American Sun

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Caesar
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American Sun

Post by Caesar » 30 Jan 2026, 06:01

Debitum Acceptum

Caine was still on top of Laney when they finished, her nails digging hard into his back, leaving marks he'd feel later. Her thighs tightened around him, breath catching in her throat, then going ragged. He stilled, the pulse working through him, his weight pressing her into the mattress.

He stayed there for a second, breathing hard against her neck, skin slick with sweat. Then he flopped onto the bed beside her, the mattress dipping under him as he stretched out on his back. The ceiling fan turned overhead, blades whispering through the air. Laney's hair was a mess, dark strands stuck to her neck and cheek. She reached up, fingers threading through it, pulling at the tangles without much success.

She leaned over, breasts grazing his arm as she stretched for the joint she'd rolled earlier, fingers closing around it and the lighter beside it. She settled back against the pillows, one hand working through her hair again, the other turning the lighter over once before she brought it up.

Her phone lit up on the nightstand. She glanced at it, face blank, then looked away. The screen went dark again.

Caine watched her from the corner of his eye. She was focused on her hair now, working a knot loose near her temple, pulling strands back.

"Next time you in the mood like this," he said, "I'm gonna need at least a thirty-minute warning."

Laney rolled her eyes, hand dropping from her hair. "You wasn't sleeping anyway."

"That ain't the point." He turned his head to look at her. "I could've been otherwise occupied."

She ignored him. The lighter clicked once, twice, and the joint caught. She took a drag, held it, then let the smoke out slow through her nose. The smell filled the room, sharp and familiar. She passed it to him without looking.

Caine took it, fingers brushing hers. He brought it to his lips and pulled, the heat curling into his lungs, settling there before he let it out. Laney was watching the ceiling now, eyes tracking the fan blades.

"You know I could get used to this again," she said. "Sneakin' 'round at two in the mornin'."

Caine let out a short laugh through his nose, smoke still hanging in the air between them. "How you gonna swing that?"

Laney shrugged, one shoulder lifting and falling. She reached over and took the joint back, fingers plucking it from his. "My mama and daddy used to leave me and Caleb at home alone when we were eight and nine. And we ain't have family livin' right on top us." She took another pull, ash glowing orange in the dim light. "We turned out fine. 'Sides, them boys sleep like they got sixteen-hour shifts in a coal mine."

Caine stared at her. The words sat there, casual.

Laney glanced over, caught his expression. "What?"

He plucked the joint from her fingers. "You ain't turn out fine."

Laney's hand came up fast, slapping him in the chest with the back of it. "Dickhead." She shifted against the pillows, pulling her knee up slightly. "At least I wasn't out there stealin' nobody grandma's Oldsmobile."

Caine laughed, the sound low and rough. "Neither was I. Ain't nobody giving you no money for that."

Laney took the joint back, fingers brushing his again. She brought it to her lips and took a slow drag, eyes narrowing slightly as she looked at him. "Lord, you get on my last nerve sometimes."

"Yet here you are." Caine turned his head on the pillow, watching her profile. "Just keep on coming back like you addicted to it."

Laney ashed the joint on the nightstand, tapping it once, twice against the wood. She stared at the small pile of ash for a moment, then looked over at him. The fan blade shadows moved across her face. "Never said I ain't." She paused, tongue touching the corner of her mouth. "But not any more than you are."

Caine snorted, reaching for the joint again. He took it from her, brought it to his lips, and pulled deep. The smoke filled his chest and he held it there, counting the seconds in his head before he let it out. "Never said I ain't."

~~~

Trell was still on top of Mireya, her nails digging hard into his back, leaving marks that would still be there tomorrow. Her legs wrapped tight around him, breath catching in her throat, then going ragged. He stilled, the pulse working through him, his weight pressing her into the mattress.

He stayed there for a second, breathing hard against her neck, skin slick with sweat. Then pushed himself up, the mattress shifting under his weight as he stood. The floor was cool under his feet. He walked over to the dresser, movements easy, unhurried, like he had all the time in the world.

The blunt was sitting where he'd left it earlier, next to his phones and keys. He picked it up and brought it to his lips, thumb working the lighter until it caught. The flame flickered once, then steadied. He lit the tip and took a pull, holding the smoke in his lungs before he let it out slow toward the ceiling. The smell filled the room, sharp and thick.

Mireya moved behind him. He heard the sheets rustling as she pulled herself up, the headboard creaking when she settled back against it. He took another pull from the blunt, eyes drifting toward the window.

He turned and walked back to the bed, blunt between his fingers, smoke curling up toward the ceiling. Mireya sat with the sheets slung across her thighs, hair loose around her shoulders, eyes on him as he came closer. He got back in beside her, the mattress dipping under his weight.

"You know when we were in San Diego," he said, settling in next to her, "Gustavo tried to steal you away from me."

Mireya raised an eyebrow, head tilting slightly. "Yeah, what you say to that?"

Trell let out a short laugh through his nose, the sound easy, amused. "You one down ass bitch when you not letting school get in the way of your paper."

Mireya sighed, the sound soft but weighted. "Trell…"

He held his hands up, blunt still between his fingers, smoke rising between them. "I'm only trying to open your eyes to what's right in front of you, baby." He took another pull, then looked over at her. "How'd you feel just hopping on a plane and flying across the country?"

Mireya shrugged, one shoulder lifting and falling. "I liked it."

Trell put his arm around her shoulders and pulled her toward him. He looked down at her as he spoke, eyes on her face. "Exactly. Then you go in rooms and ain't scared of nothing. Cold ass bitch." He paused, letting that sit for a moment. "And I know you enjoyed that little shopping spree I took you on before we came back."

Mireya rolled her eyes, mouth pulling into a smile. "I would've liked it more if you ain't try to tell me what I could and couldn't get."

"I was trying to save some money on baggage fees, girl." Trell shifted his weight, arm still around her. "You know they be taxing niggas out here with that shit."

Mireya laughed, the sound light and real. "You got it like that."

"I could have a million dollars in my pocket," Trell said, voice even, "but I ain't about to pay no fees that I don't want to. That's hustling backwards."

Mireya looked up at him, head resting against his chest "I think I'm worth a fifty-dollar bag fee."

"No doubt." Trell nodded, the motion slow, deliberate. "No doubt."

He paused for a moment, the room going quiet. Then he reached over and grabbed her chin, fingers firm, tilting her face up so she had to look at him. His thumb pressed against her jaw, keeping her eyes on his.

"The reason I'm so hard on you about the school shit," he said, voice dropping lower, more serious, "is because I don't want you going out here and getting hurt thinking these college niggas understand you. They not gonna." He let that sit for a second, watching her face. "And they ain't gonna love you like you should be loved because they can't relate to you. To your shine. They gonna try to dim that."

Mireya's lips rolled into her mouth, pressing together as she listened. She didn't say anything. She just watched him, taking it in.

Trell kept going, his tone steady, certain. "Only people like you gonna be able to love you. That's why you and me work. We cut from the same cloth." He paused, thumb still pressed against her jaw. "You know what I'm saying?"

Mireya nodded, the movement small but there. The praise wrapped up in what he was saying did what it always did, settling into her chest. "Yeah," she said, voice soft. "I hear you."

Trell let go of her chin and brought the blunt back to his lips, taking another slow pull. The smoke leaked out through his nose as he settled back against the headboard, arm still around her shoulders, keeping her close.

~~~

E.J. set the plate down in front of Tessa, the ceramic clicking soft against the kitchen table. Eggs scrambled loose, bacon still steaming, a little grease pooling at the edge. The smell filled the small kitchen, mixing with the coffee he'd brewed earlier that sat cooling in a mug near her elbow.

Tessa sat with her hands folded in her lap, shoulders tight, eyes on the plate. The morning light came through the window behind her, thin and gray. Her hair was pulled back, a few strands loose around her face that she hadn't bothered to fix.

E.J. pulled out the chair next to her and sat down, the legs scraping against the linoleum. He leaned over, arm reaching across to her, hand settling on her forearm. His thumb moved slow over her skin, back and forth, the motion automatic. "You still good with this, right?"

Tessa picked up the fork. Her fingers closed around it, and she brought it down into the eggs, the tines breaking through the soft yellow. She didn't lift it. She just left it there, stuck in the middle of the plate. "I don't know." Her voice was quiet, careful. "Does this make me a bad person? That I'm helping y'all set someone up? Especially someone I know so well?"

E.J. shrugged, the movement easy, casual. His hand stayed on her arm. "I ain't the one that can answer that for you, bae." He watched her face, waiting for her eyes to come up to his. They didn't. "Only person gonna know is you so as long as you can sit with it then it's all good."

Tessa's thumb rubbed along the handle of the fork. She turned it slightly, making the eggs shift on the plate. "You've done worse stuff than this, right?"

E.J. stared at her. The question hung there between them, heavy and obvious. His jaw worked for a second, tongue pressing against the inside of his cheek while he decided how to play it. Then he nodded, slow and deliberate. "Yeah, I have." He paused, letting that sit. "But I get you ain't built like I'm built. That's why we only need you for the bare minimum."

Tessa put the fork down. It clinked against the plate, a small sharp sound in the quiet kitchen. Her hands went back to her lap and she sighed, the breath coming out long and tired.

"You know the last time you went inside, that almost broke me." Her eyes finally came up to meet his. "When they were throwing all those numbers out there. I thought I'd never see you again."

E.J. smiled, the expression coming easy, almost reflexive. "System can't hold a real nigga, girl."

Tessa smiled back, but it didn't reach her eyes. Sadness sat there instead, quiet and stubborn. "I just wanted you to know that." Her voice dropped lower. "And to know that I love you and that's why I'm helping y'all because I can't see you locked up again because some guy wants to fuck me and you're in the way of that."

E.J. laughed, the sound surprised and genuine. "That's a wild way to put that."

Tessa's eyebrows pulled together, her face shifting from sad to something sharper. "E.J., I'm being serious right now."

E.J. held his hand up, palm out, still smiling but reining it in. "My bad." He let the smile fade and his voice dropped into something softer. "I love you, too."

Tessa stared into his eyes, the moment stretching out between them. The kitchen went quiet except for the faint hum of the refrigerator and the tick of the clock on the wall. She leaned forward, closing the space between them, and kissed him. Her hand came up to his jaw, fingers light against his skin. The kiss was slow, intentional.

When she pulled back, her hand lingered on his face for a second before she dropped it.

"When this is over, can we go somewhere?" Her voice was still soft, but there was something hopeful threading through it now. "Just the two of us? To get out of the city and away from everything for a bit."

E.J. nodded. "Yeah." He shifted in his chair, arm still resting near her on the table. "Where you want to go?"

"Fairhope."

E.J. shook his head. "That's some white girl shit."

Tessa rolled her eyes, half annoyed, half amused. She picked the fork back up and poked at the eggs again, breaking them apart without any intention of eating them. The tines scraped against the plate, a soft grating sound that filled the space where words had been.

~~~

Nicole pulled the door open and stepped back, eyes going straight to the dress Sara was wearing. "You look nice."

Sara rolled her eyes and walked past her into the apartment, heels clicking twice on the hardwood before she kicked them off near the door. She dropped down onto the couch with a heavy sigh, letting herself sink into it.

"I had to do the whole good Catholic thing today." She adjusted the dress where it had bunched at her hips, smoothing it down with one hand. "No matter how many times I tell mi mama that I'd rather not, she pulls me back in."

Nicole closed the door and followed her over, the latch clicking into place with a solid sound that echoed briefly in the quiet apartment.. She sat down beside Sara, the couch dipping under her weight, springs shifting beneath the fabric. "At least your mother isn't trying to get you set up with some guy who wants fourteen kids and to live on a homestead out in the middle of nowhere near the Mississippi state line."

Sara snorted a laugh. "That's probably because a man like that wouldn't want me considering I already got one of those fictional fourteen."

Nicole rolled her eyes. She shifted on the couch, turning slightly to face Sara, one arm stretching along the back of the cushions. "Speaking of men, what happened on your date last night with Devin?"

Sara sighed. She let her head drop back against the sofa cushions, eyes tracking the ceiling, following a thin crack that ran from the corner toward the light fixture. Outside, a car passed on the street below, the sound rising and fading.

"Didn't happen. He just texted me out of nowhere, said something came up at work and we haven't talked since."

Nicole's expression shifted, sympathy giving way to something sharper, more critical. Her mouth pressed into a thin line and her eyebrows pulled together. "Oh, girl, I think it's time for you to cut him off." She leaned forward slightly, elbows on her knees now, voice firm and direct. "You don't even like him enough to be letting him get away with all of this."

Sara sucked her teeth. Her head came up off the cushions and she turned to look at Nicole, shoulders tightening. "Yes, I do." The words came out hard, clipped and firm. "I just feel like I should be giving him the benefit of the doubt or something, right? It's not like we're two teenagers. We're grown. And got grown problems and lives."

Nicole tilted her head, eyes narrowing slightly, studying Sara's face. "I was talking to my friend Julia about this."

Sara's eyebrows pulled together. She sat up straighter, shoulders squaring. "You gossiping about me with your friends?"

Nicole waved off the comment, hand cutting through the air between them. "I offer to bring you with me every time I go see them. You're the one that wants to stay cooped up in your apartment." She paused, letting that land. Her voice dropped slightly. "Anyway, I think she figured it out."

Sara's jaw tightened, muscles working beneath the skin. Her fingers pressed into the fabric of her dress where it lay across her thighs. "Yeah? What she figured out?"

"He's got a wife." Nicole said. No preamble, no softening. "Probably some kids."

Sara pushed herself up to her feet, the movement quick and sharp. The dress shifted around her legs as she stood. "That's ridiculous."

Nicole stayed where she was on the couch, looking up at her. "Is it?"

"Yes." Sara's voice was firm, clipped. She started toward the kitchen, already putting distance between them. "I work at hotels, remember? I can tell when a married man is creeping."

Nicole turned on the couch, arm draped over the back so she could watch Sara move into the kitchen. "I think it makes total sense."

Sara ignored her, already opening cabinets, fingers running along the edges of bottles and boxes, searching. The door hinges creaked softly. Glass clinked against glass as she pushed things aside. "You got some wine?"

Nicole's voice came from the living room, amused now. "What happened to being a good Catholic today?"

Sara called over her shoulder without looking back. "I'm drinking the blood of Jesus."

~~~

Smoke rose from the grill where Carlos stood with tongs in one hand, flipping burgers and hot dogs while Javier stood next to him with a beer, talking shit about something that made Carlos laugh and wave him off.

Caine sat at one of the plastic tables with Dwight, Donnie, and Keanon, cards fanned out in his hand. Empty beer bottles sat scattered across the surface, sweating rings into the white plastic. Terrell and Jaylen were over by the grill with a few other guys from the team, voices carrying across the space in bursts of laughter and arguing.

Donnie looked at his hand, squinting at the cards. He shifted in his seat, the plastic chair creaking under him. "I got four and a possible."

Dwight dropped his cards face down on the table and looked at Donnie. "Nigga, don't start with that possible shit. Either you got four or you got five. Pick one."

Keanon leaned back in his chair, one arm draped over the backrest, grinning. "Should've been started docking his ass for that shit when we finished the first game."

Caine kept his eyes on his cards, mouth pulling into a small smile. "Y'all only want to dock him because we beat y'all asses in the first game."

Donnie reached across the table, hand extended toward Caine. Caine met it halfway, their palms slapping together in a quick dap. "Let these niggas know." Donnie turned his attention back to Dwight and Keanon, voice louder, animated. "Y'all lucky we ain't put no money on this because we would've been running y'all pockets all day."

Dwight sucked his teeth, the sound sharp and dismissive. He picked up his cards again, shaking his head. "You dirty ass Louisiana nigga would probably just snatch it off the table and run off with it."

Caine jabbed his thumb in Keanon's direction without looking up from his hand. "Don't forget he from Louisiana, too."

Keanon waved the comment off, hand cutting through the air between them. "Y'all don't get to pick and choose when I'm from Louisiana and I ain't." He shifted in his seat, leaning forward with his elbows on the table. "This one on y'all from them big cities."

Donnie gestured at Keanon with his cards, the motion loose and easy. "This why we say you part of Texas."

Caine and Dwight laughed, the sound mixing with the noise from the grill and the music someone had playing from a speaker somewhere behind them. Dwight looked at his cards one more time, then pulled one and laid it down in the center of the table. The card hit the plastic with a soft tap.

Donnie followed up, playing his card without hesitation. Keanon went next, then Caine. The cards sat in a loose pile in the middle of the table. Keanon reached over and pulled them toward him, claiming the book.

Dwight leaned back in his chair, the legs scraping against the concrete. He looked around the picnic area, eyes tracking the guys standing by the grill, the empty tables, the parking lot beyond. "You know it's crazy we ain't got no bitches out here. Ratio way off." He turned his head toward Caine, eyebrows raised. "I know you got the hoes. Where they at bruh?"

Caine held his hand without the cards in it up, palm out, the gesture casual and final. "Every time I get bitches to come somewhere for y'all, y'all can't close. Y'all on y'all own now."

Dwight shook his head, mouth pulling into a grin even as he talked shit. "Stingy ass nigga."

The game continued, cards being played and books being taken, the rhythm of it easy and familiar. Donnie leaned back in his chair, tilting his head toward the grill where Carlos was still working. He cupped his hands around his mouth and shouted across the space. "Say, Los! When them burgers gonna be ready?!"

Carlos looked up from the grill, spatula in hand, and waved it at Donnie. "Five minutes, nigga!"

Caine shook his head, a small laugh escaping before he could stop it. "Always thinking about food."

Keanon played his next card and grinned. "That's why coach got him on a diet."

The table erupted in laughter, Donnie included, his shoulders shaking as he reached for his beer and took a long pull. He set it down and flipped them all off with both hands, still laughing. "Fuck y'all."

Caine played his card, the movement automatic, eyes still tracking the conversation. The sun cut through the pine branches overhead, casting moving shadows across the table. A breeze picked up, carrying the smell of burgers and charcoal across the picnic area.

~~~

The house was full, family spread out through the rooms and spilling into the backyard like the gathering had a life of its own. The kitchen smelled like potato salad and ham, sweet tea sweating in pitchers on the counter. Voices layered over each other, coming from the back patio where Marianne sat with Pastor Hadden, from the living room where Caleb had his phone pressed to his ear, from the yard where the boys ran circles around Jesse, Tommy and Blake.

Laney stood in the kitchen with Gabrielle, drink in hand, the condensation making her palm damp. She laughed, head tilted toward Gabrielle's phone as she scrolled through something that had them both grinning.

Gabrielle tapped the screen and a video started playing. Laney leaned in closer, watching, and then her shoulders shook with laughter.

"I ain't never seen nobody run like that. You would've thought he was runnin' from Michael Myers."

Gabrielle laughed. "He did like to go to Lake Lanier. Might've been something worse to run from."

Laney shook her head, still grinning. "I cain't trust no one that would be willin' to go there."

"Right?" Gabrielle was still scrolling, already pulling up the next thing to show her.

The front door slammed. The sound cut through the house, sharp and violent enough to make both of them look up. Rylee came storming through, heels loud on the hardwood, her face twisted with something that looked like rage and heartbreak fighting for space. She went first toward the back door, then spotted Laney standing in the kitchen and pivoted hard.

She stomped over, her hand coming up and throwing something down on the floor between them. The Georgia collage lighter hit the tile and skittered toward the cabinet. Rylee pointed a finger in Laney's face, close enough that Laney could smell the weed on her clothes. "You're fuckin' him! I found that fuckin' lighter at his apartment. You been usin' it."

Laney's stomach dropped. She glanced at Gabrielle, whose eyes had gone wide, then stepped closer to Rylee, lowering her voice, teeth clenched. "Lower your fuckin' voice."

Rylee's voice went louder instead, sharp and cutting, carrying through the house. "Fuck you! I told you that I had feelin's for someone and it turns out that you're fuckin' him!"

Laney's hand came up, palms out. "Rylee, stop it."

Rylee sniffed hard, her hand coming up under her eyes, smearing tears across her cheek. Her voice cracked. "How long? Huh? How long y'all be sneakin' 'round?"

Laney shook her head, already backing toward the counter. "I'm not doin' this with you right now."

Rylee's voice rose to a shout, raw and jagged. "You always get every fuckin' thing. Everyone loves you 'cause you're fuckin' Miss Perfect. Soon as I decided I wanted somethin', of course you already fuckin' got it. Fuck you, Laney!"

Gabrielle stepped around them, hands up, her face tight with discomfort. She slipped out of the kitchen toward the living room. Caleb had lowered the phone from his ear, his hand mostly covering the receiver, eyes on the scene unfolding.

Marianne came in from the back patio, her face set in that expression that said she'd heard enough to know this wasn't normal sibling fighting. "Why are the two of you shouting?"

Rylee turned toward her mother, arm extending, finger pointing straight at Laney. "'Cause she's fuckin' Caine."

The air went out of the room. Marianne's hand came up to her mouth, her eyes widening. "That boy at the church?"

Laney's voice came out hard and desperate. "Rylee, fuckin' stop. Now."

Rylee sucked her teeth, tears falling freely now, her face wet and blotchy. Her voice dropped into something crueler, more pointed. "He's a good lay, ain't he?"

Pastor Hadden came through the back door into the house, his frame filling the doorway. His eyes swept the room, taking in his daughters, his wife, the tension crackling in the air.

Marianne's voice was tight, controlled, but shaking underneath. "Delaney, tell me that you didn't do that to your husband."

Laney turned toward her mother, the anger finally breaking through. "Every fuckin' thing ain't 'bout fuckin' Tommy."

Pastor Hadden's voice cut through. "Delaney. Watch your mouth."

Laney turned back to Rylee, trying to salvage something, anything. "We can talk 'bout this later."

Rylee was already walking toward the front door, her steps quick and unsteady. "I'm good. I'm sure you'll be too busy gettin' fucked by Caine later."

Pastor Hadden's eyes went wide. His jaw clenched so hard the muscles jumped in his cheek. His fists curled at his sides, knuckles going white.

Rylee stormed out the front door, slamming it behind her hard enough to rattle the frame.

Marianne turned back to Laney, voice rising. "You need to answer us, Delaney."

Laney started to turn toward her mother's voice, mouth opening to say something, anything, when Pastor Hadden's hand came across her face. The sound of the slap was sharp and clean, skin on skin, loud enough to echo. Laney's head snapped to the side from the impact, her body stumbling back into the counter. Pain bloomed hot across her cheek.

Gabrielle gasped, both hands flying to her mouth.

Caleb ended his call with a single tap, phone lowering to his side. He looked at Gabrielle and his voice came out calm, measured. "Go tell Jesse to keep the boys outside."

Pastor Hadden's voice was a roar, filling the kitchen, shaking the walls. "You fucked that n*gger in my church?!"

He swung at her again, this time with a closed fist. Laney threw her arm up, blocking her face. His fist caught her on the forearm, the impact sending pain shooting up to her shoulder.

Gabrielle skirted around them toward the back door, moving fast, her face pale.

Pastor Hadden was shouting now, the words coming out in a torrent. "How dare you defile the House of God?!"

He hit her again. This time his fist connected with her face, catching her cheekbone and splitting her lip. Blood filled her mouth, hot and metallic. The force sent her falling, her knees hitting the tile hard, hands going out to catch herself.

His voice boomed above her. "And committing the sin of adultery!"

He grabbed her by the hair, his fingers twisting into it, yanking her head back. Laney yelped, the sound high and involuntary, her hands flying up to claw at his wrist, trying to ease the pressure on her scalp. Pain seared across her head as he hauled her to her feet, pulling so hard she felt strands tearing.

He shoved her across the kitchen. She stumbled, fell, her side slamming into the corner of the wall between the kitchen and dining room. The impact knocked the breath out of her lungs.

Caleb took a few steps out of the way toward the wall, giving his father room. His face was blank, unreadable.

Marianne stood with her hand still over her mouth, her eyes wide but not moving, not saying anything.

Pastor Hadden grabbed Laney's hair again, his grip brutal, and dragged her across the floor. Her feet scrambled for purchase on the wood, hands still clawing at his wrist. He pulled her down the hall toward his office, his voice filling the house, shouting scripture, shouting damnation, the words blurring together into a wall of sound.

He reached his office door and shoved it open with his free hand, then dragged her inside and slammed the door behind them. The sound echoed through the house.

Gabrielle came back in through the back door with Tommy. Tommy shut the door quietly behind them, his face carefully neutral. They stood in the living room with Caleb and Marianne, the four of them frozen.

The sound of impacts came through the office door. Fist on skin, heavy and dull. Pastor Hadden's voice was still shouting, demanding confession, demanding apology, demanding penance. Something shattered inside the office, glass breaking, the sound sharp.

Laney cried out, the sound muffled by the door but unmistakable.

Another impact. Another cry.

Then Laney's voice, raw and desperate, cutting through everything else. "Daddy, stop hittin' me."

Gabrielle looked around at the others, her voice barely above a whisper. "Should we—"

Caleb shook his head once, the motion small but definitive.

Marianne patted Gabrielle on the arm, her voice soft. "She just needs correction."

Tommy snorted a laugh.

The sounds continued. More impacts. More shouting. Laney's voice again, begging, crying. The house held it all, the walls absorbing every sound, every word, every blow.

Then it stopped. The silence was sudden and heavy, pressing down on the house like a weight.

The office door swung open, banging against the wall. Pastor Hadden came walking down the hall, his chest heaving, breath coming hard and fast. His shirt was untucked, his tie loosened. Sweat darkened his collar.

Marianne's eyes dropped to his hand. "Your knuckles."

He looked down. His knuckles were split, blood welling up in the cracks, dripping onto the hardwood.

Marianne went to the kitchen and pulled a clean towel from the drawer. She came back and handed it to him, her movements efficient, practiced.

Laney came stumbling out of the office, one hand braced against the wall to keep herself upright. Her other arm was wrapped around her stomach, holding herself together. Her left eye was already swelling, the skin around it darkening to purple. Her lip was split, blood running down her chin. Bruises were forming on her arms, dark fingerprints and the red marks that would turn black by tomorrow.

She didn't look at any of them. She kept her eyes on the floor, on the door, on anything but her family standing there watching.

Gabrielle took a half step toward her, hand lifting slightly.

Caleb's voice was quiet. "Gabi, leave it."

Tommy shifted his weight, arms crossed. "She's a big girl. She'll be alright."

Laney reached the front door. Her hand shook as she turned the knob, her movements slow and careful, everything hurting. She pulled the door open and walked out into the afternoon sunlight, leaving the house behind.

~~~

Mireya lay on the couch, the silence thick and luxurious in a way it almost never was. Camila was at Elena's, the apartment empty except for the hum of the refrigerator and the occasional sound of footsteps from upstairs. Someone's TV bled through the wall, muffled voices and canned laughter she could feel more than hear.

She held a skirt up in her hands, turning it over, the fabric barely longer than the distance from the top of her middle finger to the bottom of her palm. Black, shiny, something that caught the light when she moved it. Trell had pulled it off a rack in San Diego and handed it to her without asking if she wanted it. She ran her thumb over the material, smooth and thin at the same time.

She tossed it onto the armchair where the rest of the clothes from the trip sat in a pile. Tags still on most of them. She hadn't bought hangers yet. Kept meaning to, kept forgetting, kept leaving them there in a messy stack she told herself she'd get to eventually. The pile had grown over the week, shirts and another skirt and a pair of shoes.

The pounding on the door started sudden and loud, fist on wood, insistent and angry. Her eyebrows pulled together. She pushed herself up from the couch, bare feet silent on the carpet as she moved to the door. The pounding came again before she got there, harder this time. She leaned up on her toes and looked through the peephole.

Jordan stood on the other side, shoulders tight, jaw set. Even through the distortion of the peephole she could see the tension in his face.

Her expression softened. She unlocked the deadbolt, then the chain, then the doorknob. She pulled the door open, smile spreading across her face. "Hey, baby. I didn't know you were going to drop by tonight."

Jordan stepped inside without looking at her, his shoulder turning away when she reached out to hug him. He walked around her into the living room, movements stiff and controlled, deliberate. His hands stayed at his sides, fingers curled slightly. "Didn't know that I was going to stop by either."

Mireya closed the door and followed him, the latch clicking soft behind her. She stepped close and wrapped her arms around his waist from behind, pressing her chest against his back. This time he let her, but his body stayed rigid under her touch. She looked up at him, smile still in place, trying to read the set of his shoulders, the way he wouldn't turn his head to look at her. "I missed you this week. Why haven't you been answering my texts?"

"Been busy." His voice was flat, distant. He still hadn't looked at her.

Mireya's smile faltered slightly. Her arms loosened around him. "Did I do something wrong?"

Jordan's eyes moved away, tracking across the room to the pile of clothes on the armchair. The tags caught the afternoon light coming through the window, bright red and white against the dark fabric. He stared at them for a long moment. He didn't look back at her when he spoke. "Where were you last weekend?"

"I told you. I was with Sara." The lie came easy, automatic.

Jordan's jaw tightened, the muscle jumping. "You need a suitcase to go places with your baby daddy's mother? And that's an all weekend thing?"

Mireya stepped back, her arms dropping from around him. The space opened up between them, cold and sudden. The smile fell from her face completely. Her heart started beating faster. "You been following me?"

Jordan shook his head, still not looking at her. "I came over here to bring you some food because you're always complaining about work but here I find out that you getting flown out places."

Mireya's voice rose, defensive. "I told you to stop fucking accusing me of shit. What do I need to do to make you believe m—"

Jordan snapped, turning on her, his voice exploding into a shout. "The woman across the hall saw you! Stop it. Stop lying to my fucking face!"

Mireya held up her hands, palms out, her voice dropping into something softer, more placating. "Look. Mrs. Ella Mae over there is getting old. Her eyes aren't great."

Jordan's voice went louder, cutting through her words like a knife. His whole body turned toward her now, shoulders square, eyes blazing. "Stop talking to me like I'm fucking stupid, Mireya!" He took a step toward her, closing the distance she'd just created. His voice filled the small apartment, bouncing off the walls. "Kobe saw you with some motherfucker in the parking lot and now this? What is he? Your sugar daddy? One of your OF 'collab' partners? How much is he giving you to fuck him, Mireya?"

Mireya's face fell, the color draining from her cheeks. She felt the floor shift under her feet. Her voice came out smaller now, strained, almost pleading. "Jordan, baby. Loo—"

He cut her off again, the word sharp and vicious. "Don't fucking call me that. Don't you fucking dare."

Mireya flinched like he'd raised his hand to her, her whole body jerking back. Her shoulders came up, protective. She took a deep breath, trying to steady herself, trying to find solid ground that kept slipping away. Her hands were shaking now. "Okay, I'm sorry. It's not what it looks like."

Jordan laughed, but there was no humor in it. The sound was bitter and cruel. He ran his hand through his hair, shaking his head. "You know Maddy clocked you. On Mardi Gras Day? She knew you had just gotten fucked. What'd you do suck some fucking dick right before meeting my fucking family?! How fucking disgusting."

Mireya pressed her lips together, trying to hold it together and failing. Tears pricked at her eyes, hot and sudden. She took a step toward him, hand reaching out for his. "Please, let me expl—"

Jordan yanked his hand back like she'd burned him, disgust twisting his face. "Don't fucking touch me."

The look on his face broke something in her. A sob choked out of her throat, her body shaking as the tears started falling freely. "Jordan, please stop. I can explain."

Jordan's lip curled up in a sneer. "How many times did you fuck someone else before you saw me? Do I need to go get fucking tested?"

Mireya shook her head, hand pressed to her forehead, fingers digging into her skin. "I'm clean."

Jordan snorted, the sound harsh and dismissive. "Clean's a fucking stretch. You might not have shit yet, but you're a dirty fucking gutter slut."

The words hit her like fists. Her legs went weak. She cried harder, the sobs coming fast and desperate, almost hysterical. The fear was overwhelming now, drowning everything else. She choked out the words through tears. "Please stop. I'm not what you think I am."

Jordan's voice was cold, cutting. "Then fucking tell me what you are."

She opened her mouth. Started to say something. "I—" Then stopped. The words wouldn't come. "I can't. It's complicated."

Jordan's face twisted with something that looked like pain mixed with rage. "Was everything a lie? Did you ever even really give a fuck about me?"

Mireya could only shake her head, then nod, the movements jerky and confused. She couldn't speak. Her throat was too tight, the sobs still wracking her chest.

Jordan scoffed and turned toward the door, already done with her.

Mireya lunged forward, grabbing his wrist with both hands, desperation making her movements clumsy. "Please let me explain."

Jordan ripped his arm out of her grasp, the motion violent. "Get your fucking nasty ass hands off me. Fuck's wrong with you?"

The force of him pulling away sent her stumbling. Her knees hit the floor hard, the impact jarring. She stayed there, kneeling on the floor, sobbing so hard she could barely breathe. Her whole body shook with it.

Jordan shook his head, looking down at her with something that might have been pity mixed with contempt. He turned and walked out of the apartment, the door slamming behind him hard enough to rattle the frame.

Mireya stayed on her knees, hands pressed to her face, sobbing into her palms.

She pulled her hands away from her face long enough to drag in a shaky breath, then pressed them back, the sobs starting fresh.

The crying intensified, her whole body convulsing with it. She curled forward, forehead nearly touching the carpet, arms wrapped around herself. The apartment was too quiet. The silence pressed down on her, heavy and suffocating.

She didn't know how long she stayed like that. Time slipped away from her, measured only in the waves of panic that kept crashing over her, pulling her under again and again. Eventually the sobs slowed, her body too exhausted to keep producing them at the same intensity. But the shaking didn't stop.

She pushed herself up off the floor finally, movements slow and unsteady. Her knees ached from where they'd hit the carpet. Her face felt swollen, eyes burning. She moved to the couch and collapsed onto it, pulling her knees to her chest, wrapping her arms around them.

The pile of clothes stared at her from the armchair. She stared back, vision blurry with leftover tears.

Her phone buzzed on the couch cushion next to her. She didn't look at it. Didn't want to know who it was.

She closed her eyes and tried to breathe. The sobs started again, quieter this time but no less desperate. She pressed her face into her knees and let them come, her whole body shaking.

~~~

Ramon sat on one of the two beds in the hotel room, back against the headboard, legs stretched out in front of him. The room was standard, cheap. Beige walls, darker stains on the carpet near the bathroom, the smell of old cigarette smoke baked into everything no matter how much air freshener the cleaning staff sprayed.

Tyree lay on the other bed, sprawled out on his back, one arm behind his head, phone in his other hand. The glow lit his face from below, casting shadows under his cheekbones. He scrolled without looking up, thumb moving in lazy swipes.

E.J. sat on the coffee table in front of the chair in the corner, elbows on his knees, hands clasped between them. His leg bounced slightly, a nervous energy he couldn't quite keep still. The table creaked under his weight every time he shifted.

A knock came at the door. Three sharp raps, evenly spaced.

Ramon pushed himself off the bed and crossed the room in a few strides. He leaned forward and looked through the peephole, the fisheye lens distorting the hallway into a bubble. Tessa stood on the other side, alone, hands empty except for a phone.

He unlocked the deadbolt and pulled the door open.

Tessa stepped inside, already holding the phone out to him. "He’s taking a shower."

Ramon took it from her without comment. Behind him, Tyree lifted his head off the pillow and looked at E.J., a grin spreading across his face. "You were smart to sit in front of that chair, nigga."

E.J. shook his head, jaw tight. "Don't start that shit right now, man."

Ramon crossed the room to where their backpacks sat lined up against the wall near the bathroom. He crouched down and unzipped the front pocket of the middle one, reaching inside and pulling out another phone. He stood and carried both phones back to the bed, sitting down with them in his hands.

He plugged the phones into each other using a small cable he'd pulled from his pocket, the connector clicking into place on both devices. The screens lit up simultaneously. He looked up at Tessa. "It's gonna take about ten minutes."

Tessa shifted her weight from one foot to the other. "How much, whatever, are you putting on his phone?"

Ramon's eyes went back to the screens. "Enough."

E.J. looked at her, his voice softer than it had been a moment ago. "You still good with everything, right?"

Tyree didn't lift his eyes from his own phone. "Stop being a bitch, nigga. She a big girl and she already halfway there. Might as well just see it all the way through."

E.J. shook his head, pushing himself up from the coffee table. He walked over to Tessa and wrapped an arm around her shoulder, pulling her against his side. She leaned into him, her hand coming up to rest on his chest.

The room fell into silence. The only sounds were the faint hum of the heating unit under the window and the occasional buzz of one of their phones vibrating against fabric or wood. Ramon watched the progress bars on both screens, twin lines creeping from left to right, filling in slowly. Blue on one phone, green on the other.

Files moved from one device to another in a steady stream. Pictures first, then videos, the thumbnails too small to make out clearly but the file sizes telling enough of the story. Ramon had created a folder deep in the iCloud files on Brent's phone, buried several levels down in a directory he'd found labeled "High School Baseball pics." Old enough to look forgotten. Innocuous enough that nobody would go looking through it unless they had a reason.

The progress bars moved. Fifty percent. Sixty. Seventy.

Tessa's breathing was the loudest thing in the room now, a little too fast, a little too shallow. E.J.'s thumb rubbed small circles on her shoulder through her shirt. Tyree had set his own phone down on his chest, eyes on the ceiling, hands folded behind his head.

Eighty percent. Ninety.

Ramon watched the final files transfer, the bars completing, the confirmation message appearing on both screens simultaneously. He unplugged the cable and set his phone down on the bed. He stood and walked to the bathroom, flipping on the light. The brightness spilled out into the main room in a harsh yellow rectangle.

He grabbed a towel from the rack, white and thin and scratchy from too many washings. He walked back to the bed and picked up Brent's phone, wrapping the towel around it carefully. He wiped down every surface, the screen, the back, the edges, the buttons. Methodical and thorough. When he was satisfied, he walked back to Tessa, the towel still covering the phone, and held it out to her.

She took it, her fingers closing around the fabric.

"So, that's it?" Her voice was quiet, uncertain.

Ramon nodded once. "That's it."

Tessa turned toward the door, her movements slow, hesitant. She glanced over her shoulder one last time, eyes finding E.J.'s face.

E.J. straightened. "I'm gonna walk you back."

Tessa nodded. They moved to the door together, E.J.'s hand on the small of her back. He opened it and they stepped out into the hallway, the door swinging shut behind them with a soft click. The deadbolt didn't engage. They'd be back in a few minutes.

Tyree sat up on the bed, elbows on his knees now, eyes on the phone Ramon had left sitting on the comforter. He nodded toward it. "So, what was on there?"

Ramon walked back to his backpack and pulled out a bottle of water, twisting the cap off. He took a drink before answering. "Some shit Asia got off a pedophile John for me."

Tyree laughed, the sound low and genuinely amused. He shook his head. "I ain't think you were setting up bro that bad. They about to fuck him up in OPP. A cop and a chomo? Is the pack gas or what?"

Ramon didn't answer. He set the water bottle down on the nightstand and walked back to the bed where Leo's phone still sat. He picked it up, turning it over in his hand once, looking at the cracked screen protector, the scuffed case. Then he dropped it on the floor and placed his heel over it.

He pulled up on the phone, putting his full weight down through his heel. The phone resisted for a second, then gave with a sharp crack. Plastic splintered. Glass crunched. He shifted his weight and pulled again, the phone bending further, components snapping inside. One more pull and it broke completely in two, the screen separating from the body, wires and circuit boards exposed between the pieces.

~~~

Ant sat in the front passenger seat of Yola's car, wrapping tape around the stock of a pistol. He wound it carefully, each loop overlapping the last, covering the grip completely. His movements were methodical, unhurried.

Shad sat in the back seat, watching through the gap between the front seats. The car was parked on a dark street two blocks from Boogie's apartment complex, engine off, windows cracked just enough to let the night air in without drawing attention.

Yola sat behind the wheel, eyes on the rearview mirror, tracking a car that rolled past slow before turning at the corner. He didn't say anything. Just watched and waited.

Ant finished taping the gun and set it in his lap. He reached down between his feet and picked up a takeout bag from Wing Stop, the paper already darkened with grease stains, the smell of lemon pepper and hot sauce filling the car. He held it back toward Shad without turning around.

Shad took the bag from him, the weight of it shifting in his hands. "What's this for?"

"Go up there and make sure no one got a ring camera. Just put the bag in front of someone's door."

Shad looked from Ant to Yola. Yola only shrugged, his expression flat and uninterested. Shad opened the back door and slid out, his sneakers hitting the pavement with a soft scuff. He shut the door quietly and started walking toward the apartment complex, the bag swinging slightly at his side.

Ant watched him go in the side mirror, then picked up the gun again, checking the magazine, the chamber one more time before sliding it into his waistband at the small of his back.



A blonde woman knelt on the floor in front of the couch where Boogie sat, his jeans open, head tilted back against the cushions. The TV was on, volume low, some movie playing that neither of them was watching.

She worked for a minute longer, then abruptly leaned back and stood up, wiping her mouth with the back of her hand. "Hold on, baby. I gotta go get something out of my car."

Boogie nodded, eyes still half-closed. "Don't take too long."

She grabbed her keys from the counter and walked out the door, pulling it shut behind her. Her heels clicked down the breezeway toward the stairs.

Boogie waited a few seconds, then pushed himself up from the couch and walked to the kitchen. He pulled a bottle of vodka from the freezer and poured himself a shot, the liquid thick and cold in the glass. He downed it in one motion, the burn hitting the back of his throat and spreading through his chest. He set the glass down and exhaled hard through his nose.

A knock came at the door.

Boogie's eyebrow raised. He glanced at the door, confused. He crossed the studio and leaned forward to look through the peephole.

Ant stood on the other side, hands visible, posture relaxed.

Boogie unlocked the door and pulled it open, already reaching out to dap Ant up. "What up, homie? I ain't know you were dropping by."

Ant returned the dap, stepping inside as Boogie moved back to give him space. "Business don't take no days off." His voice was calm, conversational. "I need a stick. Something that ain't got bodies on it. You got one?"

Boogie nodded, already turning toward the TV stand. "Yeah, I got you."

He walked over and crouched down, opening the drawer underneath. He pulled out a pistol, checking it quickly before standing and handing it to Ant. "That one clean."

Ant took it, turning it over in his hands, checking the weight, the slide, the magazine. He nodded once, satisfied, then slid it into his waistband next to the other one.

He looked at Boogie. "You here alone?"

Boogie started to answer. "Nah. I got—"

Realization hit him like cold water. His face changed, eyes going wide, mouth opening to say something else. "Hold on, nigga. Let me tell you what happen. You ain't g—"

Ant drew the other gun from his waistband in one smooth motion and fired.

The first shot hit Boogie in the chest, high and center. The sound was deafening in the small space, the muzzle flash lighting up Boogie's face for a fraction of a second.

Boogie stumbled back, hands coming up instinctively, mouth open but no sound coming out.

Ant fired again. The second shot hit lower, chest again, punching through and sending Boogie back another step.

The third shot caught him in the neck. Blood sprayed across the wall behind him, dark and arterial. Boogie's legs gave out and he dropped, first to his knees, then forward onto his face. His body hit the floor with a heavy thud. Blood pooled underneath him almost immediately, spreading across the cheap laminate in a widening circle.

Ant stood there for a moment, gun still raised, watching. Boogie's body twitched once, a small involuntary movement, then went still.

Ant lowered the gun and reached into his hoodie pocket with his other hand. He pulled out a torn page from a Bible, the edges rough where it had been ripped from the binding. Psalm 41:9. He flicked it down onto Boogie's body. The paper landed on his back and stuck there, blood already soaking into it.

Ant turned and walked to the door, pulling his hand back into his sleeve so the fabric covered his fingers. He grabbed the doorknob through the cloth and pulled the door shut behind him, the latch clicking into place.

He walked down the breezeway at an unhurried pace, the gun already tucked back into his waistband next to the one from Boogie. His footsteps were even and measured.

He reached the stairs and started down. Halfway to the bottom, he passed the blonde woman coming up. She had a small makeup bag in her hand. She glanced at him as they passed, the kind of look strangers give each other in apartment complexes at night, brief and indifferent.

Ant kept walking.

He made it to the bottom of the stairs and crossed the parking lot toward where Yola's car sat waiting, engine already running. He looked back over his shoulder as the woman reached the top of the stairs and turned toward Boogie's apartment.

He was almost to the car when he heard it. The scream. High and sharp and sudden, cutting through the night like a siren. It echoed in the breezeway, amplified by the concrete walls, carrying across the parking lot.

Ant opened the passenger door and climbed inside. He pulled the door shut and Yola put the car in drive, pulling out of the spot smoothly, no rush, just another car leaving an apartment complex at night.

The screaming continued behind them, getting quieter as they drove away.

~~~

Jaslene stood outside Mireya's apartment door, phone in hand, staring at the last text Mireya had sent her. Just "please come." Nothing else. No explanation. No context. Just those two things and then silence.

She'd been trying to call since then. Every call went straight to voicemail. Every text went unread, the blue checkmarks never appearing. The quiet on the other end felt wrong, dangerous in a way that made Jaslene's chest tight.

She knocked on the door, three sharp raps that echoed in the hallway. No answer. She waited then knocked again, harder this time. Still nothing. No movement. No sound from inside.

She reached down and tested the doorknob. It turned easily under her hand, unlocked. Her stomach dropped.

She pushed the door open slowly, the hinges creaking. The sound felt too loud in the quiet hallway.

The apartment was dark except for the light bleeding in from the hallway behind her, casting a long shadow across the floor. She stepped inside, eyes adjusting to the dimness, and found Mireya curled up on the floor in the middle of the living room. Knees pulled tight to her chest, face pressed into her arms, body shaking with quiet sobs that made her shoulders jerk.

Mireya's phone lay face-down on the floor a few feet away from her, screen dark.

Jaslene sighed, the sound sad and tired and full of ache. She closed the door behind her, the lock clicking into place, cutting off the hallway light and plunging them into near darkness. She crossed the room carefully, stepping around Mireya's phone, and sat down on the floor next to her.

"Nena, you gotta get off the floor."

She reached out to run her hand over Mireya's hair, the gesture automatic and tender.

Mireya flinched away violently, her whole body jerking back. "No me toques. Estoy jodidamente sucio."

Jaslene's hand froze in the air, then lowered slowly back to her lap. Her voice stayed soft, patient. "Mi amor, no. ¿Quieres irte a la cama?"

Mireya shook her head, the movement frantic. Her voice came out broken, desperate. "He can't find out. He can't fucking find out."

Jaslene's eyebrows pulled together. "Who can't? Jordan?"

Mireya didn't answer. She just kept crying, the sobs coming harder now, her whole body convulsing with them. Her face stayed buried in her arms, hidden from view.

Jaslene stood up, her knees protesting slightly from sitting on the hard floor. She moved around Mireya carefully, positioning herself so she could reach down and take Mireya's hands. Her fingers closed around Mireya's wrists gently, feeling the rapid pulse beneath the skin. She pulled gently, trying to coax her up.

Mireya resisted at first, her body dead weight, muscles locked, unwilling to move. Her hands stayed clenched into fists against her chest. But Jaslene kept pulling, kept murmuring soft encouragement in Spanish, her voice low and soothing, and eventually Mireya let herself be lifted. She unfolded slowly, joints stiff from hours on the floor. She stood on shaky legs, knees threatening to buckle, and Jaslene's arm immediately wrapped around her waist to steady her.

Jaslene guided her down the hall toward the bedroom, moving slowly, taking small careful steps. Mireya leaned heavily against her, barely holding herself upright, feet dragging slightly on the carpet. Her breathing was still uneven, hitching every few seconds with leftover sobs.

As they passed the refrigerator, Mireya's eyes drifted up. A picture was stuck to the side with a magnet, edges curling slightly from humidity. Camila on Caine's hip, his hand supporting her back, her little hand on his shoulder.

Mireya's lip began to tremble. Fresh tears spilled down her cheeks and she started sobbing again, the sound wrenching and broken, like something inside her had torn open all over again.

Jaslene tightened her grip and kept moving, pulling Mireya past the kitchen and into the bedroom. The room was dark, unmade bed visible in the dim light from the hallway. Jaslene led her to the bed and gently laid her down, easing her onto the mattress like she might break.

Mireya curled up immediately, knees to chest, arms wrapped around herself, making herself as small as possible. The sobs continued, muffled now by the pillow her face was pressed into.

Jaslene kicked off her shoes, the soft thud as they hit the floor barely audible over Mireya's crying. She climbed onto the bed and lay down next to her, the mattress dipping under her weight.

Mireya immediately pressed against her, shifting closer, laying her head on Jaslene's chest. Her body molded to Jaslene's side, seeking comfort, seeking warmth, seeking anything that wasn't the cold terror that had consumed her for hours.

Mireya's voice was small, thick with tears. "I can't go to work tonight."

Jaslene's hand came up to stroke Mireya's hair, fingers moving through the strands in slow, soothing motions. "We're not going anywhere, nena."

Mireya's breath hitched. "Tenía razón."

Jaslene's hand paused for a moment, then continued its gentle movement through Mireya's hair. "Who was right?"

Mireya shook her head, the movement small and defeated. She turned her face into Jaslene's shirt, pressing harder. Her arm stretched across Jaslene's stomach, hand fisting in the fabric of her shirt and pulling, trying to bring her closer even though there was no space left between them.

Jaslene's voice was soft, steady. "No voy a ir a ningún lado. No te preocupe."

She kept running her hand over Mireya's hair, the rhythm constant and gentle. Mireya cried into her chest, the tears soaking through the thin fabric, her breath coming in shaky gasps.

Mireya's voice came out desperate, panicked, the words tumbling over each other. "He can't find out. He can't. He never can."

Jaslene looked down at her, her expression heartbreaking in its sadness. She kept stroking her hair and said quietly, "I know, nena."

~~~

Caine stood in his kitchen, washing a couple of dishes in the sink. The water ran warm over his hands as he scrubbed a plate clean, then set it in the dish rack. He dried his hands on a towel and turned his attention to the boxes lined up against the wall. A few had shifted out of alignment. He moved them back into place, the edges forming a perfect line again.

A knock came at the door.

Caine raised his eyebrow and pulled his phone from his pocket, checking the time. 11:45 p.m. He set the phone down on the counter and walked to the drawer next to the stove, pulling it open. The gun sat, black metal gleaming under the kitchen light. He left the drawer open and waited.

His phone buzzed on the counter. He picked it up and saw a text from Laney. "It's me."

He walked to the door and leaned forward to look through the peephole. Laney stood outside, arms wrapped tightly around her body, head down, staring at the concrete. Even through the distortion of the lens he could see something was wrong.

Caine unlocked the door and pulled it open.

Laney looked up.

Rage coursed through him, hot and immediate. Her left eye was swollen, the skin around it already turning purple-black. Her lip was split, dried blood crusted at the corner of her mouth. Bruises marked her arms where fingers had gripped too hard.

He stepped outside, his hand going to the small of her back, gentle despite the fury burning in his chest. He ushered her inside and closed the door behind them, the lock clicking into place.

His voice came out through clenched teeth, barely controlled. "Who the fuck did that to you?"

Laney opened her mouth. Nothing came out. She tried again, her breath hitching, words catching in her throat.

Caine took a deep breath and walked back to the kitchen drawer. He grabbed the gun and returned to her, movements smooth and deliberate. He squatted down so he was closer to eye level with her, the gun held loose in his right hand. His left hand came up to her face, gently cupping her cheek. His thumb moved carefully under the bruise beneath her eye, barely touching.

"Tell me who it was, Laney. I'm gonna go deal with them."

Laney's eyes dropped to the gun, then came back up to his face. "I—It—I."

Caine moved the gun behind his leg, shifting his body to block her view of it. "Was it Tommy?"

Laney shook her head, the movement small and jerky.

Caine's eyebrows pulled together. "Then who was it?"

Laney's voice came out barely above a whisper. "My daddy. 'Cause Rylee was shoutin' 'bout us."

Caine sighed, the sound heavy with frustration. He ran his hand through his dreads, jaw working. He couldn't go kick an old man's ass. Couldn't shoot a preacher, no matter how much he wanted to in this moment.

He tucked the gun into his waistband and took Laney's hand, leading her to the sofa. He sat her down gently and then positioned himself on the coffee table in front of her, hands resting on the sides of her knees.

"Tell me what happened."

Laney took a shaky breath. "Rylee found that lighter here. Must've seen me leavin' another day or somethin'. She blew up. Said everythin' in front my family. Daddy," she stopped, snorting a laugh that had a sob caught in it, gesturing to her face. "Well, daddy ain't really like what he was hearin'."

Caine's hands tightened slightly on her knees. "You want to stay here tonight?"

Laney shrugged, then shook her head, then nodded, all the movements running together. "I don't fuckin' know what to do, Caine. I ain't had to worry 'bout no shit like this since I was 16, 17." She leaned forward, hissing in pain when her ribs protested the movement. "I cain't go home to the boys lookin' like this. How am I gonna tell them grandpa beat the shit out of mommy 'cause mommy was bad?"

Caine shook his head, reaching for her hands. He took them in his, thumbs rubbing slow circles on the backs of her hands. "Tell me what you need me to do, Laney."

Laney's voice cracked. "I don't even fuckin' know. I'm just so fuckin' glad my sons didn't see this."

Caine sat in silence for a moment, his thumbs continuing their movement over her hands. Tears fell down her face silently, tracking through the dried blood at the corner of her mouth.

Then Caine spoke. "You drove here, right?"

Laney nodded.

"I can give you an excuse to tell your sons."

Laney looked up, bloodshot eyes staring at him. "How?"

Caine held her gaze. "Do you trust me?"

Laney nodded. "I trust you."



The winding country road stretched dark and empty in both directions, trees crowding close on either side. Laney pulled her van to a stop on the shoulder and Caine's car pulled up behind her, headlights cutting through the darkness.

He got out and walked to her side of the van, opening the door for her and helping her down. She stood on the gravel shoulder, looking down the road where her headlights illuminated the asphalt and the curve ahead.

"Caine, we cain't do this. This is fuckin' crazy. What am I gonna tell the insurance?"

Caine pointed down the road to a curve just before where they stood. "You were upset and tired driving, misjudged that curve, started to spin, overcorrect and hit the tree." He pointed to the row of trees lining the road, their trunks dark against the night sky.

Laney's voice went higher, uncertain. "You think they gonna believe that?"

Caine's tone stayed level. "It's not like you saying you crashed your car and don't look fucked up. I'm driving you to the hospital after, remember?"

Laney ran her hand through her hair, cringing when her fingers found the tender spot where her father had dragged her by it. Her scalp still burned.

Caine stepped in front of her, blocking her view of the van. "Look. Your options are this, or trying to explain to your sons what actually happened. Or worse, you don't tell them shit and they start talking about it at school and then one of their friends says that Tommy probably did this to you. None of the options we got are good. At least you can control this."

Laney stared at him for a long moment, then nodded. "Alright."

Caine walked to the side of the road and bent down, picking up a rock about the size of his fist. He came back and handed her his keys. "Drive back to the top of the curve in my car."

Laney took the keys, metal cold against her palm, and walked to his car. She got in and started the engine, pulling a U-turn and going back up the road slowly until she was at the top of the curve. She put it in park and waited, watching through the windshield.

Caine walked to the driver's side of the van and climbed in. He adjusted the seat, pressed down on the brake, and positioned the rock carefully on the gas pedal. The engine revved loud, too high. He shifted the rock, adjusting the pressure until the RPMs dropped to something that would move the van forward at a reasonable speed without screaming down the road.

Satisfied, he leaned out of the open door, keeping his foot on the brake. He looked back once to make sure Laney was clear, then released the brake and jumped away from the van in one smooth motion.

The tires screeched as the van lurched forward, accelerating down the road. Caine watched it go, tracking its path. It hit the curve and the steering wheel, left on its own, didn't correct. The van went straight, tires leaving the asphalt. It hit the guardrail with a metallic crunch, the impact sending it sliding sideways. The passenger side caught the slight embankment and the van tipped, slamming into a tree.

The sound of the crash echoed through the quiet night. Glass shattered. Metal crumpled. The airbags deployed with twin explosions, white powder and smoke billowing out through the broken windows.

Laney walked up next to him, her hand pressed to her side, holding her ribs. They both stood there on the shoulder, staring at the wreckage. The van's headlights were still on, one pointing up into the trees, the other shattered.

They looked at each other. Neither of them said a word.
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Post by Captain Canada » 30 Jan 2026, 12:48

Knew Riley was far too unstable for this. Shordy really went scorched Earth for Caine, who doesn't even want to fuck her.

Atta boy, Jordan. Fuck her.
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Post by redsox907 » 30 Jan 2026, 16:25

the same opening scene for both Laney and Caine then Trell and Mireya is :chefskiss:

Laney and Caine are anchored in actually care for each other and it symbolizes that, while Trell is just using Mireya as indicated by his quick shifty away from her once he's gotten what he wanted

still think I'm off based for wanting that Hadden family pack. :fuckem:

Didn't think Jordan had it in him

Mireya finally realizing actions have consequences eh. Can go one of two ways now. Either she tries to distance herself from Trell, or leans into it 100%.

Psalm 41:9 :golfclap:

Nosotras somos criminales

Caine got a habit of making his boo-thangs criminals lmao

also

how this gonna affect Caine's probation, cause I'm sure Pastor Hadden ain't gonna want the felon fucking his married daughter around no more
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Post by djp73 » 01 Feb 2026, 21:13

djp73 wrote:
06 Jan 2026, 12:22
Captain Canada wrote:
06 Jan 2026, 10:37
Crazy how Mireya has progressed down the line of sex work :drose:

Rylee getting a little too comfortable and Caine just letting it happen. Wicked work.
pretty wild that Rylee is gonna be the one to give Tommy the proof he's after
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Post by Caesar » 01 Feb 2026, 23:43

Captain Canada wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 12:48
Knew Riley was far too unstable for this. Shordy really went scorched Earth for Caine, who doesn't even want to fuck her.

Atta boy, Jordan. Fuck her.
She didn't do that to get Caine. She did it because she was angry with her sister who (as stated in the chapter) she believes gets everything she wants. Women can do things that ain't for men, mon frere.

You would celebrate Jordan.
redsox907 wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 16:25
the same opening scene for both Laney and Caine then Trell and Mireya is :chefskiss:

Laney and Caine are anchored in actually care for each other and it symbolizes that, while Trell is just using Mireya as indicated by his quick shifty away from her once he's gotten what he wanted

still think I'm off based for wanting that Hadden family pack. :fuckem:

Didn't think Jordan had it in him

Mireya finally realizing actions have consequences eh. Can go one of two ways now. Either she tries to distance herself from Trell, or leans into it 100%.

Psalm 41:9 :golfclap:

Nosotras somos criminales

Caine got a habit of making his boo-thangs criminals lmao

also

how this gonna affect Caine's probation, cause I'm sure Pastor Hadden ain't gonna want the felon fucking his married daughter around no more
Image #writingcraft

I didn't say you were off-based but wanting the whole family murked is crazy. Gabrielle just an in-law and you was about offing her.

Jordan couldn't ignore some random ass old lady saying Mireya was with another man like he could when his bitch sister said something.

:hmm: We shall see

Ya like that little tidbit huh? :bazechief: On Easter Sunday, too.

Tbf. He directly asked Mireya to commit a crime for him. Laney asked a criminal for help and the criminal did criminal shit to help her because he's a criminal. Somewhat different situations.

I mean, in his world view, Laney is more of an issue than Caine is. Laney is the only who sinned and forsook her vows to God. But we'll have to see because: "Star Quarterback Ordered Back to Louisiana to Serve Six Year Prison Sentence After Pastor Angered By Him Fucking His 28-year-old, Married Daughter" is a crazy headline to hit national news outlets.
djp73 wrote:
01 Feb 2026, 21:13
djp73 wrote:
06 Jan 2026, 12:22
Captain Canada wrote:
06 Jan 2026, 10:37
Crazy how Mireya has progressed down the line of sex work :drose:

Rylee getting a little too comfortable and Caine just letting it happen. Wicked work.
pretty wild that Rylee is gonna be the one to give Tommy the proof he's after
djpstradomus
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Post by Caesar » 01 Feb 2026, 23:45

Linea Transita

The kitchen table held the quiet. Absorbed it, kept it close. Caine sat with his back to the counter, one leg stretched out, the other bent with his foot flat on the linoleum. The apartment breathed its small sounds around him. The refrigerator hummed and clicked.

The journal sat open in front of him, pages bent at the spine from use.

He uncapped the pen and let it rest against his knuckle for a beat, felt the weight of it. He leaned forward, elbows on the table, and started.

Mi vida, he wrote.

Trust is a weird thing. People always say things like trust is earned, but it ain't.

Everyone trust someone in their life for no reason other than they feel they do. I ain't never been someone that trusted, though. It's made life harder, more complicated.


He shifted in the chair, wood creaking under him.

Mi mama, tu mama, that's about it. Even the guys I did dirt with, in the streets putting in work with, Dre, Ricardo back in the day. Ramon, Tyree, E.J. now. It's always a little bit of not really trusting a motherfucker there.

The pen slowed.

I know we all got each other back today, tomorrow too. But what happens when something change that situation?

He breathed. Rolled his neck once, felt it pop. The kitchen stayed dim, the stove light throwing long shadows across the floor.

Now, you looking down the barrel of a gun with your brother holding it. That's the reality of life, that's the reality of trust and loyalty.

His jaw tightened. He rubbed his thumb along the edge of the page, felt the paper warm under his skin.

No, trust isn't earned, nena. Neither is loyalty. They're blind leaps of faith, rolling the dice that someone won't fuck you over because you gave them the opening to do it.

The pen kept moving.

To call them anything other than that is someone coping with the fact that they trusted someone they shouldn't have. I know. I've trusted people I shouldn't. Plenty times.

Caine leaned back in the chair, one hand still on the journal, the other hanging loose at his side. He looked toward the living room where the boxes sat stacked against the wall.

He pulled himself forward again, elbows back on the table.

At the end of the day, though, you just keep taking that leap. Over and over and over and over again.

His hand cramped. He flexed his fingers, then kept going.

Hoping that when you jump off that cliff that the person you're expecting to catch you is there.

The words came slower now.

Sometimes, they ain't. Then you go back up to that cliff to jump off it again.

The pen stopped. He set it down in the crease of the journal and looked at what he'd written. The ink had dried flat already, words locked in. He read it once more from the top, slow, letting each sentence sit the way it needed to.

The stove light hummed. The refrigerator clicked. Somewhere outside, a dog barked twice and went quiet.

Then he stood, and carried the journal back to the living room. He set it gently in the box with the others, the stack shifting just enough to make room. The cardboard rasped under his fingers as he nudged the lid closed.

~~~

The compact sat open on the desk, its little round mirror reflecting Laney's left eye back at her. She held the makeup sponge between her thumb and index finger and touched it to the skin just below her lashes. The bruise there had faded from deep purple to something yellower, edges gone green like old fruit. She worked the sponge in small circles, blending until the color disappeared into the foundation she'd already put on.

She moved the sponge to her jaw where another bruise sat darker and pressed it against her skin. The makeup smoothed over it and she watched it blend, watched herself disappear the evidence with powder and patience. Her office was quiet except for the hum the distant sound of the AC kicking on somewhere in the building.

She tilted the mirror up and looked at her eyes. But something had been there before that night and wasn't there now.

The compact snapped shut. She dropped it in her purse where it landed soft against her wallet. Her fingers found the cuffs of her sleeves and she tugged them down over her wrists. The fingerprint bruises on her forearms had faded to yellow but they were still visible enough.

Her wedding ring had gotten loose. It twisted on her finger when she moved her hand and the diamond kept turning sideways. She adjusted it, spun it around until the stone faced up the way it was supposed to.

The hallway was empty when she stepped out of her office. Fluorescent lights buzzed overhead, one of them flickering every few seconds in a pattern she'd gotten used to. The air conditioning blew cold through the vents near the ceiling. She pulled the door shut behind her and turned toward the daycare. The toddlers would need their mid-morning snack soon and she needed to make sure Ethel had everything ready.

"Delaney."

Her mama's voice came from the other end of the hall. Not Laney. The whole name. Laney stopped and turned. Marianne stood by the storage room with one hand on her hip and the other holding a clipboard pressed against her side.

Laney walked toward her, eyes on the floor tiles, watching them pass under her feet.

"Yes, ma'am?"

Marianne pointed at the open storage room door with the pen she was holding. "I been trying' to find that box of wipes that Ethel needs for the last ten minutes, but I can’t make heads or tails of nothing' in this doggone storage room."

"I'll get it for you."

Laney waited. Marianne stepped to the side and Laney walked past her into the storage room. The smell of cardboard and Pine-Sol hit her first. Metal shelves climbed both walls with everything organized the way she'd re-done it last week. Clear bins with labels in her handwriting. Cleaning supplies on the second shelf. Paper products on the third. The box of wipes sat eye-level on the shelf directly in front of the door with its label facing out.

She reached up and took it down. The cardboard was rough under her palms. She turned and walked it back out to her mama.

Marianne looked down at the box, then back at the shelf where it had been sitting, then at the box again. She laughed, short and clipped. "Huh. If that was a snake, it would've bit me."

"You want me to carry it for you?"

Marianne shook her head and took the box from Laney's hands. "Where were you headed?"

"To check on the daycare."

"I got that."

"I'll go grab the receipts from last week from my car then."

Marianne raised an eyebrow. Her eyes got sharper and she turned her wrist over to look at her watch.

"You didn't bring that in when you got here?"

"No, ma'am. I forgot."

Marianne looked at her for a beat. Then she shifted the box of wipes to her other hip and stepped out of the way. "Okay."

Laney headed for the side door at the end of the hallway. Her flats made soft sounds on the tile. She pushed the door open and stepped out onto the patio. The morning air hit her face, already warm, already thick with humidity that said the heat would only get worse. She kept her head down as she crossed, eyes tracking the weeds that had started pushing up through the seams.

"Miss Laney."

Mr. Charlie's voice came from somewhere over by the playground. She could hear the hedge trimmers running, their motor buzzing steady. She nodded once in his direction without stopping, without looking up at him.

She almost walked right past her van. The white paint caught the sun and gleamed so bright it pulled her attention sideways. New. Still had the dealership tags on the back where they'd been for three weeks now. It sat in the parking spot she always used, the same spot her old van had occupied for years. Her brain kept looking for that van, kept expecting to see blue paint instead of white.

She stopped and corrected her path, turning toward the passenger side. The door handle was warm when she wrapped her fingers around it. She pulled it open and leaned in, reaching across the center console. The receipts sat where she'd left them yesterday, clipped together with a black binder clip. She grabbed them and the paper crinkled in her hand.

She pulled back out and closed the door. The latch clicked. She turned back toward the church with the receipts in her hand.

~~~

Mireya walked into the classroom with the weight of the last two hours still sitting heavy in her thighs. The room buzzed with that particular energy that came before finals, voices layered over each other in a sound that was half dread and half relief. Students huddled in clusters, some sprawled across desks with their heads down, others scrolling through phones with expressions that said they'd stopped caring weeks ago.

She scanned the rows and found them on the far side. Frankie sat with her legs crossed, hair pulled back, one hand holding her phone while the other tapped a rhythm against her thigh. Sena sat beside her, eyes on the door. The seat on the inside of the row sat empty, backpack slung over the back. Mireya moved through the maze of bodies and bags, steps measured.

She dropped into the chair and let her backpack slide off her shoulder. The zipper made a soft rasp when she opened it. She pulled out a pen, clicked it once, then set it on the narrow desk in front of her. The metal seat pressed cold through her jacket as she pulled out her phone and started scrolling through messages.

Frankie's eyes were already on her when she settled. Sena's followed a beat later. The weight of their attention on the side of her face. Frankie's gaze held amusement, mouth curving just enough to show she had something to say. Sena's lingered, tracking down from Mireya's face to her chest, then back up again.

Mireya looked between them.

"What?" she said.

Frankie's smile widened. She leaned back in her chair, the plastic creaking under her. Her eyes dropped deliberately to Mireya's chest, held there for a second, then came back up to her face.

"You starting hot girl summer early, huh, bitch?" Frankie said. "Coming in here in a jacket with no shirt or bra?" She paused, grin sharpening. "Or you trying to throw Stewart off then I see the play."

Mireya rolled her eyes. The jacket hung open enough that the nylon framed her chest.

"It's a cute jacket," Mireya said.

She looked over at Sena. Their eyes caught and held. Sena's gaze didn't waver, didn't slide away. The moment stretched. Then Sena blinked and her shoulders shifted.

"Did you do that last minute reading that was posted on Canvas?" Sena asked.

Mireya shook her head. She picked up the pen and turned it over in her fingers. The tip clicked against the desk.

"It looked like some shit that wasn't going to help one way or the other," she said.

Frankie let out a breath that was half laugh, half relief. She dropped her phone onto the desk and leaned forward, elbows coming to rest on the edge.

"Facts. I read that shit and felt like I had wasted a couple hours of my life."

Sena's fingers drummed once against the desk. She tilted her head, mouth pulling into something that wasn't quite a smile.

"It said at the end that if you answer the questions right on the exam that came from it that you'd get extra credit.”

Frankie's eyebrows shot up. She twisted in her seat to face Sena, one hand coming up to rest on the back of her chair.

"Where it said that?"

Sena's expression didn't change. She reached for her water bottle and unscrewed the cap, the plastic threading making a soft sound in the brief quiet between them.

"The last paragraph," Sena said. "It was in a different font and everything."

Frankie dropped her head back against the backrest of her chair. The motion was sharp, frustrated. Her eyes went to the ceiling tiles overhead.

"God damn it," Frankie said. "These motherfucking people always trying to be slick."

"I'll just wing it," Mireya said. "How hard could it be? It's not like they haven't been talking about the same shit all fucking semester."

Frankie's head came forward. She looked at Mireya, mouth twisting into something between disbelief and amusement.

"That's some famous last words shit," Frankie said.

Mireya snorted a laugh. Her hand went to the pen again, turning it between her fingers in a slow spin. The barrel was smooth, cool. She let it roll across her knuckles once before catching it.

She glanced over at Sena. Sena was already staring at her. Mireya held it.

Then Mireya looked toward the front of the room. Movement by the door. Mr. Ledet walked in first, his worn leather bag slung over one shoulder, graying hair combed back. Stewart followed a step behind, arms full of papers, his shirt wrinkled at the elbows

Mireya let her breath out slowly. She set the pen down on the desk and straightened in her seat.

~~~

Ramon sat on the sofa with his legs spread wide, one arm stretched along the back cushions, the other hand holding half a po'boy. Dressed shrimp from Parkway, the bread already going soft where grease had soaked through the wrapper. He took a bite, lettuce crunching between his teeth, and chewed slow while his eyes tracked movement on the TV screen without really watching.

Nina sat beside him, close enough that her thigh pressed against his. She had her own po'boy balanced on one hand, the other reaching for the paper towel she'd set on the coffee table. The movie played low, some action thing with cars and explosions that neither of them had picked on purpose..

Nina finished chewing and looked over at him.

"We got the money from the city for that new program I've been talking about," she said.

Ramon leaned back to look at her, eyebrows lifting. He swallowed before he spoke. "The one to get them lil' niggas off the streets and into art and all?"

Nina rolled her eyes. She set her po'boy down on the wrapper in her lap and wiped her fingers on the paper towel.

"You ain't gotta call them that," she said. "But yeah."

Ramon smiled, the expression easy and genuine. He took another bite, shrimp tail sticking out between the bread. He pulled it out with his free hand and dropped it onto the wrapper.

"That's what's up, bae," he said. "Gonna find New Orleans' version of that nigga from back in the day who used to run around with that white man."

Nina laughed. She turned to face him more fully, one hand coming up to tuck hair behind her ear.

"You mean Basquiat?" she said. "First of all, New Orleans got our own artists. Don't be sleeping on your city." She paused, eyes narrowing with amusement. "But I ain't know you knew anything about Basquiat."

Ramon shrugged. He went back to his po'boy, tearing off another piece of bread with his teeth. He chewed, swallowed, then looked at the TV for a second before answering.

"That's 'cause you ain't ask if I knew anything about that nigga," he said. "It's some dope shit, though. To be able to just like at a blank piece of paper then a few hours later you got some whole ass painting on that shit."

Nina watched him for a moment, mouth pulling into a small smile. She picked up her po'boy again and took a bite, still looking at him.

"You know the program won't just be for lil' niggas," she said after she swallowed. "You can come to the adult classes."

Ramon waved the comment off with his free hand, the motion dismissive. He kept his eyes on the TV.

"I ain't doing that shit. They got paper to be made, especially with—"

He stopped. The words cut off clean. His jaw worked once and then went still.

Nina shook her head. The motion was slow, tired. Her phone vibrated against the coffee table, the sound sharp in the quiet that had settled between them. She didn't reach for it yet.

"If Tyree can go to college," she said, "you can learn how to paint."

Ramon didn't say anything. Nina leaned forward and picked up her phone, thumb already moving to unlock the screen. Her eyes scanned the text. Then they went wide.

She pointed at the remote next to Ramon's leg.

"Oh my God," she said. "Turn on Fox 8."

Ramon grabbed the remote. He backed out of Netflix, the screen going black for a second before the menu loaded. He punched in the channel number and the TV switched over.

A reporter stood in front of one of the New Orleans Police Department's precincts, the building behind her all brick and official-looking. A banner ran across the bottom of the screen in bold letters: "New Orleans Police Officer Charged with Possession and Production of CSAM."

The reporter held the microphone close to her mouth, expression serious.

"Assistant District Attorney Jill Babin told reporters earlier this morning that the district attorney's office has been investigating New Orleans Police Officer Brent LaDoux, a twenty-one-year-old resident of Gretna who has been on the force for a little more than a year, for almost a month after receiving an anonymous tip from a potential victim, alleging that LaDoux had sexual photos and videos of her from when she was fifteen years old."

Ramon’s fingers tapped idly on the remote, his eyes still on the screen.

The reporter continued.

"This morning, New Orleans Police Chief Trina Kirkpatrick confirmed that LaDoux surrendered his phone to Internal Affairs last week and he was subsequently charged and arrested today."

The camera cut to other footage. Brent walked out of the precinct flanked by three NOPD officers, his hands cuffed behind his back. He wore his uniform pants but only a white T-shirt on top, no badge, no vest. His face was down, eyes on the ground. One of the officers had a hand on his shoulder, guiding him toward a waiting cruiser.

Nina sucked her teeth, the sound sharp and disgusted. She shook her head and set her phone back down on the table.

"It's always fucking something with NOPD," she said. "They really be hiring the worst fucking people to so say 'serve and protect us.'"

Ramon snorted a laugh. He reached for his po'boy, lifting it to his mouth to take another bite.

~~~

Trell leaned against the wall with his shoulders pressed to the faded paint, arms loose at his sides, hands in his pockets. The room smelled like sweat and something chemical underneath it, sharp enough to sit at the back of the throat. Paint peeled near the ceiling where water damage had left brown stains spreading across the drywall. A fan rattled in the window but didn't do much except push warm air from one side to the other. The blades ticked every few rotations, uneven and persistent.

Ant stood a few feet away, arms crossed over his chest. His weight rested on both feet, balanced and centered. He didn't shift his weight. Just watched the room with eyes that tracked everything and gave nothing back. His jaw sat tight, the muscle there working once before going still again.

Dez was on the opposite side of Ant, flipping his keys in his hand. The metal clicked and spun, caught between his fingers, then clicked again. The rhythm stayed steady but his shoulders stayed tight. Every few seconds he glanced toward the door, then back to the room.

Yola moved through the space ordering the younger guys around, voice cutting through the low hum of activity. He pointed at one, snapped his fingers at another, kept them moving.

On the other side of the room, mostly naked women sat at a card table bagging product. Their hands worked fast, practiced, fingers folding plastic with the kind of speed that came from doing it a thousand times before. One of them wore a bra and panties, both black, the fabric thin enough to show everything underneath. The other two wore less. Bare breasts moving with each reach and fold. None of them looked up. A radio played somewhere behind them, volume low, some bounce track bleeding into the room's other sounds.

Yola walked over to the broken coffee table where a gun sat next to empty bottles and crumpled foil. He picked it up, turned it over in his hand, then threw it back down hard. The metal hit wood with a sharp crack.

The younger guys jumped back, bodies tensing, eyes going wide. One of them lifted his hands like the thing might go off just from landing wrong.

Yola sucked his teeth.

"Y'all motherfuckers up in here with Dirty Harry ass fucking sticks," he said. "This how that nigga was letting y'all watch the spot?"

One of the younger guys opened his mouth. His eyes went to Ant first, then back to Yola.

"That's what Bo—"

He stopped. His jaw worked once. Ant's gaze hadn't moved but the weight of it landed anyway.

The kid swallowed and tried again.

"That's what that nigga gave us," he said. "We asked him for something else. He said he ain't have the money for it."

Another one of them nodded fast, hands coming up in agreement.

"I ain't even got no pole."

Yola pulled his own gun from his waistband and held it out. The kid took it, fingers wrapping careful around the grip.

Then Yola reached into his pocket and pulled out a roll of bills. He threw it at the first one. The money hit him in the chest and he fumbled to catch it before it hit the floor.

"Go hit up Malcolm in the East and get some fucking throwaways that don't look like a fucking musket," Yola said. "And one of you niggas need to be standing outside all the time. Text me every hour so I know what's going on."

They nodded. Both of them.

Yola turned around to leave. Trell pushed off the wall and walked out first, shoulders moving easy, steps unhurried. Ant, Yola, and Dez filed out behind him.

The air outside hit cooler. The street sat quiet, nobody moving on the block except a dog nosing through trash two houses down.

Trell stopped and turned to face Yola.

"You good with more responsibility?" he asked. "You know there ain't no asking for less work if this too much for you."

Yola nodded.

"I got it, big brudda," he said. "Shit gonna be running like Domino Sugar by the end of the month."

Trell laughed, the sound low and genuine. He shook his head once. "Just don't start cutting the work with sugar."

Yola smirked, one corner of his mouth pulling up. "That might be a way to stretch the work that ain't gonna kill niggas like the fetty, though."

Trell just shook his head again. He stepped forward and dapped Yola up, their hands clasping before pulling apart. Then he turned and headed for Dez's car.

Yola walked over to his own, keys already in his hand.

Dez and Ant followed Trell. Dez's keys clinked one more time before he shoved them in his pocket. He glanced back at Yola, then at Trell's back.

"If he don't make shit work," Dez said, "we gonna kill him too?"

Trell stopped walking.

He turned slow and stared at Dez. The look was flat, empty.

Ant moved before Trell could say anything. He shoved Dez forward hard, both hands hitting his shoulders. Dez stumbled, feet catching on the uneven pavement, barely keeping himself upright.

"Stop being a bitch, nigga," Ant said. "Go work at Wal-Mart if you can't handle it."

Dez turned around but he didn't step toward Ant. He just stood there, jaw tight, then shook his head once. He turned back and kept walking toward the driver's seat.

Trell and Ant shared a look. Then they both headed for the car.

~~~

Mireya squatted low, elbows braced against her thighs, ass bouncing to the beat. The VIP room smelled like cologne and weed, the air thick with both. Bass thumped through the floor, vibrating up through her heels and into her knees. Bills hit her body, some sticking to the oil on her skin, others fluttering to the carpet around her feet.

The rapper sat directly in front of her on the leather sofa, legs spread wide, one arm draped along the back cushions. His friends flanked him on either side, leaning forward, shouting over the music. Money kept coming. Twenties mostly. A few tens. One of the friends threw a five and the others laughed at him for it.

Mireya stood, the motion smooth and controlled. She turned and placed one foot behind the rapper's head on the cushion, toes pointed, calf flexing. Her hips rolled slow toward his face as the beat stretched out. She looked down at him. His eyes stayed exactly where she expected them to be.

The song faded into the next track and she brought her foot down, planting it back on the carpet. She turned to face him again, hand running down her stomach to rest on her hip.

"You want a dance alone, papi?" she asked

He looked down at the stack of bills in his hand. What had been thick when she started was thin now, folded once and looking sad. He cursed under his breath.

His head swiveled toward his boys.

They shrugged, lifting empty palms, grins on their faces that said they'd already spent what they brought.

The rapper looked back at Mireya and flashed a smile. Gold caught the low purple light, two teeth on the top row gleaming.

"Lemme run to ATM down the street, love."

Mireya shrugged, already bending to gather the scattered bills.

"You know where to find me, baby."

She swept the money into a pile with both hands, scooping it against her stomach. The bills were warm from being handled, some damp with sweat. She stood and walked toward the door, hips loose, steps unhurried. The table next to the door held her robe where she'd left it draped over the edge. She grabbed it with one hand and pulled it on, letting it hang open as she stepped into the hallway.

The noise from the main floor hit louder out here, voices and music bleeding together into one constant hum. She walked the short distance to the makeshift dressing room, passing Maren coming the opposite way. They nodded at each other without speaking.

The dressing room door was propped open with a brick. Mireya stepped inside and crossed to her station, dropping into the chair. She set the money down on the counter and started separating it by denomination. Twenties in one pile. Tens in another. Fives and ones together.

Alejandra passed behind her, heels clicking against the tile floor. She glanced down at the growing stacks and her mouth pulled into a grin.

"Oye, Mexicana. You been getting to la feria this week, huh?!"

Mireya rolled her eyes without looking back. Her fingers kept moving through the bills, sorting, counting in her head.

"Every week, bitch."

Alejandra's laugh rang out sharp and bright as she disappeared through the doorway, already heading back to the floor.

The door opened again. Mireya glanced up at the mirror and saw Jaslene walk in. She crossed the room without stopping anywhere else, moving straight toward Mireya's station. Her robe hung open, lingerie underneath catching the overhead lights. Her hair was loose around her shoulders, still perfect even after hours of work.

Jaslene stopped behind Mireya's chair and draped her arms over Mireya's shoulders. She leaned down, face close, mouth next to Mireya's ear. Her breath was warm against Mireya's skin.

"¿Cómo te sientes esta noche, mi amor?"

Mireya shrugged, shoulders lifting under Jaslene's arms.

"Fine. Tired. The usual."

Jaslene's fingers moved slow along Mireya's collarbone, tracing the bone. Her eyes met Mireya's in the mirror.

"Jason wants the Sol y Luna. Are you up for it? I know you just did a group."

Mireya snorted a laugh. She pushed the stack of bills into the money bag and tied it shut, then shoved her backpack down on top of it under the station.

"Of course, I'm up for it."

Jaslene looked at her through the mirror, gaze steady and searching. Then Jaslene's hand slid down Mireya's arm, fingers trailing along skin until they reached her wrist. She wrapped her fingers through Mireya's and pulled.

Mireya stood, letting herself be guided up from the chair. Jaslene didn't let go. She turned and started walking, their hands linked, leading Mireya toward the door and back out into the hallway.

~~~
Ella rolled from her knees to her back, chest rising and falling hard, breath coming in quick pulls that evened out slow. Sweat cooled along her ribs and collarbone. Her hair stuck to her neck in dark, damp strands.

Caine walked around the bed, feet hitting the carpet without sound. The room smelled like sex and the faint mahogany teakwood from the diffuser on the dresser. He reached for his phone on the nightstand, fingers wrapping around it as he lifted it and thumbed the screen awake.

Notifications stacked on top of each other, names and timestamps blurring together. Group chat from the team. Donnie talking shit about something. Dwight sending a link. Dozens of social media messages. Things he needed to do for brand deals. He scanned them all, eyes moving fast, looking for one name that wasn't there.

His jaw tightened once. He shook his head and dropped the phone back onto the nightstand. The screen stayed lit for a few seconds, then faded to black.

Ella's voice came quiet, tentative. "Do you mind if I spend the night or do you want me to get out?"

Caine looked at her. She was watching him now, eyes steady but waiting, body still loose against the mattress.

"You got a preference in that or you asking because you don't care?"

Ella shrugged, one shoulder lifting. Her hand moved to pull the sheet higher across her stomach.

"Well, I was hoping that you'd want me to stay, but—"

"Then stay." He turned toward the door. "Cool with me."

He walked into the hallway, the floor creaking once under his weight. "You want something to drink?"

Ella's voice drifted out from the bedroom behind him.

"Water's fine."

Caine nodded even though she couldn't see him. He moved through the space, passing the bathroom on his left, then stepped into the kitchen.

Ella's Nikes sat in the middle of the tile, right where she'd kicked them off when they came in. White leather scuffed at the toes, laces loose and hanging. He bent down and grabbed them, one in each hand, then set them against the wall near the counter where they wouldn't be in the way.

He straightened and walked to the fridge. His hand closed around the handle and he pulled it open. Cold air hit his chest and face, raising goosebumps along his arms. The shelves were mostly empty. A carton of orange juice pushed to the back. A takeout container from two days ago that he should probably throw out. A few bottles of water lined up on the bottom shelf, condensation beading on the plastic.

He reached down, grabbing two bottles of water. The plastic was cold against his palms, wet where the condensation had gathered. He shut the fridge and turned, already heading back toward the bedroom.

When he stepped through the doorway, Ella was under the sheets now. She'd pulled them up to the swell of her chest, bare skin only visible above the sheets. Her head was propped on one of the pillows, dark hair fanned out behind her, eyes on him as he came closer. He walked to her side of the bed first and held out one of the bottles.

She took it with both hands, fingers wrapping around the plastic. Her nails were painted some dark color he hadn't paid attention to before. Maroon, maybe. Or brown.

"Thanks."

He didn't answer. Just moved back around to his side and sat on the edge of the mattress. The springs shifted under him. He twisted the cap off his own bottle and took a drink, the water cold going down, throat working as he swallowed. Then he set it on the nightstand and picked up his phone again.

The screen lit up under his thumb. He scrolled through the notifications, past the ones he'd already seen, down to the group chat. Caine shook his head at it.

Ella shifted beside him. The mattress dipped slightly as she moved closer.

"As much as I like looking at you," she said, voice carrying that same lightness she always had after, "I'm the kind of girl that likes a little cuddling after getting fucked."

Caine snorted a laugh. He set the phone down and turned toward her. She was already waiting, eyes on his, sheet pulled back just enough to make room for him.

He slid under the covers and settled onto his back. Ella moved immediately. She pressed against his side, one leg hooking over his, arm draping across his chest. Her head found the space between his shoulder and collarbone, fitting there without effort. Her breath warmed his skin. Her hair tickled his jaw.

He stared at the ceiling. The fan turned overhead, blades cutting through the still air in slow, even rotations.
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Captain Canada
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Post by Captain Canada » 02 Feb 2026, 09:24

Caine really can't help himself huh :drose:
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redsox907
Posts: 3796
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

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Post by redsox907 » 02 Feb 2026, 15:52

Whats up with Sean? Jordan loop her in or something? Cause suddenly she all up in Mireya's biz like Paz

okay its been a month since shit went down judging by the police report

Nah Dez, they gonna kill you next dumb dumb

Laney gets the piss batted out of her and Caine already on to the next pussy eh? Grimy

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

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Post by Soapy » Yesterday, 08:58

redsox907 wrote:
02 Feb 2026, 15:52
Laney gets the piss batted out of her and Caine already on to the next pussy eh? Grimy
known scumbag does scumbag thing

although to be fair, he prob doesn't know (yet)

we gonna see if he really standing on bidness and a real crash out

ain't none of the homies to gas him up :kghah:
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djp73
Posts: 11484
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 13:42

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Post by djp73 » Yesterday, 21:11

Soapy wrote:
Yesterday, 08:58
redsox907 wrote:
02 Feb 2026, 15:52
Laney gets the piss batted out of her and Caine already on to the next pussy eh? Grimy
known scumbag does scumbag thing

although to be fair, he prob doesn't know (yet)

we gonna see if he really standing on bidness and a real crash out

ain't none of the homies to gas him up :kghah:
She told Caine and he helped her crash the van to cover it up??
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