louder in the quiet between them. The movie’s next scene threw light across her cheekbones, then shadow.

“Can I think about it?”

E.J. didn’t move right away. He stayed watching her, the way she kept her gaze forward. Then he nodded, slowly.

“Yeah. We ain’t trying to do nothing right now. Gotta get the ducks in a row.”

Tessa didn’t answer. She kept biting her nail, smaller now. Her foot twitched once on his thigh, and she stared at the TV, mouth tight, jaw working under her skin.

E.J. let out a long sigh and leaned back up into the couch, the cushion taking his weight again. He reached to the side and grabbed his bag of cracklin.

~~~

The car sat tucked into one of the back rows of the lot where the paint lines were faded and the asphalt had little pebbles pressed into it from years of heat. Sunlight bounced off windshields in hard flashes. A couple students cut across the lanes with backpacks slung low, heads down, moving with the same half-rush, half-drag that came with a day stacked too tight.

Inside Dez’s car, it was warmer than it needed to be.

Dez sat up front with his shoulders set, elbows close, phone held low over his lap. He scrolled with his thumb. The rearview mirror caught too much. Every time the glass reflected movement behind him, his gaze wanted to flick up. He kept it down.

In the backseat, Mireya leaned into the corner with one knee angled toward the door and her bag on the floor at her feet. The iced coffee rested in her hand. Trell had brought it already sweet, already cold. She tipped it and pulled a long sip through the straw, letting the cold roll down her throat.

Trell sat beside her with his legs spread, one arm draped along the top of the seat. His eyes moved over the lot in slow sweeps. When he spoke, it wasn’t loud.

“When’s the next time you going see that lame ass nigga in Georgia?”

Mireya turned her head toward him, straw still between her lips. She drew it out and ran her tongue along her lips, the ice in the cup shifting with a soft clatter.

“Few weeks, I guess. Why?”

Trell’s mouth pulled to the side as he looked at her, then he glanced forward for a second at the back of Dez’s head.

“Because I’m tired of sharing you with that Ben Carson nigga.”

The laugh came out of Mireya through her nose. She angled her body a little, shoulder brushing the seat, eyes narrowing.

“Who?”

Trell’s gaze held on hers. Then he waved a hand once, dismissive.

“Ben Carson. He ran for– Nevermind.”

Mireya shifted the cup to her other hand and let her head fall back against the seat. The headrest pressed into her hair.

“I always forget that you’re always reading the fucking news and shit.”

Trell’s teeth flashed quick when he smiled. He leaned forward just enough that his shoulder brushed hers.

“Just because I’m a hood nigga don’t mean I can’t be a smart nigga.”

He paused with his eyes on her cup, watching the way her fingers held it, the manicured nails. He let the moment sit.

“I’m gonna need your expertise soon. For a few things.”

His eyes slid up and flicked toward Dez. Dez’s head was buried in his phone, neck bent. The muscles along his jaw moved once.

Trell’s attention returned to Mireya. His voice stayed even.

“I’ll tell you about it as it come up, but I just need to know that I ain’t gotta be changing my plans based on no fuck shit.”

Mireya swallowed another mouthful of coffee and let the cold settle her for half a second. She nodded once.

“I got you. But I have midterms coming up.”

Trell sucked his teeth. “Ain’t I just told your ass that I don’t want to hear about no fuck shit? And the first thing out your mouth is what?”

Mireya shifted. She held his eyes.

“Midterms.”

Trell’s hand moved, palm up, fingers spread.

“No, fuck shit. Skip them. You ain’t gonna fail no freshman classes because you ain’t take a fucking midterm.”

Mireya’s fingers tightened around her cup until the plastic flexed. “Trell, no. You know how I feel about school.”

He rubbed his forehead with the heel of his hand. Then he flicked his fingers toward the middle of the seat, the gesture sharp and simple.

“Come here.”

Mireya slid over, the fabric of her jeans dragging across the seat. Her side pressed into his, warm through their clothes. Trell wrapped his arm around her shoulders and pulled her in.

He leaned closer, his mouth near her ear, his breath warm against her skin.

“Haven’t you been living good since you started fucking with me?”

Mireya’s eyes stayed forward on the windshield, on Dez’s hands, on the phone screen glow on his knuckles. She nodded.

Trell’s fingers pressed once into the top of her shoulder.

“What part of that got to do with that school shit?”

She turned her face toward him, close enough that she could see the clean edge he kept along his jaw.

“I know, but it’s what I want to do.”

Trell’s hand came up and caught her chin between his thumb and index finger. His touch was careful. It lifted her face and held it there.

“Baby, you’re a fucking star already. I really don’t like how you sell yourself short by thinking that you need to do what some other motherfuckers say you need to do to be important. You already important. Right now. That’s why I need you when I need you. I can’t count on no one else. Just you.”

The words slid into her the way they always did. She met his eyes in his hold, let the praise land where it wanted to.

In the front seat, Dez’s scrolling slowed. His head lifted the smallest bit. His eyes flicked up, caught the mirror for half a second, then dropped again to his phone.

Mireya let the cup rest against her thigh. “I just need a couple hours on those days. I can manage studying around it.”

Trell’s mouth tipped up. His grip on her chin eased. “That’s my girl. You always coming through for a nigga.”

Mireya looked out the window at the students coming from the buildings on the other side of the lot. “I got class.”

Trell nodded once. He leaned in and kissed her, firm and quick, his hand sliding off her chin as his mouth pressed to hers. When he pulled back, his eyes stayed on her.

Mireya slid back over to her side of the seat. She set the iced coffee into the cup holder, heard the plastic click against plastic, then grabbed her bag off the floor.

She pushed the door open and the outside noise hit immediately. A truck rumbled through the lane a row over. Someone laughed loud near the sidewalk. She stepped out and straightened, one hand still on the door edge, the other tightening on her bag strap.

In the driver’s seat, Dez finally looked up. His eyes caught her in the rearview mirror, following the line of her shoulders as she adjusted the strap and shifted her weight.

Before Mireya could shut the door, Trell called out to her from the backseat.

She paused with the door still open and leaned back in, upper body dipping into the car again. The cooler air inside brushed her face.

Trell held out a couple hundred dollar bills between two fingers, the green flashing quick in the light.

“Go buy you something nice.”

Mireya took the money. The bills were warm from his pocket. They folded into her palm easy. She smiled.

“If you insist.”

Trell’s eyes flicked over her face, then down her body, then back up, slow.

“Come by the house after you get off from work.”

She pulled back out and shut the door. She started down the row of cars with her shoulders squared, weaving between bumpers. Her shoes tapped on the asphalt in a steady rhythm.

Halfway down the row, she glanced to the side and caught movement near the next lane over. Kobe stood with another guy. Kobe’s head turned as she passed, eyes landing on her and staying there.

Mireya lifted her hand and gave him a small wave, fingers loose.

Kobe didn’t return it.

The other guy kept talking, mouth moving, but Kobe’s eyes stayed on her for another second before he finally looked back. Mireya’s hand dropped.

Shaking her head, she kept walking.

~~~

Tyree leaned on the counter, shoulders over the plate, tearing into the tacos fast enough that the fillings shifted and threatened to spill. He kept his eyes down, jaw working, elbows planted.

Paz stood on the opposite counter and watched him for a moment, quiet. Her gaze stayed on his hands, on the way he ripped, folded, and ate without slowing down. He felt her looking, even when he didn’t glance up.

He licked his fingers, one at a time, then reached for the bottle of Modelo beside the plate. The glass sat cold in his hand. He took a swig and set it back down.

Paz pushed off the counter and let her eyes stay on him as she spoke.

“You know you can sit down, right?”

Tyree laughed through a bite of taco, cheeks full. He chewed hard, swallowed, and tipped his chin toward her without turning all the way, mouth still shiny at the corners.

“Sorry, love. I been hungrier than a motherfucker today. You know this my early day.”

Paz shook her head and crossed the small space. She reached in, picked up the plate and the bottle, and lifted them clean off the counter.

Tyree held his hands out, palms up, fingers slick with grease. He leaned back a fraction, protest coming out before he stood.

“C’mon. I was eating.”

Paz rolled her eyes and carried the plate and bottle to the table. She placed them down in front of one chair, then sat. With her foot, she kicked the chair across from her out.

Tyree followed, wiping his fingers together as he walked. He dropped into the chair she’d pushed out and leaned forward again, reaching for the tacos before his weight fully settled. He dove right back into the food, head down, shoulders tight.

Paz let the silence sit. She watched him eat, listened to the apartment’s small noises threading through the quiet.

Tyree finished what was in his hand, swallowed, and grabbed the next taco without looking up.

Paz waited until he’d cleared his mouth. Then she asked, flat and direct.

“You find out what Mireya does for work?”

Tyree paused with the taco halfway up. He looked at her once, then dropped his eyes back to the plate. His mouth tightened for a second before he spoke.

“I asked her and she said to tell you to mind ya business.”

Paz’s eyebrows pulled in. She shifted in her chair, the legs moving under her, and planted her forearm on the table.

“Why would you just ask her?”

Tyree shrugged, shoulders rising and falling once. He spread his hands.

“What else was I supposed to do?”

Paz stared at him a beat, then flicked her eyes toward the hallway and back, impatience rising in her posture.

“I don’t know. Ask Caine or something.”

Tyree stopped eating. He lifted his head and held her gaze, surprised turning hard and quick. The pause stretched.

“You want me to just randomly ask this man about his baby mama? I wouldn’t even blame him if he batted the piss out me for that.”

He dropped his eyes, bit down on the taco again, and chewed.

Paz stayed still, watching him work through it.

Tyree swallowed and looked at her again, brow low. “Why it matter so much to you, anyway? Ain’t like she live here with you and Angela.”

Paz’s mouth opened and closed once. She leaned back a fraction, shoulders still tight.

“You don’t worry about what your friends do?”

Tyree shook his head, quick. He tore another bite off the taco, eyes still on the plate, voice sure. “I know what my potnas be doing. I be right there with them.”

Paz’s fingers found her nail and worried at it. Her gaze dropped to his hands, then lifted again, stubborn in her face.

“I just don’t like it. I think she’s doing something illegal and she’s got Camila to worry about, too.”

Tyree went still for a beat. His jaw worked once without food. Then he grabbed the Modelo, took another pull, and set it down with a short exhale through his nose.

“I be doing illegal shit. If she is, she slick as fuck because far as I know she just some chick that go to school for nursing.”

Paz leaned forward, frustration pushing her words toward the edge of her mouth. Her elbow slid across the table.

“It’s not–”

Tyree cut her off. His voice sharpened. “Fucking stop, bruh. You starting to sound like the people. Get out that girl pockets and mind your fucking business.”

Paz raised an eyebrow and held it there. Her mouth stayed closed. Her fingers stayed on her nail until the skin around it went pale.

Tyree shook his head, done. He dropped the last half eaten taco back on the plate. He tipped the Modelo up and downed it. Then he pushed back from the table, chair legs shifting under him.

He grabbed a napkin and wiped his hands, palm to palm, then over his fingers, the paper dragging over the grease. He stood with the napkin still in his hand and looked at Paz once, eyes tight.

“You done pissed me off, man. I’m out this bitch.”

Paz watched him go, silent. He walked past the table and crossed the small space toward the door.

Tyree opened the door and stepped out. The hall’s dim light slid in for a second. He didn’t look back. He closed the door behind him.

Paz leaned back in the chair, shaking her head.

~~~

Sara’s bedroom held heat even with the fan turning overhead. The lamp on the nightstand threw a dull, warm pool across the sheets and left the corners of the room in shadow.

Sara lay on her back near the headboard, hair spread across the pillow. Devin was over her, weight braced on his forearms, close enough that his warmth sat on her skin. Their mouths stayed together, the kiss deep and steady, building without hurry. His hand slid along her side and down to her hip, fingers spreading there.

Sara’s hands rested on his shoulders at first, then moved down his arms, feeling the muscle under his sleeves. She pulled him closer and his chest pressed into hers, breath shifting against her mouth. The bed gave under the change in weight. The comforter bunched at their hips. Her knee lifted and brushed his leg, a small nudge that made him adjust and settle between her thighs.

Devin’s mouth moved off hers for a second, then returned. He kissed her again, slower now, then faster. His hand at her waist tightened and eased, the movement controlled. Sara felt her own breathing change. She made a quiet sound against his mouth and her fingers curled into the fabric at the back of his shirt.

He kissed along the line of her jaw, then the corner of her mouth, then back. His knee pressed in closer. The room narrowed to heat, breath, and the small sounds of fabric shifting.

Sara let it build for a few seconds longer. The pull in her body wanted to keep going.

Her mind didn’t.

She opened her eyes and stared at the ceiling, then at the edge of the lamp shade. Devin’s hand moved lower and paused. The moment waited for her to decide.

Sara placed her palm flat on his chest and pressed, gentle and firm. Devin stopped immediately. He pulled back, letting the space open between them. Sara sat up and shifted against the headboard.

Devin stayed close, propped on one elbow. His eyes searched her face, eyebrows drawn together.

“Are you okay?”

Sara nodded, keeping her gaze on him. She reached up and tucked hair behind her ear, buying a beat.

“Yeah, I’m fine.”

Devin exhaled through his nose and shifted his hips, a small adjustment that made the mattress dip. His voice came out half joking, half strained.

“Why you keep stopping then? With the way you slow-walking this, I’m gonna bust as soon as I put it in.”

Sara shook her head. She lifted one hand and tapped the back of it with a single finger, the gesture pointed. Her eyes stayed steady on his.

“You got something that can take care of that if you don’t want to wait.”

Devin blinked once, then let out a short laugh. He held her gaze, the edge of a smile on his mouth, but his eyes stayed careful. He shifted his elbow higher and angled his body toward her.

“You into me, aren’t you?”

Sara nodded.

Devin’s shoulders eased a fraction. He reached out and rested his hand on the comforter near her knee. His voice softened, still direct.

“And I’m into you. Look, we old, girl. We can’t be crawling through things. You never know what might happen.”

Sara snorted and leaned her shoulder into the headboard, chin lifting. She kept her tone light, but her eyes stayed sharp.

“I don’t know about you, but I’m not old. I’m still in my prime.”

Devin lifted the hand, palm up in surrender, laughing under his breath. His head tipped back for a second, then returned to her.

“My bad, Ms. Guerra. Didn’t mean to age you. I’m just trying to understand how to make you feel comfortable with this.”

Sara watched him for a long moment. The fan kept turning. The city noise outside rose and fell. Devin waited, mouth closed now.

She kept her back against the headboard and let her eyes hold his. When she spoke, her voice stayed even.

“I’d feel much more comfortable if I knew what you were hiding.”

Devin’s eyebrows lifted. His mouth opened slightly, then closed. He held still, then gave a small shake of his head.

“Hiding?”

Sara nodded. She pulled one knee up and hooked her foot behind her other ankle, settling in. Her tone stayed calm, but her words didn’t soften.

“You’ve been acting weirder and weirder since you met Nicole. You know her from somewhere?”

Devin shook his head right away. He sat up a little, putting more of his weight into his elbow. His hand slid back toward himself.

“Like I said the other day, I’ve just heard of her boss. I know a lot of lawyers because of all the real estate deals. That’s it.”

Sara didn’t answer immediately. She looked at him, expression flat, waiting for the part that made it make sense.

“You been acting real off for someone who just knows of Markus.”

Devin scooted closer. The mattress dipped under his weight. He rested his hand back on her leg, fingers spread, the contact warm but light. His thumb moved once, then stopped. His voice stayed steady, earnest.

“Sara, I’m not lying to you. I assure you. I’ve had a few difficult clients close over the last few weeks so that might have thrown things off, too, but there’s nothing shady about me.”

Sara held his gaze and gave him nothing. The quiet stretched. Devin’s hand stayed where it was, but he stopped trying to soothe her with movement.

Sara’s eyes dropped to his hand, then back to his face. She could see him watching her, waiting for her to accept the answer.

She let the silence sit longer. Her body stayed composed against the headboard, shoulders relaxed, mouth neutral. Devin’s jaw worked once, then stilled.

Sara shifted first. She threw her legs over the side of the bed and planted her feet on the floor. She stood and smoothed her shirt down. She didn’t look at him right away.

Then she turned her head back toward the bed and asked, “Are you hungry? I haven’t eaten since this morning before I went to work.”

Devin dropped his head back against the pillow, eyes closing for a beat. His hand slid off her leg and landed on his own stomach. His voice came out rough with frustration, but the laugh was still there.

“You’re killing me, woman.”

Sara didn’t say anything as she walked out of the room.
User avatar

redsox907
Posts: 3796
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 22 Jan 2026, 23:05

Caesar wrote:
22 Jan 2026, 22:40
Real nooticers would know
didn't even read the update yet, but it just hit me

fucking Leo's phone. He gonna plant the pedo shit on Brent :kghah:

Soapy
Posts: 13694
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 23 Jan 2026, 07:41

Caesar wrote:
22 Jan 2026, 22:40
I'm still confused as to how she became a degen and murder not being beneath her
Brother, she got ole boy shot that "groomed her" and then set the play for that other pimp, forgot his name, to get killed by Trell and them
User avatar

redsox907
Posts: 3796
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 23 Jan 2026, 11:28

Soapy wrote:
23 Jan 2026, 07:41
Brother, she got ole boy shot that "groomed her" and then set the play for that other pimp, forgot his name, to get killed by Trell and them
Junebug, whom she got murked to keep Ramon quiet about her slurping dick and telling Caine. She also took a beating to set that one up, willing to sacrifice herself to keep her secret safe. Is she willing to sacrifice her familia? :hmm:
Caesar wrote:
22 Jan 2026, 22:40
Kobe didn’t return it.
Jordan too deep in the honeypot now, he already nearly lost it once. His homie saying he saw her with some hood dude ain't gonna change his mind

Devin definitely hiding something, he moving like someone trying to get the job done before he gets found out.
Post Reply