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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Blitz
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Blitz Blazing Boy

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Angel McBride and Deon Saunders


Location: The Spit
Interacting with: Each other





It was a humid August evening. The streets of New York had been more empty than usual during the day as the people tried to escape the relentless heat. It felt like the long dog days of summer slinked by painfully slowly, baking the chipped bricks of dilapidated buildings and the cracked asphalt of the lonely streets. For as slow and endless as the days felt, however, it seemed there was more and more drama going on every day.

“The heat makes people do crazy things,” Angel always said.

And she was right. From drug busts and alleyway stabbings to broken hearts and surprise pregnancies, there was hardly a dull moment that summer. Though most of what she heard of didn’t require her involvement, Angel felt almost exhausted from the nonstop and often upsetting news she would receive. No amount of cigarette would calm down her mounting stress either.

What better way was there to destress than grabbing a drink? Except, it’ll be much more than just a drink.

Angel didn’t really go out to bars much, but when she did, she made sure everyone around her, strangers and friends alike, knew it was a big deal. She spent the brunt of her afternoon cooped up in the little bedroom she had for herself in the basement of the Wolves’ main hideout. She tried out five different dresses before deciding on a tight but elegant white one that hugged her waist and stopped dangerously close to her hips. Her golden hair she left down, leaving its slight curls to be formed by the wind. Looking into her mirror she applied a small amount of make-up.

She emerged from her room with high-heels clicking against the cement flooring, feeling confident and sexy. But before she left, she made sure to grab her purse—with her pistol and pocket knife inside.

“Does Deon have a match tonight?” she asked aloud, to no one in particular.

“Not tonight,” someone had replied to her from one of the couches. “But he’s got one tomorrow, I think.”

Angel sighed. “I guess I’ll have to drink without any entertainment, then. What a shame.”

As expected, the walk to The Spit was uneventful until she drew closer. The Spit was located on McNerta Avenue, a more or less neutral area that housed the majority of the city’s dive bars, whorehouses, and businesses of the like. The Spit was among the top on the list of the infamous bars of that area, known for hosting its cage fights and being a hub for drug sales and rumors of underage drinking. Upon turning onto McNerta, Angel already saw the roaming drunk, the groups of giggling women clad in colorful dresses and reeking of cheap, overpowering perfume.

Angel stepped inside the bar and immediately felt the attention of more than a few men focus on her. Before she could even take a seat at the bar, a large, lumbering man hobbled over and stepped in front of her.

“Oy, gorgeous,” he boomed, his voice already saturated with the stench of alcohol. “How ‘bout your first couple drinks on me, eh?”

Angel was always keen on getting free drinks, but not from the likes of this inebriated fool. It would take about ten more drinks for the beer goggles to work on that one, she thought. Without giving him a word, she stepped to the side and continued toward the bar.

She felt a hand clap down on her shoulder.

“Is that a no?”

Angel halted and rolled her eyes.

“Please don’t touch me,” she told him, her voice oddly calm over the blaring music and shouting of drunkards. “I really don’t want this to get ugly so quickly.”

Before he could react, another drunk man came by and locked the first one in a bear-hug type of greeting, momentarily releasing Angel from his grap and freeing her from his attention. She slipped away and snaked through the throngs of dancing people over to the bar area, where she pulled up a seat at the very end.

“Vodka shot!” she barked at the bartender, throwing the cash down from her purse onto the greasy bartop.

"You wanna explain to me why you think you gotta pay for your drinks here?" a familiar voice addressed her.

Deon took up the stool next to Angel and got comfortable, nodding his head to the bartender who took out another shot glass and filled them both with Angel's poison of choice.

The Spit was his stomping grounds - had been for the last handful of years. And even though he wasn't set up with a match for the night, that didn't mean he wasn't interested in free alcohol and getting a good look at future competition. Not to mention... with his reputation as King of the Cages, it never failed to land him a girl or five. Sometimes all at the same time.

He scratched the side of his shaved head above the angry scar that split his scalp. A handful months short of three years since he had been given perhaps one of his largest trademarks, the feeling of the scar, despite being healed, was certainly a new one.

Dropping his hand then to take up one of the shots that the bartender put in front of them, Deon raised his glass to her before pounding down the beverage in one quick gulp. Exhaling out a burning breath, Deon cleared his throat and returned the empty shot glass to the bar, signaling to the bartender with a simple motion of his finger for another round.

"You know I don't fight until tomorrow, right?" he then asked Angel, tilting his head in curiosity. "Or did you just really miss me?" He stuck out his lower lip, pouting.

With a small smirk, Angel folded up her bills and placed them back into her purse when Deon had pulled up a seat next to her at bar. He seemed to materialize out of nowhere, as Angel was sure she would’ve seen him upon entering. He had probably been camouflaged by an entourage of girls at the time.

“The ones who offer to pay don’t really… rub me the right way,” Angel answered him, placing coy emphasis on the last bit. She took her first shot with him, needing no mixer or chaser at her side in order to do so. She also exhaled, feeling the liquor dive into her stomach and warm her cheeks somewhat.

“I knew you didn’t have a match tonight,” Angel said. “Maybe I just came here hoping to avoid you on one of your off nights.” She winked at him and smiled at the bartender who placed another round before them.

“You know, I never pegged you as a vodka man,” Angel commented. “I thought you were all beer and brown liquor.”

Deon shrugged.

"Since when have you known me to be predictable?" he lightly teased before moving to lift up the second shot.

"What are you really doing here, Angel? We both know you don't know how to have fun." He took down the shot, feeling now the alcohol starting to warm his body.

Angel chuckled to herself. He was partially correct. She was the poster child for Type-A personality, and it was rare to see her relaxing for relaxing’s sake.

“You still think I don’t go to bars unless it’s for a mission?” Angel teased right back. “Sure, I look a little out of place here right now, but what can I say? These are my people.” She gestured to the source of drunken clamor behind her and reached down to take her shot.

“I could ask you the same thing, you know,” Angel told him after setting down the empty glass. “If your little part-time job isn’t paying out tonight, why’d you come here? I hope it wasn’t just for the fangirls. Your lawyer can only shake off so many paternity suits.”

Deon chuckled. Luckily, he hadn't actually gotten anyone pregnant yet. At least, to his knowledge he hadn't. Not like he cared, anyway.

"Small-time fight tonight. My agent thinks it a good idea to watch and try to learn a thing or two from how they fight." He scoffed. "Like he thinks they'll beat me." He shook his head before switching up his order from vodka shots to a pint of dark beer.

"Now your turn. What's the deal?"

For once, Angel agreed with and understood his cockiness. She has yet to see Deon lose a fistfight, official or otherwise. In the back of her head, she toyed with the idea of whether he always won because of his skill, or because his contempt for losing was so strong.

Angel watched the bartender closely and grabbed the pint of beer from Deon before he could take a sip for himself. She took a few hearty gulps and set down the mug, sliding it over to him. Her face was one that hard to read—if she was ever showing any emotion, it was probably because she wanted you to see it.

“Deal?” she asked. “There’s no deal. Can’t a gal come out to the bars and take a load off? What did you expect? Robbing the bookie? Or reconnaissance? Did you know it’s French for recognition? Believe me, I recognize this place well enough, unfortunately.”

She ordered a vodka cranberry, deciding she didn’t care much for Deon’s beer selection.

“Or will you not believe me, no matter what I say?” she asked, taking a delicate sip from her chilled glass after it arrived.

“It’d probably be a bit more fun.” Deon commented, taking his mug back and took a long drink, practically emptying it. “Although, it goes to question… if you really are just here to relax… here, of all places… then I’m starting to believe that you really did just miss me.” He theatrically placed his free hand over his heart. “Angel Baby, I’m touched.”

Angel resisted rolling her eyes at her cocky comrade. She watched him down his drink like a thirsty animal and nearly grimaced at the thought of washing down such a drink so quickly. It would’ve almost been more efficient for him to funnel the drink down his gullet, she thought.

“You’ve caught me red-handed,” Angel said with a tone of sarcasm. The alcohol’s buzz migrated from her warmed cheeks to a tingling sensation in the back of her head. “I guess I was just really craving the kind of… fun you tend to bring along when you’re around.”

Behind them, the emcee announced the two who would be fighting that night, bringing out some cheers from the lookers-on. Angel glanced at the ring for a moment, and easily deduced Deon could pummel either of them in a fight.

“Yawn,” Angel commented, referring to the fighters. “I’d rather watch two pigeons fight over a breadcrumb.” She chuckled at herself and took another sip.

“Is it… just alcohol that you’re indulging in tonight, Deon?” she asked.

Deon quirked a curious brow.

“Oh?” A faint smirk played across his lips.Women, usually, in his company were looking for one of three things: sex, booze, drugs. And since they could already mark off one of those options, that left the more… interesting two. He laughed lightly, turning his attention to his nearly empty mug and finished it off, using the back of his hand to wipe his lips.

“Alright… you’ve got my attention.” he confessed. Not like he could ever turn Angel down for anything, anyway. “I’m… meeting someone here in about an hour for some.. Pop Rocks.” He didn’t even dare shift his gaze around at other people to see if his choice of random candy stirred any attention that might let someone know there was much more to what he was talking about. “Stick around long enough, Angel Baby, and I can show you a good time.” he promised with a wink before motioning the bartender for another drink.

“That implies I never had your attention to begin with,” Angel cooed, leaning forward so her chest pressed a little more against the bartop. When Deon mentioned “Pop Rocks,”Angel pursed her lips, her expression growing grim for second. But her face relaxed as she took another sip of her fruity beverage.

“I see,” she sighed. “I was expecting one of your improperly rolled joints. And who is this someone? What you’re looking for can be hard to come by.”

“Improperly?” Deon grumbled lowly, messing around with the handle of his mug for a few moments before recovering from the little jab.

“She’s a... contact I’ve had for a few years. Quality stuff. Now that I can afford it, I don’t get anything else. Like I said, if you stick around long enough, you’ll find out what I’m talking about.”

“For a few years, hm?” Angel was quiet for a moment, surrounding the two of them with the sound of the loud music and the cheers for the fight going on behind them. Angel wasn’t one hundred percent sure of how much she wanted to have a “good time” with Deon and this supposed contact, but she knew she had nothing better to do than stick around and see for herself.

“I guess I’ll meet her then,” Angel decided. “Can’t promise I’ll partake, though. At least one of us should only stay on one kind of substance.”

“I’ll keep that in mind, miss goody-two-shoes.” Deon chided, finally receiving his second drink. He turned his attention to the beverage for a few moments, taking enough off of the top of the glass worthy of a few swallows and then lowered it, giving Angel a smile.

“In the meantime…” he trailed off. “What could we possibly do together to keep entertained for another hour?”

Angel smirked.

“I imagine you already have some thoughts on that,” she guessed, taking a another sip but not breaking eye contact with Deon.

“I’ve got a room in the back.” He inclined his head in the direction he was talking about, taking another drink of his beer. “I won’t even charge you for the restraints.” he half-joked.

“How noble,” Angel remarked. She pondered the idea for a second and then shrugged. “I guess I did come here to unwind. Don’t disappoint me, Deon.” She gave him a little wink and stood up, gesturing for him to lead the way.

“It’ll be just like old times.” Deon said, smiling as he got up. He quickly reached out to his drink and with a few large gulps, finished it off before setting the empty mug back on the bar. He then reached out to take her hand, urging her to follow him. “And you know me, Angel baby. I never disappoint.” he then finished.
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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Fading Memory
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Fading Memory The Final Flame of a Fiery Bird

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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Blitz
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Blitz Blazing Boy

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Knox Callahan


Location: The Train Yard -> McNerta Ave.
Interacting with: Introduction





On the other side of town, on the border of Tersei and Amaranth, there was a lonely old railroad yard underneath a network of raised highway ramps. Though most train yards weren't particularly beautiful, this one was especially rundown, though still functional by some miracle. A few locomotives sat motionless on the tracks, in the middle of being loaded or unloaded. Many of the cars were covered in graphic or profane graffiti. Being shielded from most of the elements by the overhead highway ramps and the surrounding buildings, the air was dense, eerily still and quiet.

Only the sound of slow, deliberate footsteps through the gravel broke the silence. A pair of old, faded white basketball shoes kicked up the little stones that ran parallel between two stalled trains. The young man, whose face was obscured by his hood in the dim lighting, checked the time on his phone before reaching his hand out and touching the rough metal surface of one of the train cars that was covered in spray paint.

"Wish I had this kinda talent," he mused to himself.

"That's not you at all, Knox." A different voice rang out from farther down between the two trains. The hooded boy turned his head and removed his hand from the graffiti. A smile formed on his lips as he chuckled.

"Oh?" he asked aloud, before a new figure emerged from the dark—a tall but lanky main with dark skin, hair, and eyes. He was shouldering a backpack and dressed casually.

"You're not the artsy type," he declared.

Knox looked again at the graffiti.

"I don't think most of the guys who made these were very artsy either," he supposed. He reached up with both of his hands and pulled back his hood, revealing more of his face, his eyes, and his hair.

The newcomer came up next to him and also touched the side of the train car.

"Eh, maybe you're right. Still not you though." He paused for a moment and spoke up again. "Always wondered who made all this grafitti and where they're from, you know? Trains go all over the country. Whoever did this could've been from Chicago, St. Louis, maybe even somewhere out in California."

"California..." The previously-hooded Knox pronounced the word slowly, feeling the words on his tongue. "Just the sound of it seems like some kind of distant, exotic land."

"Why not go out there? It's only a train ride away. Warm year round, and the best weed in the country."

"I can't now. I'm... tied down here."

The one with the backpack snickered and pulled off his backpack, setting on the gravel at his feet.

"Ah, right. How's the gangster life going for you?" he asked coldly.

"Can't complain. Would've probably died without 'em."

"Sure, sure." The newcomer unzipped his backpack and rummaged around inside.

"What you got for me today, KJ?" Knox asked expectantly.

"I've got your favorite."

"White widow?"

KJ pulled out a bag and held it before Knox's beaming face.

"My man!" he exclaimed. He shoved his hand into his hoodie's pocket and pulled out a wad of cash, handing it to KJ before snatching the bag from his hand. He held up the bag to the light of a dim service light and examined his treasure.

"Noice," was his only affirmation.

"Guess where it's from," KJ told him.

Knox brought down the bag and stuffed it into his pocket in lieu of the money that was previously there.

"California?" he guessed.

"That's right."

"Whatever. As long as I've got hookups like you here, I've got no reason to leave."

"That's fair." KJ zipped his backpack back up and shouldered it.

"You should consider joining yourself," Knox suggested. "They're really chill. Good group of people."

"No thanks," KJ laughed. "I've got business with y'all and the Wolves. Gotta stay neutral for the maximum customer base."

"Lame."

"Tell that to my profits. Is that all for tonight, Knox? You could smoke through that in a day's time."

Knox shrugged.

"I'll text you if I need more."

"Oh, I know you will. See you around. Careful not to get lose down here, either."

"I won't. My sense of direction isn't that bad."

"Mmm-hmm."

With that, Knox's drug deal turned and sauntered down the gravel back the way he had came. Knox, however, lingered for a moment more, looking and and touching the trains cars a bit longer. Finally, he turned and walked back the way he had also come from, leading onto a quiet side street of Tersei. He wandered down it for nearly half an hour, trying to find a good place to smoke at.

Eventually, he drew near McNerta Avenue, and spotted a park across the street from all the dive bars and strip clubs. Well, it was a park at some point. The grass had yellow and the trees had lost their leaves one winter, never to get them back. The fountain in the middle no longer ran and was filled with an opaque brown liquid that was more sludge than it was water. The ugliness made no difference to Knox, however. He eagerly took a seat on an old park bench in front of the fountain. He quickly and discreetly ground up a bit of the weed and packed it into his favorite bowl. He snatched out his lighter from his pocket and sparked the flame, taking a long, slow inhale from the open end of the bowl.

"Oh, fuck yes." He was in heaven.
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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Aalakrys
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Aalakrys

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Leigh Livingston


Location: Matron's Studio Apartment
Interacting with: Greenie / no one





It was weird being here, Leigh thought with a slight pang, without The Matron.

It'd been a week, and still Leigh thought she'd show up via the fire escape window as per usual to find the woman sitting in the sole armchair drinking tea or working on another wind chime. Instead, when Leigh had climbed through - still not accepting that this place was hers and that she'd use the front door like any normal person would - the tinkle of chimes as the brushed against her shoulder was the only noise within the empty studio apartment. With a sigh, she'd walked over to the lamp she'd left on to make it seem like someone was home while she was away and flicked it off. The lights from outside was enough to leave the room illuminated, and somehow made it easier to be in the place.

"You shouldn't leave the window unlocked, kid." Though the voice was familiar, gravelly from disuse, Leigh still sat bolt upright on the bed she'd fallen onto. She wasn't accustomed to being the one that was watched without notice. "Someone could sneak in while you're out."

Though the Matron trusted the man in the green jacket, Leigh had no cause to blindly do so while in a semi-lit apartment after just vulnerably positioning herself. Her mind was instantly on the window and forming a way on how to get to it efficiently. He must've seen her thoughts from whatever shadow he was in as the city lights had her face illuminated and revealed that her eyes had darted to the open frame. "And they wouldn't warn you either."

He flipped on the lights then, and she saw he had a scrap of cloth pressed to his forehead, dried blood down his face. "Fortunate for me you did leave it open though. I could use some cleaning up."

Stitches. The Matron had shown her how to do them. She didn't like it, and so the woman had pushed her to do it more frequently until she had become numb to the process. There were a few regular people who had stopped by for clean up, but only a handful. They could have gone to the hospital, but that came with questions.

"Princess is out tonight." Greenie had said after Leigh had nodded and stood, hiding her nerves at the prospect of doing this without the watchful eye of The Matron, and then preparing what was needed. He had let her work in silence, only speaking when he sat down on the stool and was about to have a needle stick through his scalp. It may have been a hint of nerves, or maybe he sensed hers and tried to distract her. "Could get some good intel if you head over to The Spit."

"There's plenty of eyes at that place." Leigh said as she narrowed her eyes on the cut she'd just mopped up and disinfected. The first stitch was always the worst, but somehow going it alone made it that much more difficult. Still, she did it. He hissed through gritted teeth and clenched his fists that rested on his knees, but didn't flinch - which was much appreciated. So, with a wry smirk, she added: "And I'd be insane to be spotted while spying on her."

The man chuckled then, the pain from her work into his skin only slightly evident. But he said nothing. The place was, as she said, crawling with people. Sure, Leigh could go and hang out on a roof, blending in by looking she belonged and was simply having a drink and watching the show, but ... she didn't like the noise. If it was required, yeah, she'd go. But there was no mission directly sending her and so she didn't. Besides, who would she pass intel to now? The sewer kid?

"All done." She said as she snipped the string. It didn't look like a professional did it, but it was functional. She patted the wound with some more disinfectant lightly and stood back. He took that as his cue to stand. "Here you go."

From within his pocket, he pulled out some cash. She looked at it, but didn't take it. The Matron never took payment from the people who came here, so she wasn't sure if she should. He shook his hand once. "Don't do a job and not except payment unless there's been something else worked out, kid. You inherited a violin and a flat, but relationships don't work that way. Remember that."

She reached for the folded bills and he let her take them. She flipped her thumb along them and saw it seemed a reasonable price as the man moved towards the door and collected his jacket. It had blood droplets on the shoulder, she saw, when he pulled it on. Curiosity was nagging, but still she didn't ask as she tucked the money in the back pocket of her jeans. It was kind of warm for a jacket, but the man always wore it. "And, kid, making your own friends wouldn't hurt. A worn out old man and dead woman who's names you don't know don't count."

Friends? Who needs friends? She thought as she rested her chin on her folded arms atop the window sill after he'd left, looking down on the street below with slight indifference after he'd vanished from sight. Friends just let you down. Or die on you.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Afro Samurai
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Afro Samurai Like a Raisin in the Sun

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Lamarcus Hawthorne


Interacting with: Adrienne and Demetrius Hawthorne



The blow up mattresses were stained and were not deserving of their namesakes. Of the three inhabitants, two were up and about. To meet the 8 a.m. bus deadline, Lamarcus had to ready both of his young siblings before 7:30 so he could walk them to the bus stop before their transport arrived. Adrienne, Lamarcus’ younger sister--and the most dutiful of the trio--was up and dressed at five thirty. Demetrius was still sleep. Lamarcus kicked the base of the mattress where Demetrius slept,

“Get up, fat head. Time to get dressed.” Demetrius moaned his rejection,
“Can’a skip today? We ain’t even doin’ nothin’ in class.” Lamarcus’ silence provided Demetrius the answer to his inquiry. Reluctant and with some resentment, Demetrius rose and as morning zombies do, slogged a path to the bathroom.

Lamarcus was moving a tad slower this morning as well, tonight’s business with the Ones wore itself on the back of his mind. But tonight was tonight, not the present; Lamarcus tried to keep the things in front of him as near as possible. Whatever was in the future was out of his control and he tried his best not to bother himself with its inevitable consequences. To stymie his incessant worry, Lamarcus fired up the stove. A bowl, a whisk, some eggs. He cracked six eggs and plopped them into a bowl. A little water, some cheese, some pre-diced tomatoes. Into the skillet the liquid went.

In the “TV room” which was just what the kids called it--it was the main room of the apartment--Adrienne sat watching the news. Her massive afro extended and poofed so wide it looked like it was burdensome on her thin neck. Tangling with that monster was the first of ‘Marcus dreads each morning. It was 5:45. Demetrius had just finished showering and one could hear the bathroom faucet creak. The eggs were done. Demetrius didn’t like his scrambled, but he would have to deal with it this ‘morrow. A shout from the bathroom,

“YOU MAKIN’ EGGS AGAIN? I DON’T WANT NO EGGS.” picky. He was always picky, just like their father,
“He always actin’ bougie.” Adrienne conided to Lamarcus, a kiss of her teeth against her jaws,
“Yeah, well, you ain’t no better Miss ‘I only eat sandwiches with the crust cut off!’” a twelve year old girl penetrated Lamarcus’ gaze with pent up spite, a demon all its own.
“Shut up, ugly.” was all she could muster as retort. Games of wit were not ones she played. Lamarcus let her have a pity chuckle before he replied,
“Come on and eat so I can do that nappy ass hair of yours after.” she stuck out her tongue. On cue, Demetrius joined the other members of the house for breakfast.

As the secondary man of the house, Demetrius was charged with readying the table and assisting Lamarcus with any grunt work around the house. The senior Hawthorne thought setting the table would teach the young one some etiquette. Manhood wasn’t just about protecting and providing, one needed a sense of order as well. Both the young Hawthornes were blooming into adolescence: Adrienne twelve, Demetrius eleven. Boy trouble, girl trouble, bullies, bad influences--and with the way the city was now--drugs, violence. They only had their big brother to protect them, and he only had them and the Lost Ones to give him purpose. But of the two, only his siblings were tangible to him. He didn’t understand the Lost Ones, he was a cog. Invisible, nameless. Lamarcus--or Hawk as he was known on the streets--accepted it.

Adrienne and Demetrius both asked too many questions: what Lamrcus did for money, why he was always coming home so late, did he have a girlfriend, was he a drug dealer. They were all the right questions but Lamarcus always gave them the wrong answers. He came home late because he was ‘working’ long hours at the grocery store. He did have a ‘girlfriend’--the Ones. He didn’t deal drugs, he shut drug dealers down. The trio ate, forks clinking almost in sync. 6:45.

Demetrius attended to the dishes as he did every morning, grumbles beneath his breath. Lamarcus never loved it either, but ‘it was part of being a man’ their father used to say. Every chore their father didn’t want to do was part of ‘being a man.’ Lamarcus sat with Adrienne’s head between his legs as she returned to watching the news. Rubberbands, berets, and combs of varying sizes in his hands as he twisted, parted and pulled sections of her massive ‘fro into manageable sections before sectioning them into puffs. 7:10. He had become an expert at it. They had just enough time to get to the bus.

Out the door they went. The walk to the bus-stop was quick and uneventful. The three sat there until the bus came. Kisses, hugs, waves. A soft and playful pap on the back of the head for Demetrius before they both got on the bus and were off.

Now, Lamarcus would ready himself for tonight’s protection run.
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