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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 15 Jun 2026, 22:10

Inlakech / Nonamic

E.J. carried a stack of plates from the coffee table into the kitchen and set them in the sink. The sound of the shower running at the back of the apartment drifted from the bathroom.

He went back through the living room and pulled the remote off the cushion, dropped it on the arm of the couch, and crossed to the rug. A pair of his sneakers were on their side near the coffee table, the tongues folded back. Tessa's slides and flats were under the edge of the rug. He gathered them by the heels and carried them down the hall to the bedroom closet.

He crouched at the closet and set them on the rack one pair at a time, the sneakers first, then the slides, then the flats. He reached for the last pair, his hand closing around the heel, and stopped.

A pair of boots sat back in the corner of the rack. Women's, Western, the toe stitched in a quartered pattern across the vamp, the leather tan and stiff, the low block heel unscuffed. Behind them, a box was pushed into the corner of the closet, the Tecovas script across the top, the tissue paper still folded inside in two flat layers.

E.J. picked one up, turning it in his hand once, then again. The sole was clean, the leather under the arch barely touched. He ran his thumb along the stitching and down to the welt, then back up the seam to the top of the shaft.

He sat with the boot in his hand for a beat, then stood and carried it down the hall.

He walked into the bathroom and the steam came out around him, the mirror over the sink fogged across the middle. He stepped to the edge of the tub and brought the boot up past the seam of the curtain.

“Tessa. Whose these is?”

Her voice came over the water, flat. “Mine.”

E.J. he reached out and pulled the curtain aside enough to see her, the rings dragging an inch along the rod. Tessa stood under the spray with her face turned half away from him, the water running down her cheek and off her jaw.

“Since when you wear shit like this?”

“Since I bought them.”

“You ain’t never had on no cowboy boots a day in your fucking life.”

“And now I do. People buy new things, E.J. That’s what money’s for. You’d know if you had some.”

“Where you even get this shit?”

“A store. With a card. You want the address?”

E.J. sucked his teeth. “I’m asking ’cause you on some shady fucking shit right now.”

Tessa reached out and pulled the curtain to the wall, the rings dragging fast along the rod. Water ran off her chin onto her collarbone. She turned and squared her body to him.

“So a pair of boots got you doing all this?”

E.J. lifted the boot a fraction, his thumb pressing into the seam at the heel. “I’m saying you been different.”

“Different how?” Tessa swiped her thumb along her eyebrow where the water was running into the corner of her eye. “Because I smell good and I go out with my friends and I buy myself something? That’s the crime?”

“You know what I’m saying.”

“I don’t, actually. Spell it out. Say what you really trying to say to me.”

E.J.’s tongue pushed against the inside of his cheek.

Tessa watched him hold the boot. “Right. Because the second you say it out loud, we gotta talk about you fucking Nyla on that couch you were just cleaning.”

E.J.’s hand dropped a fraction. “That’s different.”

“It’s always different when it’s you.”

The water came off the ends of her hair and landed on her collarbone. Then she reached out and took the boot out of his hand. Her fingers closed around the shaft and she turned and tossed it across the bathroom. It hit the wall beside the door, knocked off the tile, and dropped to the floor by the trash can.

“I gotta be at work in forty minutes. Let me finish my fucking shower.”

She pulled the curtain closed, the rings dragging back across the rod.

E.J. stayed in the steam for a beat, his eyes were on the curtain. Then he turned and walked back up the hall.

~~~


Mireya's knuckles came down on the door harder than she needed them to, three sharp knocks against the wood. She lifted her hand and knocked again before the door could open.

The lock turned over and Jaslene pulled the door open. Her eyes moved across Mireya's face, the corners of her mouth holding for a beat. Then her face softened and she stepped back into the apartment.

“Mi amor. Come in.”

Mireya stepped past her and crossed into the living room. She turned in the middle of it to face Jaslene, her arms loose at her sides, her chest rising once before her voice came.

“You been leaving me on read like I'm some bitch you met one time at the club. I told you I needed you.”

Jaslene pushed the door shut behind her with the heel of her hand. She turned to face Mireya. “I know you did.”

“Then where you been?”

“I've been around.”

“You been around. Not for me.”

Jaslene crossed a few steps further into the living room, her arms coming together, one hand cupping her opposite elbow. Her head tilted to one side. “You don't need me, mi amor. You think you do.”

Mireya's hand cut through the air and her voice climbed. “Don't tell me what I need. Te digo lo que necesito y eres tú.”

Jaslene's eyes stayed on her. “And I'm telling you I don't think that's true.”

Mireya's eyes held on her face. Her chest pulled in once. Her arms came up at her sides and dropped again. “So that's it.”

Jaslene's mouth pulled in for a beat. “Have you been tricking?”

Mireya's hands came up at her sides, palms turning out. “Why the fuck would you care? You fucking washed your hands of me.”

“Me importa que estés a salvo.”

“No you don't. You don't care about me at all or you wouldn't be doing this.”

Jaslene's arms came down from her elbow. She closed the rest of the space between them and took Mireya's hand in both of hers, her palms covering it on either side. “I do care about you. Te quiero. You know that.”

“Then why we gotta have all this space?” Mireya's other hand came up at her side. “Why are you pushing me away? Solo dime por qué.”

Jaslene's thumb moved over the back of Mireya's hand, slow, tracing the bone from her knuckle down to her wrist and back. “Mi amor.”

Her thumb traced the line again. She held the hand in both of hers, the warmth of her palms wrapped around Mireya's. Her eyes stayed on Mireya's face, even and steady.

Mireya's body went still in front of her. Her chest pulled in and her shoulders came up. Mireya's eyes moved across Jaslene's face. Then her face went first.

Her mouth pulled in at the corners and her eyes closed for a beat. When she opened them, the tears had already started, the water gathering at her lashes and running down her cheek toward the corner of her jaw. Her free hand came up between them, the thumb drifting toward her mouth, the pad of it stopping just under her bottom lip. Her shoulders pulled in toward her chest.

Her voice came out small. “Why don't you want me anymore?”

“Mireya, that's not—”

Mireya cut across her. “Why doesn't nobody fucking want me?”

Jaslene's face caved. She let go of Mireya's hand and closed the last of the space, pulling her in against her chest. One hand slid into the back of Mireya's hair, the fingers spreading at her scalp. The other came around to the small of her back.

“Eso no es verdad. Don't say that. Ven aquí, mi amor.”

Mireya's hands came up and fisted in the back of Jaslene's shirt at her shoulder blades. Her face pressed into the side of Jaslene's neck, her wet cheek against the warm skin. Her shoulders shook once and then settled against Jaslene's body.

Then she lifted her face from the curve of Jaslene's neck and turned her head. Her mouth found Jaslene's.

Jaslene went still for a beat, her hand still at the back of Mireya's head. Then her fingers slid up into Mireya's hair, the strands catching between them, and she kissed her back. Mireya's hand left Jaslene's shoulder blade and pulled at the hem of her shirt. Jaslene's fingers found the skin at Mireya's waist, the warmth of her palm flattening against the curve of her hip.

~~~


Sena set her chopsticks across the rim of her bowl and reached for her water. The meal was down to its last bites, the rice bowls half-empty and pushed toward the center, the mackerel down to its bones on the long plate, the kimchi reduced to a streak of red at the bottom of the dish.

June set his chopsticks down on top of his bowl and reached across the surface of the table for Sophie's hand. He brought it up on top, his fingers folding over the back of hers between the dishes. His eyes moved around the table.

“We wanted to tell everybody. Sophie's pregnant.”

Sophie looked over at him, the smile already on her mouth.

Minji's hand pressed flat against the table. She pushed up out of her chair and came around the side, her steps fast, her hand brushing the back of Sena's chair as she passed. She got to Sophie's seat and her hands came up and framed her face, one palm at each cheek.

Sung's chopsticks paused above his rice. He looked across at June and nodded. “Good. Good.”

Minji's hands stayed on Sophie's face. She bent forward at the waist, her questions coming over Sophie's head, one running into the next. “How far along are you? When did you find out? Who's your doctor? Have you been taking your prenatal vitamins like I told you?”

Sophie's eyes lifted up to Minji's, her smile holding. “Ten weeks. We found out about a week and a half ago. Dr. Pham. And yes, eomma. Every morning.”

Minji's hand came off one of Sophie's cheeks and pressed against her own chest.

Sena's eyes moved from June to Sophie. “Congratulations.”

Tae's elbow came over and nudged her in the side, the bone of it pressing through the sleeve of her shirt. “Eomma and appa will be great-grandparents now before you bring someone home, eh?”

“Fuck off, Tae.”

Minji's eyes came up from Sophie's face. Her smile held in place, but the line of her mouth shifted at the corners. “I wouldn't mind meeting this Rey of yours. The one who keeps you so busy.”

Sung's eyes came up from his rice. He looked across at Sena. “Who is Rey?”

Sena's thumb pressed against the side of her water glass. “A boy I met at school, appa. We've been dating.”

Sung's eyebrow rose. His chopsticks settled across the top of his bowl. “And you haven't brought him to meet your family?”

June leaned back in his chair, his arm settling along the back of Sophie's. “He must be a criminal or something.”

Tae laughed through his nose, short and sharp. His finger came up and pointed across the table at his brother. “That's the same thing that I said.”

Sung's eyes cut from June to Tae and held there. Both of them held still for a beat. Tae's hand came down and reached for a pastry from the small plate beside him, lifting it and biting into the corner, his eyes staying on Sung. June bent toward Sophie, his head dropping closer to her ear, saying something low under the rest of the conversation. Sophie's eyes stayed on her bowl but the corner of her mouth pulled.

Minji's hand went to the back of Sophie’s chair. “Have you met his family?”

Sena nodded once. “His family is a little different than ours.”

Sung's chin lifted. “Different how?”

Sena's thumb pressed harder into the glass. “He's close to his ex's mother. It's complicated and a lot to explain.”

Sophie's eyes lifted from her bowl to Sena's face and held there. “You have a good head on your shoulders. I'm sure he's a good kid.”

June's nose pulled in a snort. “If he even exists.”

Tae's laugh came again, louder this time, his head tipping back. “His name is probably actually rose.”

Sophie's head dropped into her hands as June started laughing at Tae's joke, his shoulders shaking against the back of his chair.

Sung's voice came across the table. “I want to meet him. Soon.”

Sena lifted her glass and drank. “We have mid-terms coming up. After, maybe.”

Minji's hand moved off the back of the chair. “You don't take tests all day. He can come for dinner.”

“I'll ask.”

Sung leaned back in his chair and let his shoulders settle against the slats. “A proper man would want to meet his partner's parents as soon as possible.”

Sena's chin dipped. “I know, appa.”

Sophie's eyes stayed on Sena's face. They held there for a beat longer than the conversation needed. Then she straightened against the back of her chair and her voice came back, her mouth softening at the corners. “So, we were thinking about names.”

Minji turned back to her, her face opening. “Tell me. What ones?”

The talk moved back to Sophie. Minji started in on the names she liked, names from her own side of the family, names that had been her sister's and her aunt's, names she'd thought about back when she was carrying her own boys. Sophie listened and nodded.

Sena reached for her water.

~~~


Caine pushed the door of the room open and stepped inside. The meeting was still twenty minutes from starting, students standing in twos and threes around the long rectangle of pushed-together desks, laptops open, water bottles set out, a couple of conversations going at different corners of the room. He scanned the space once and found Memo at the far end with Adelita, a flyer in Memo's hand. He crossed the room toward them.

Memo's eyes caught him before he was halfway across, and Memo's chin came up in a small nod. Caine came up to the edge of where they were standing and slid into the gap between them.

Adelita turned her head toward him, her mouth pulling into a flat line at the corners. “Everytime I see you come to one of these I'm surprised.”

Caine brought his hand up to his chest, his fingers spreading flat against his sternum. “¿Por qué?”

Memo's laugh came out the side of his mouth. “Because she thinks you're like the Cubans, mano. You're playing for the other side and stuff.”

Adelita's eyes cut sideways at Memo. “I wouldn't say it like that.”

Caine's hands came up, palms turning out at his sides. “I get it. Guilty until proven innocent because you can't afford to be wrong. It's all love, though.”

Adelita's mouth softened a fraction. “Just make sure you use some of that money for our next protest.”

“I got you, girl. Just tell me where you need me to go to bail folks out.”

Memo's chin came up, the grin already breaking through his mouth. “Ade loves spending a couple nights in jail to really get in touch with her revolutionary side, you know?”

Adelita rolled her eyes, her head tipping back a fraction before it came level. “I'll be counting on that money, Caine.”

Caine nodded once. She turned and walked off across the room toward another girl who was setting a laptop down on one of the desks.

His hand came up and tapped Memo on the chest with the back of it twice. “Say, bruh. When I get back from Illinois, hit me up. Mi abuela sent something from Louisiana for yours, for taking care of me with the food and shit. I got it back at the crib. But you know I gotta bring it to her myself or I'm never going to hear the end of it.”

Memo's head tilted to the side. “She should've sent it to me because you wouldn't even know them if it wasn't for me.”

Caine snorted a laugh. “That's what you want to tell Doña Sofía?”

“No, but I'm gonna say it to you and we just gonna leave it at that.”

Caine shook his head. He looked at Memo for a beat, the corners of his mouth still pulled at the joke.

“You know you remind me of one of my potnas from back home.”

Memo's eyebrow rose. “Yeah?”

“Yeah, dude I grew up with. Éramos como hermanos. Ricardo. Some people called him Pretty Ricky. It was him, me and our homeboy Dre. Thick as thieves.”

Memo's hands came up between them. “This better not be where you say he's dead or something because that's bad ju-ju. I ain't got no Vick's at my apartment.”

Caine laughed, his head shaking once. “Nah, he alive. Last I knew anyway.” His hand came up and settled against the back of one of the chairs beside them, his fingers curling over the top of the slat. “We all got arrested for the same charges. They deported his mama. Then I heard he got out and deported his damn self to be with her.”

Memo's face dropped. “Damn. That's tough, mano. ¿No sabes dónde está ahora?”

Caine shook his head. “I can just assume Culiacan because that's where he's from, but beyond that. I don't know. He ain't never tried to reach out or nothing. But he probably didn't want to fuck up my probation.”

Memo nodded slow, his eyes staying on Caine's face. “Makes sense to me.”

His mouth held flat for a beat. Then the corners pulled up and the grin came back, slower than before but settling into place all the same. “Kids’ mama Mexican. Best friend Mexican. Man, you know they look down on us, huh?”

Caine sucked his teeth. His hand came off the back of the chair and pressed flat against Memo's chest, shoving him back a step. “Man, chill out.”

Memo's laugh came loose, his feet finding their place under him again. “Better go knock up Montse and get a Salvadoran on your roster.”

Caine shook his head, the snort coming up through his nose.

~~~


Sara took a sip of her wine and set the glass back down on the small table between the two chairs. The bottle on the table beside her glass was down past the label, the wine settled level inside it. Nicole was beside her with her own glass against her thigh, her ankles crossed in front of her, her free hand draped over the armrest of the chair.

Nicole's eyes moved toward Jabari's house.

“Your man not home tonight?”

Sara rolled her eyes. “No, he's back on a hitch. Another two or three weeks.”

“Are you sure that's where he is?”

Sara picked her phone up off the table. She thumbed it open, scrolled through her pictures, and turned the screen toward Nicole. The shot showed Jabari on the deck of a rig, a hard hat under one arm, his other hand raised in a half wave at the camera. The Gulf was behind him, flat and gray under the sky.

Nicole's laugh came out short, her shoulder lifting once. She leaned over the armrest for a closer look at the screen. “Oh, he's a cutie. Sending his lady pictures and stuff.”

“You're doing way too much.”

Nicole's hand came up at her side. “I'm messing. I'm happy for you. Especially after all of that shit with Devin.” She brought the wine to her mouth and took a slow sip, her eyes coming back over the rim of the glass. “Did you ever find out if it was really a prostitute that made him call you?”

She picked her glass back up off the table, her thumb settling against the stem. “No, and I'm not sure I care either way. At least we know she's looking out for other women whatever she is.”

Nicole lifted her glass toward the sky, her chin tipping up with it, the wine catching the light at the rim. “A true girl's girl.”

Sara's mouth pulled up at one corner. She lifted her own glass and drank with her.

Nicole settled her glass back against her thigh. Her eyes came over at Sara, the lift in her mouth still there. “So, is it getting serious between you and Mr. Roughneck then?”

Sara took another sip of her wine. She set the glass back down on the table, her thumb pressing once against the stem before she let go. “I think it is. It's easier for him because we already knew each other.”

Nicole rolled her eyes. “Knowing you twenty years ago doesn't have a damn thing to do with knowing you now.”

“I mean, it gives you all that shit that you have to spend the first three months of a relationship learning. I don't have to do that song and dance because he knows my family and what not.”

“That's fair.” Her thumb ran once along the stem of her glass. “The issue is that he knows Caine's father, too, right?”

Sara nodded. She turned her glass on the table between her fingers, the base making a quarter rotation against the wood, then stopped. “That's why I think I'm slow walking it a bit, because I don't know what pushing this to the point he needs to meet Caine means. I've decided that I'm not going to tell Caine that Jabari knows Calvin but that doesn't mean someone else in his life wouldn't say it.”

Nicole shrugged, the corner of her mouth pulling at the joke before she'd even said it. “You could always just say that Jabari's Caine's dad.”

Sara snorted a laugh, her head shaking once. “Caine would kill him thinking he was back around for the money.”

Nicole brought her glass to her mouth and drank. “That's also fair.”

Sara's hand stayed on the base of her glass. Her eyes went past Nicole, out across the patio toward the dark of the yard. Her thumb pressed once against the curve of the stem before she spoke. “I think Caine stopped looking for a father figure long ago and wouldn't care either way, but I don't know. Sometimes, I don't know with him. Even as his mother.”

“Well, that's a bridge to cross when you get to it.” She brought the wine to her mouth, took a sip, and lowered it. The corner of her mouth pulled. “What I want to know is how's the sex?”

Sara turned her head and looked at her, her eyes narrowing, the line of her mouth flattening.

Nicole's free hand came up between them. “What? It's been a while since I've been with a man.”

~~~


Garrison sat at the head of the table with his glass loose in his hand and his fork resting across the edge of his plate. A bottle of red sat in the middle of the table at the edge of a low candle holder. His eyes came across the table at Donovan.

“You think any about that job I told you about?”

Donovan was working a piece of steak with the side of his knife, the meat coming away in a clean cut. He shook his head, his eyes still on the plate. “Man, I don't have it in me to be running all over the state like you do.”

Nadine sat to Garrison's left with her wine in front of her, her hand resting against the stem of the glass. “It's not for the faint of heart. Long hours driving the state, longer hours dealing with them damn white folks in Sacramento.”

Vivienne's laugh came from across from Nadine, her hand coming up to her chest. “Ain't that the truth.”

Autumn sat at the corner of the table next to her mother, a glass of water beside her plate, her own steak down to a few bites pushed to one side. “What's the job? I need something for my capstone.”

Garrison turned his glass once between his fingers, the wine moving inside it. “I need a grassroots director. We're trying to break the GOP's stronghold on the IE.”

Autumn's chin came up. “I can do that.”

Sasha's voice came low under the rest of the conversation. “Not with all that time you be wasting up under that boy.”

Autumn's eyebrow rose. Her head turned a fraction toward Sasha “I know you ain't talking.”

Nadine's eyes lifted off her wine. “Autumn.”

Autumn brought her hand up at the side of her plate. “My bad, mama.”

Vivienne's gaze swung over to Autumn, the smile staying loose at the corners of her mouth. Her glass came up off the table. “You know I saw that man of yours on TV. He's a bit of a cocky one, ain't he?”

Donovan set his knife down on his plate and reached for his glass. “Setting himself up for failure talking shit about UCLA and all when they're about to play all those top 25 teams.”

Garrison's hand came up off the table and waved once at the air between them. “I can't hate on a young brother that's willing to talk his shit when all these white boys can go around acting however.”

Autumn lifted her glass and took a sip before she set it back down. “That's the same thing I tell him.”

Nadine brought her wine to her mouth and took a small sip. The corners of her mouth pulled up a fraction. “I don't think anyone needed to tell that boy how to trash talk. He is from New Orleans, after all.”

Sasha cut a piece of her steak. “And I'm sure he got an agent.”

Autumn's eyes came across to her. The line of her shoulders pulled back against the chair, the smile coming up at the corners of her mouth and staying tight. “Does it make you mad that I'm dating a man with a future and you're dating a nigga who's going to be podcasting in two years?”

Nadine's head dropped into her hands.

Sasha's chin lifted. “That man with a future and two kids, huh?”

Autumn's mouth pulled in for a beat.

Vivienne brought her hand down flat on the table beside her plate, the silverware on it shifting once. Her eyes moved from one girl to the other. “Alright now. That's enough.”

Sasha's eyes cut over to her mother. “Alright, mama.”

Donovan picked his knife back up and cut into the steak again. His eyes drifted off toward the dark of the yard. “So, y'all think the Rams got a chance to do something this season?”

Garrison snorted a laugh, his head shaking once. His glass came up to his mouth. “Whether they do or not won't matter, no one gives a damn about them or the Chargers.”





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Captain Canada
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Post by Captain Canada » 16 Jun 2026, 11:02

Mireya pleading to Jaslene that nobody wants her while having a whole girlfriend is comedic gold to me. Oh my god. Like, go look after your kids fn.

Time for the real season to begin. Will those Heisman numbers maintain against an actual opponent? :curtain:
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Post by redsox907 » 16 Jun 2026, 12:53

Captain Canada wrote:
16 Jun 2026, 11:02
Mireya pleading to Jaslene that nobody wants her while having a whole girlfriend is comedic gold to me. Oh my god. Like, go look after your kids fn.
its the same trope she pulls whenever she's desperate for attention. Boo-hoo no one wants me. Meanwhile she got a whole ass girlfriend, a side chick, a roster of men and women paying for sex, and Caine whenever she flies to LA.

But boo-hoo poor Mireya
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Post by Chillcavern » 16 Jun 2026, 13:10

Absolutely destroyed Northwestern at their “permanent interim” home in the game :obama:

Good update seemingly mostly setting up pieces.

Mireya’s struggling to use her “typical” method trying to fill her emotional holes by filling her physical ones, I see :kghah:

Jokes aside, she’s gonna have to learn how to face her problems - her avoidance strategy for years is starting to show some cracks at the moment. She’s kept on despite the risks and dangers so far. But hey, it seems like the streets might remember her, as much as they remember anyone :curtain:

Nicole asking for the gory details is too good though.
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Post by Caesar » 16 Jun 2026, 20:48

Captain Canada wrote:
16 Jun 2026, 11:02
Mireya pleading to Jaslene that nobody wants her while having a whole girlfriend is comedic gold to me. Oh my god. Like, go look after your kids fn.

Time for the real season to begin. Will those Heisman numbers maintain against an actual opponent? :curtain:
She takes rejection harder than she receives acceptance :giannis:

:weready:
redsox907 wrote:
16 Jun 2026, 12:53
Captain Canada wrote:
16 Jun 2026, 11:02
Mireya pleading to Jaslene that nobody wants her while having a whole girlfriend is comedic gold to me. Oh my god. Like, go look after your kids fn.
its the same trope she pulls whenever she's desperate for attention. Boo-hoo no one wants me. Meanwhile she got a whole ass girlfriend, a side chick, a roster of men and women paying for sex, and Caine whenever she flies to LA.

But boo-hoo poor Mireya
A side chick? Caine??? We just putting random things on Caine's jacket? :smh:
Chillcavern wrote:
16 Jun 2026, 13:10
Absolutely destroyed Northwestern at their “permanent interim” home in the game :obama:

Good update seemingly mostly setting up pieces.

Mireya’s struggling to use her “typical” method trying to fill her emotional holes by filling her physical ones, I see :kghah:

Jokes aside, she’s gonna have to learn how to face her problems - her avoidance strategy for years is starting to show some cracks at the moment. She’s kept on despite the risks and dangers so far. But hey, it seems like the streets might remember her, as much as they remember anyone :curtain:

Nicole asking for the gory details is too good though.
Random Chilliam sighting.

Her almost dying seems to have shaken Jaslene a lot and that's damaging the method.

Maybe she'll find a new strategy through therapy.

Ain't nothing wrong with some sordid deets.
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Post by Caesar » 16 Jun 2026, 20:49

Was / Atl

Autumn had her knees pressed into the mattress on either side of his hips, her weight settled low on his lap, her hand resting on his chest with her fingers spread across the muscle. Caine’s palms lay flat on her thighs, his thumbs against the inside where the skin went soft. The room was still dark, nothing through the window but the deep blue that came before the sun found the horizon and the faint glow of a streetlight below them on the avenue.

She had her phone in one hand, the screen tilted toward him, the light from it catching the underside of her jaw and the column of her throat. Her thumb scrolled once and stopped.

“Have you seen what they’ve been saying about you since Saturday?”

Caine shook his head. “Probably something about how I ain’t beat nobody and they think I’m about to get exposed.”

Autumn laughed, her body rocking forward on his lap. “They are saying that, but everyone else is saying that was your Heisman moment.”

Caine snorted a laugh. “A Heisman moment against fucking Northwestern? C’mon, bae. Let’s be fucking for real for a minute.”

Autumn shrugged, her shoulders lifting and dropping. “I don’t know enough about football to tell you one way or another. I’m just telling you what I been seeing and what my girls have been talking about.”

He looked up at her, one eyebrow coming up. “You trying to be my agent now?”

Autumn rolled her eyes. “No, I’m trying to make sure I have a man that’s equally yolked. I know I’m going to be a big fucking deal when I graduate. I just want my man to be one, too.”

Caine laughed, his head pressing back into the pillow. “Ain’t I already kinda a big fucking deal? I’m the fucking quarterback for USC.”

Autumn’s phone came off his chest and she set it on the mattress beside his hip, her now-free hand settling over his where it rested on her thigh, her fingers lacing between his. She sat up straighter on his lap, her weight shifting back onto his thighs, and looked down at him, her jaw set, her eyes level on his.

“You can be so much more than that, baby. That’s what I keep trying to tell you. Most of these niggas on the team are just trying to get their little NIL money, fuck some white bitches and go to the league for two or three years. You could be Jalen Hurts if Jalen Hurts was respected in the streets because you grew up with real killers and shit. That’s not looking to get a couple million dollars. That’s generational fucking money, bae. Don’t you care about your legacy beyond football?”

Caine looked up at her. His thumb traced once along the inside of her thigh. “Yeah, but mostly when it come to my girls. How they see me.”

Something in Autumn’s face shifted, the edge in it softening. Her fingers tightened once between his, her thumb running along the back of his hand. “They should see as more than some nigga who played football. Like how I see my daddy. I know my daddy made a difference in the world. That’s why I gotta do what I gotta do to try to live up to that. Unless you think they’re going play football somewhere.”

Caine snorted a laugh. “By the time they get old enough? You never know.”

Autumn shook her head. She brought one hand up from his stomach and dragged her nail once along his collarbone, tracing the line of it from his shoulder toward his throat. Her eyes followed her finger for a beat, then came back to his face.

“By the way, Sunday afternoon, you’re coming eat with my family.”

Caine’s mouth opened.

Autumn’s finger came up and pressed against his lips. “You can’t get out of it. You already told me your mama and Mireya aren’t coming up here.”

Caine looked at her finger against his mouth, then past it to her face. She held it there for a beat, her eyes steady on his. “Fair enough.”

Autumn’s finger slid off his mouth. She leaned forward, slow, her hands moving from his stomach to the mattress on either side of his head, her hair falling around her face and brushing against his cheeks, her body lowering until her lips sat an inch from his.

“I’m just happy I got you all to myself this week.”

~~~


Dre stood at his cell door with his hands at his sides, his shoulders filling the frame, his neck thicker than it used to be. Almost four years had put weight on him, built from push-ups on concrete and pulling his own body weight on the bars welded to the wall above his rack. His chest and arms had thickened until the whites they issued him pulled tight across the front, the cotton straining at the seams when he moved. His braids were gone, traded for an afro that he kept picked out and even, and jailhouse tattoos ran up both arms from his wrists to the sleeves, the ink blue-black and raised in places where the needle had gone too deep.

The buzz came through the tier, loud and flat, and the doors slid open in a staggered roll from one end of the block to the other, the locks disengaging in sequence, each one clacking a half second after the last. Inmates stepped out onto the walkway and fell into line along the rail, bodies pulling into the same formation they pulled into every morning. Dre stepped out and took his place, his eyes forward, his arms loose.

The guard at the end of the tier called them forward. The line moved. Feet hit the walkway in a loose rhythm, rubber soles and shower slides against the painted floor, low voices underneath it from inmates who kept their mouths moving while their eyes stayed forward. Dre fell in behind Jody.

Jody glanced back at him, a quick cut of his eyes, then looked up at the female guard they were approaching where she stood with her hands on her belt near the stairwell door. He waited until they had passed her and were on the stairs, the line compressing as inmates ahead of them slowed at the landing.

“That nigga Emmett getting out of the SHU today.”

Dre kept his eyes on the back of Jody’s head. “Getting out to come back to the cell block or to go home?”

“The block. Marshawn said his cellie got out last week and one of the COs told him that he shouldn’t get comfortable. Nigga saw Emmett’s papers and he coming back today.”

Dre opened his mouth to speak.

“Keep your fucking mouth shut, inmate.” The guard’s voice came from somewhere above them on the tier.

Dre sucked his teeth and closed his mouth. He kept walking, his hand trailing along the rail as they took the turn at the landing, his feet finding each step without looking. The line pushed through the door at the bottom and into the corridor that ran toward the chow hall, the floor changing from painted concrete to polished tile that caught the overhead fluorescents.

Jody’s pace slowed a half step, enough to bring Dre alongside him, their shoulders close. The nearest guard was twenty feet ahead of them at the corridor’s bend, his back to the line, his attention on the inmates already rounding the corner.

“He must ain’t get that deal he was looking for if they sending him back.”

Jody nodded once. “Must not.”

“4KT still got that green light on him?”

“As long as that nigga breathing then he got a green light on him. You know how that shit go out on the outside.”

Dre’s eyes moved once to the guard at the bend, tracked him for a beat as he shifted his weight from one foot to the other, then came back to Jody. “It’s a quarter, right?”

Jody nodded. “A quarter and some coffees and soups for your trouble.”

The line ahead of them compressed again as inmates funneled through a set of double doors propped open with rubber wedges, the chow hall loud through the gap, voices and the scrape of trays against tables.

Dre stepped closer to Jody. “Send me a kite as soon as that nigga in the cell. I’ll do him tonight.”

Jody looked back at him over his shoulder, a smirk pulling at the corner of his mouth. “I feel like I gotta say pause on that, lil’ brudda.”

Dre shook his head. “Man, chill the fuck out. You know what I meant.”

Jody held his hands up, the smirk still on his face as the two of them followed the line through the double doors into the cafeteria. Dre reached for a metal lunch tray from the stack by the door, the tray cold against his fingers.

~~~


Cass pushed through the front door of the bakery with a white box balanced on her palm, the cardboard warm from the kitchen. Mrs. Williams had her window down already, her arm hanging out the side of the car, fingers tapping against the door panel. Cass leaned down and passed the box through.

“There you go, Mrs. Williams. Make sure you tell your husband that he need to watch his blood sugar when he eating all that.”

Mrs. Williams laughed, both hands coming up to steady the box on her lap. “You know he don’t listen none to me, baby. You have a good day now.”

“You, too.” Cass stepped back from the car and lifted her hand in a wave as Mrs. Williams pulled the car into reverse, one hand on the wheel and the other holding the box steady on her lap, the brake lights flashing once before she backed out of the spot and swung toward the exit.

Cass watched the car until it turned onto the street, then dropped her hand and walked back toward the door.

The bell above the frame chimed when she pushed through it. The front counter was empty, the display case still half full from the morning run, trays of cupcakes and pastries lined up behind the glass. She looked up at the clock on the wall behind the register. 2:14. She pulled her phone from her apron pocket and checked the screen, scrolling to her last text from Julie, sent forty minutes ago, saying she was going to grab food and would be back in thirty. Cass sucked her teeth and slid the phone back into the apron.

She walked around the counter and through the doorway into the kitchen. The scream came out of her before the rest of her body caught up, her feet stopping hard on the tile, her hands flying up, her weight rocking back onto her heels.

Ant leaned against one of the stainless steel prep tables with his arms crossed over his chest, a gun held low in his right hand, the barrel angled toward the floor.

“Found you, bitch.”

Cass held her hands out in front of her, her chest still working from the jump. “They got cameras all up in here.”

Ant looked up at the ceiling, at the camera in its dome above the door she’d come through. His eyes came back to her, his head tilting a fraction. “Ain’t nobody gonna do you nothing. Yet, anyway.”

Cass lowered her hands a fraction, her feet planted where they’d stopped. “What you talking about?”

“Trell dead.”

Cass’s hands dropped to her sides. “I know, I saw it on the news and on IG. You know who did it?”

Ant’s chin lifted a fraction. “Do you know who did it?”

“Look, I ain’t been back down there since November. When all that shit happened with Meechie and them. So if someone got Trell, it ain’t have nothing to do with me.”

Ant pushed off the table and took a step toward her, closing half the distance between them, the gun still low at his side. “I need you to get back in touch with all the connects you had from Peanut.”

Cass’s arms crossed over her chest, her weight settling onto one hip. “Everyone I know, you already know.”

“They won’t fucking work with me. I need you to make it work.”

“Why would I do that?”

The gun came up, the barrel leveling at her midsection. “‘Cause if you don’t, I’m gonna shoot your ass then go to your sister’s house and up how many hats I got.”

Cass sucked her teeth and her eyes went to the gun and came back to his face, her jaw setting, her chin lifting a fraction. “That right there is why niggas don’t want to work with you. You too violent. Sometimes, you gotta negotiate, nigga.”

Ant raised the gun the rest of the way and cocked the hammer with his thumb. “This enough negotiating for you?”

Cass held his eyes. The barrel held on her and Ant’s arm stayed extended, his finger resting along the trigger guard. She breathed in through her nose and let it out slow, her shoulders dropping a fraction with the exhale.

“Alright. I get off in like three hours. Come back here and we’ll talk.”

Ant held the gun on her for another beat, his eyes moving once over her face. Then his thumb eased the hammer forward and his arm dropped, the gun going back to his side. He nodded.

“You bet not trying to play me, Cass.”

He turned and walked toward the back door of the kitchen, his free hand pushing the door open. He stopped in the doorway, the light from outside cutting across the floor behind him and looked back at her over his shoulder.

“I ain’t never thought you’d have a normal bitch job, now look at you.”

Cass looked at him from across the kitchen, her arms still folded over her chest, her weight on one hip, her jaw set.

“Well, shit happen, nigga.”

~~~


Mireya stood in line with her arm around Sena’s waist, her hand tucked into the back pocket of Sena’s scrub pants, her fingers flat. Her eyes moved up the menu board above the counter, reading through the specials written in chalk, her head tilting a fraction as she worked down the columns.

Sena looked over at her. “You have to be touching me at all times?”

Mireya nodded without taking her eyes off the menu. “Yeah, because you mine. And I can touch what’s mine.”

Sena rolled her eyes but her body stayed where it was, her hip pressed against Mireya’s, her weight leaning a fraction into the hand in her pocket.

“I think I’m going with roast beef tonight. Seafood ain’t been hitting the same these last few weeks.”

Sena’s eyebrow went up. “I hope that’s not you being pregnant again.”

Mireya’s head turned. “I’d rip that fucking bastard out myself. And that’d require me to have been fucking men which I ain’t done since before we got together.”

Sena shrugged. “It could be immaculate conception.”

Mireya snorted a laugh. “Oh, yeah. Just re-write the fucking bible so it’s Mary Magdalene and then I can be the whore birthing deities.”

Sena shook her head, her mouth pulling at one corner, her eyes going back to the menu board above them. The line moved forward a step and they moved with it, Mireya’s hand still in her pocket, their hips bumping once with the step before they settled again.

“Mireya?”

The voice came from behind them, off to the left, somewhere near the back of the restaurant. Mireya’s body went still. Her hand stayed in Sena’s pocket but her fingers stopped moving, her arm going rigid against Sena’s waist. She turned her head.

Yola walked toward them from the back of the restaurant with a cup in his hand, Shad a step behind him carrying his own. Yola’s face opened into a grin when their eyes met and he closed the distance in a few strides, pulling Mireya into a hug before she’d finished turning to face him. Her hand came out of Sena’s pocket as his arms went around her, his chest pressing against hers, the hug tight and brief.

“Shit, girl. Where you been hiding?”

Mireya stepped back out of the hug, putting a foot of space between them. “I been around.”

Yola looked her over, his eyes moving from her face down and back up, his chin lifting. “Still fucking fine wherever you been.” His eyes cut to Sena, taking her in. “This a new chick who work with you?”

Mireya shook her head. “This is my girlfriend. She don’t work with me.”

Yola’s eyebrows went up. He looked at Sena again, longer this time. “That’s a fucking shame. She could make some money.” His head tilted toward Sena. “Ain’t that right, Yummy Chan?”

Sena’s eyebrow rose. She looked at Mireya, her mouth flat.

Yola looked back at Mireya. “Your number still the same?”

Mireya shook her head. “I changed it.”

“What it is then?”

Mireya glanced at Sena. Her eyes stayed on Sena’s face for a beat, then came back to Yola. “I don’t do that anymore.”

Yola laughed, his hand coming up to adjust the chain at his neck. “Shit, enough money make any bitch change her mind real quick.”

Shad stepped forward and hit Yola in the chest twice with the back of his hand. “Say, big brudda. We gotta go meet Scotty about that pack.”

Yola sucked his teeth. “I know. Give me a minute.”

“We suppose to get cross town in twenty minutes, nigga. This money you talking about missing.”

Yola sucked his teeth again. “You ain’t never no fun, lil’ nigga.” He looked at Mireya. “I’ll see you around, Luna.”

The two of them walked past her toward the door, Shad pushing through first with his shoulder against the glass, Yola following with his cup lifted to his mouth.

Mireya’s arms crossed over her chest. Her thumb found her bottom lip and pressed into it, her fingers curled under her chin. She stood there facing the door they’d walked through, her eyes on the glass, the line behind her moving forward without her.

Sena stepped closer. “Who was that?”

“They used to work for my ex.”

“The drug dealing one.”

Mireya nodded.

“That’s it?”

Mireya looked over at her, her thumb still against her lip, her arms still crossed tight. “You really want to know?”

Sena searched her face. Her eyes moved between Mireya’s eyes, then dropped to the thumb pressed against her mouth, then came back up. She shook her head. “It’s in the past, right?”

Mireya nodded. “Yeah.”

“Was Luna your stage name?”

Mireya shook her head, her thumb dropping from her lip, her arms loosening a fraction across her chest. “Yeah. One of the other dancers gave it to me.”

“Luna.” Sena looked at her, her head tilting, something pulling at the corner of her mouth. “You do look like a Luna to be fair.”

Mireya rolled her eyes and stepped toward the counter to order.

~~~


Tyree sat in the passenger seat with a pistol in his lap, the magazine out, feeding rounds into it one at a time, each one clicking into place against the spring. Zo had the engine off and the car parked between two others at the end of the block, the street running ahead of them under the orange wash of the lamps that still worked, every other one dead. Bakari sat behind Tyree with his knee bouncing against the back of the seat, his hands on his thighs, his head turning between the windshield and the side window.

Zo looked over at Tyree. “You sure you want to do this? We still ain’t got the go ahead from Duke about what to do.”

Tyree slid the magazine into the grip and palmed it flush. “Fuck Duke and all them old niggas. We ain’t get to where we got to by waiting around.”

Bakari leaned forward between the seats. “Y’all just gotta let me know where to aim and I’m with it, brudda.”

Tyree looked at him in the rearview. “You gonna know as soon as you see that ponk ass nigga.”

Zo’s hands rested on the steering wheel at the bottom of the arc, his fingers loose around the leather. “You know I’m ten toes with you, brudda, but you should let Ramon know what we ‘bout to do.”

“He keep telling me to wait and if these niggas the ones who shot at me then waiting just mean they gonna take another shot at me. Next time they might not miss so we going one up on them early on.”

Tyree set the gun on his lap and leaned back in the seat, his head against the headrest, his eyes on a house five down from where they were parked. The porch was dark, the windows glowing blue from a television insidey.

They waited. Bakari’s knee kept going. Zo’s thumb traced the stitching on the wheel in a slow circle that went nowhere. Tyree’s eyes fixed on the porch, his body still in the seat.

The porch light kicked on. The front door opened and three men walked out, one of them pulling the door shut behind him, the other two already down the steps and into the yard. Their voices carried up the block, the words too far away to make out but the tone loose, laughing. From across the street two more guys jogged over, hands dapping up the first three as they met in the front yard.

Tyree sat up. “That’s them right there.”

Zo leaned forward, his eyes narrowing. “You sure?”

“Yeah, drive, nigga.”

Tyree reached across himself and rolled the window down, the glass dropping into the door panel. Behind him Bakari said “Ah, fuck yeah” and rolled his window down too, his body scooting forward on the seat toward the door, his chest rising and falling as he pulled air in through his nose.

Zo turned the key and the engine turned over. He put the car in drive and pulled out from the gap between the two parked cars, the tires rolling over the asphalt, the engine running low, barely above idle.

“Cut the lights off.”

“I know what I’m doing, nigga.”

Zo killed the headlights. The car crept down the block in the dark, passing under the dead lamps where the shadows ran thick, the working ones throwing brief strips of orange across the hood and windshield before they passed through. The five men in the yard grew larger through the windshield. Their laughter was audible now, one of them gesturing with his hands while the others stood in a loose circle around him, drinks in their hands, their backs to the street.

Tyree picked the gun up off his lap. His thumb found the slide release and ran across it once. “Go, nigga.”

Zo hit the gas.

The tires barked against the asphalt and the engine roared forward. The five men turned at the same time, heads snapping toward the street, their faces catching the orange light for a fraction of a second before Tyree leaned out the passenger window and opened fire. Bakari came out the rear window a beat behind him, his arm extended, pulling the trigger as fast as his finger could cycle.

The yard broke apart. Two of the men broke for a car parked at the curb, their bodies low, arms over their heads, shoes tearing through the grass as they dove behind the bumper. Two more hit the ground, one of them rolling onto his stomach and reaching under his shirt, the other flat on his back with his hands scrambling at his waistband. The fifth one went the other way, scrambling on his hands and feet across the yard toward the gap between the house and the fence, his legs kicking dirt behind him as he disappeared around the corner.

Zo flew past the house. Tyree pulled himself back through the window and pointed the gun into the air behind them, squeezing off three more rounds that cracked into the dark above the rooftops. Bakari dropped back into the seat, his chest heaving, a grin stretched across his face.

Zo took the corner hard, the tires screaming through the turn, the back end swinging wide before the tread caught and the car straightened out. Zo’s foot pressed the gas to the floor and the car surged forward, the engine climbing through the gears, the block behind them shrinking in the rearview until it was nothing.
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Captain Canada
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American Sun

Post by Captain Canada » 16 Jun 2026, 21:57

Tyree done gone rogue to catch a hat :obama:

Mireya almost getting exposed for her full fledged self is wild. Sena too pussy to really press her which is unfortunate.

Intrigued to see where you're going to go with Cass/Dre coming back into the storyline. Hope Caine reconnects with Dre somehow.

Soapy
Posts: 15529
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 17 Jun 2026, 06:46

the play has been outstanding :rockclap:

given that you want this to be four years, i'm expecting some fuck shit to happen to force him to come back for his senior season

like I said in the chatbox, mireya sympathy gimmick not working on me
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redsox907
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Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 17 Jun 2026, 15:54

Soapy wrote:
17 Jun 2026, 06:46
like I said in the chatbox, mireya sympathy gimmick not working on me
it would be one thing if she was trying to change her life for the better. She's doing the normal therapy stereotype. Lets go and talk about my feelings then act upset when nothing changes, cause I ain't changed nothing :smh:

Ramon bout to be the last man standing for the clique? EJ in Houston getting put in check by Tessa, Tyree just spun the block and Duke gonna be pissed.

Sena needs to grow a metaphorical pair. Cause it don't take a genius to put two and two together. I get that she thinks it's in the "past" but the past is the present, girl
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Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 16076
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

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Post by Caesar » 18 Jun 2026, 07:41

Captain Canada wrote:
16 Jun 2026, 21:57
Tyree done gone rogue to catch a hat :obama:

Mireya almost getting exposed for her full fledged self is wild. Sena too pussy to really press her which is unfortunate.

Intrigued to see where you're going to go with Cass/Dre coming back into the storyline. Hope Caine reconnects with Dre somehow.
He always been a wild boy

Full fledged is doing a lot of work there.

:hmm:
Soapy wrote:
17 Jun 2026, 06:46
the play has been outstanding :rockclap:

given that you want this to be four years, i'm expecting some fuck shit to happen to force him to come back for his senior season

like I said in the chatbox, mireya sympathy gimmick not working on me
When you playing so good that Soapy can't even hate :giannis:

Man can't just pull a Dante Moore? A Matt Leinart?

We know you're cold-hearted.
redsox907 wrote:
17 Jun 2026, 15:54
Soapy wrote:
17 Jun 2026, 06:46
like I said in the chatbox, mireya sympathy gimmick not working on me
it would be one thing if she was trying to change her life for the better. She's doing the normal therapy stereotype. Lets go and talk about my feelings then act upset when nothing changes, cause I ain't changed nothing :smh:

Ramon bout to be the last man standing for the clique? EJ in Houston getting put in check by Tessa, Tyree just spun the block and Duke gonna be pissed.

Sena needs to grow a metaphorical pair. Cause it don't take a genius to put two and two together. I get that she thinks it's in the "past" but the past is the present, girl
She's been to FOUR, FIVE sessions. This is why therapy doesn't work. People think you go twice and you're cured :pgdead:

Last man standing or the first to go? :hmm:

Mireya hasn't linked with Yola in the better part of a year. That's past :druski:
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