Ghetto Girls 5

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Ghetto Girls 5 Page 1

by Anthony Whyte




  WHERE

  HIP HOP

  LITERATURE

  BEGINS…

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or organizations, or persons, living or dead is entirely coincidental.

  © 2013 Augustus Publishing, Inc.

  ISBN: 978-1935883272

  Novel by Anthony Whyte

  Edited by Parijat Deasai

  Creative Direction & Design by Jason Claiborne

  Photography by BigAppleModels.com

  All rights reserved. No parts of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For further information contact Augustus Publishing

  Augustus Publishing paperback June 2013

  www.augustuspublishing.com

  Dedicated to Will Teez, the lion of Inwood…

  Like the one who writes your checks, I’m just trying to be your favorite author. Getting at-cha… Feeling like I’m back… GNA… I’m already that…

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  1

  “Your score is two hundred, Uncle E. You’ve, without a doubt, stepped up your bowling game,” the excited teen said in a mock, stern tone. “But everyone in Harlem Lanes will get the new memo informing them of how your niece destroyed you by twenty-five points,” she laughed.

  Deedee Ascot was in a good mood at the end of an exhausting six-game set of bowling at the Harlem Lanes. Quickly she and her uncle, Eric Ascot, changed shoes. They packed away their bowling balls. Deedee’s face was glowing, as she handed her uncle the bag containing her ball.

  “Losers treat,” she smiled at her uncle.

  “Yeah, you won, but my game was a little off today. I needed that last pin, but it just wouldn’t fall,” Eric countered. “Anyway, like you said, my game is getting a little better.”

  “Practice, practice, practice…” Deedee smiled, wagging her finger.

  “Okay Ms. Show-off, I gotta give credit where it’s due. Lunch’s on me.”

  Deedee walked alongside Eric to the café, rocking tight black Cavalli jeans and boots. The pair was quickly directed to empty seats.

  “Whew, these seats are great for resting my tired feet,” Deedee exclaimed, flopping on the red cushion seat.

  “C’mon, I’m the one who’s out of shape. Remember now, you were just teasing me about that,” Eric smiled, sitting down.

  “I could eat a huge burger right now,” Deedee laughed.

  “Winning takes a lot of energy, huh, Dee?”

  “Uncle E, you couldn’t possible know how tired I am. And I’m still cramping too. Men don’t know anything about menstruation.”

  There was a long pause. Deedee studied the embarrassed grin on her uncle’s face. She let out a schoolgirl’s snicker before continuing.

  “You right,” her uncle sheepishly said.

  “Uh-huh, bowling was great. I was able to get rid of some of my aggression.”

  “Look out, world. Deedee’s an aggressive bowler.”

  “But I keep it in my lane, not in the gutter,” she laughed.

  “Let’s get you some food before you go delirious.”

  Light chatter continued while Eric Ascot and his niece perused the menu. The relaxing sounds of Coltrane wafted over the Sunday afternoon crowd in the Harlem Lanes café. The waitress arrived with glasses and filled them from a pitcher of ice-cold water. After taking their orders, the waitress zipped off. Eric shook his head, grooving to the sound of jazz piped through the sound system.

  Eric Ascot had a monthly bowling game with his niece, Deedee. They had bowled since he began teaching her at age seven, and since she had begun living with him. He reached for a Vibe magazine, thinking about the games he played with her dad—his brother, Dennis.

  Despite the fact that his younger brother had lost his life at the hands of the police, Eric had found the strength to smile. Both he and Deedee were able to survive the pain. As Eric turned the pages of the leading urban magazine, a photo of Coco caught his eye. He glanced up at Deedee casually sipping water.

  “Well, look-a-here, look-a-here. Vibe did a piece on your girlfriend and my new artist,” he said.

  “Oh my God! Let me see it Uncle E,” Deedee said, reaching across the table and snatching the magazine away from her startled uncle.

  “Hey now, be easy…”

  “Sorry Uncle E. I just have to see this,” Deedee said as she dove into the story of Coco. “I completely forgot Vibe was doing this piece. She’s gonna be surprised!”

  In no time, Deedee was completely immersed in the article. Lunch was served and Eric requested another copy of Vibe from the waiter. He chomped down on a turkey burger with fried onions. The article was basically a puff piece—a brief introduction to Coco the artist, described as the latest phenomenon coming out of Gotham onto the music scene. Eric ate while reading, but Deedee ignored her cheeseburger. When he was finished eating, Eric glanced over at his niece. Deedee still had not touched her food.

  “That cheeseburger will be cold if you don’t eat it.”

  “I’m sorry. I got caught up,” she said. “Vibe’s a real cool magazine, and they did a nice piece on Coco,” she said.

  Eric pointed to the meal in front of Deedee, and raised his eyebrows. “Eat up, Dee. I have to make a stop at the studio.”

  She glanced around, and seeing the rush of the afternoon crowd, she replied, “Ok, Uncle E.” Some of the patrons were dressed as if they were coming from church. With the sounds of Dizzy Gillespie and Coltrane mingling with boisterous chatter, the scene was reminiscent of the early days of the Harlem Renaissance.

  Donning their shades, niece and uncle left the lanes, exiting onto the buzzing sidewalks of Seventh Avenue. Sunlight shone bright outside, throwing light on the post–Saturday-night. They walked across 125th Street to where Deedee had parked her new BMW. They jumped in and headed to the West Side Highway. Approaching the Hudson River, she dropped the top.

  “Did I tell you how I love this car, Uncle E? Thank you very much,” she smiled.

  Deedee raced onto the south lane of the Henry Hudson Parkway as her uncle looked on in surprise.

  “Hey Dee, slow down, girl. Take it easy. Let’s enjoy the ride,” Eric cautioned.

  “Okay Uncle E. Let’s enjoy the ride,” she sighed, shaking her head.

  Moments later Deedee parked and they alighted from the car. Both walked to the building and nodded to the security personnel stationed in the lobby.

  “Good afternoon, Mr. Ascot. Are you gonna be long, sir?”

  “No, I’ll be out in a few,” Eric answered, walking with Deedee.

  “You always say that, Uncle E,” Deedee smiled.

  They continued to the elevator and waited quietly. Minutes later, Eric Ascot was in the office of his recording studio. Deedee sat alone at the receptionist desk, reading Vibe again. About half hour later, there was a buzz at the door of the recording studio. Deedee was still engrossed in the magazine. The buzzing continued.
She finally looked up and before she could answer, Deedee saw it flying off the hinges and what seemed like an army of police barged in.

  Shouting and banging noises carried through the entire studio. Eric walked out of his office and was greeted by officers with their weapons drawn. In a New-York minute the recording studio was shut down, ready for search and seizure. Detectives and dogs were everywhere taking everything. Standing outside his office, Eric was stunned. It took him a long time to fathom the depth of his situation.

  A detective accosted him, “Who are you?”

  “Eric Ascot. What is all this about?”

  “You are under arrest!”

  “For what…? I haven’t done anything, and if you put those handcuffs on me you better have a good reason.”

  The dogs, preoccupied with sniffing, suddenly began barking. The commotion brought a smile to the officers’ face and a hush among the employees of the recording studio.

  “I guess the dogs found it,” a detective shouted after a tension-filled pause.

  “Found? Found what?” Eric asked, perplexed.

  “I got something here that will put you away for good.”

  “What…?”

  With a scowl on his face, Eric glanced in silence at an officer standing next to a dog. The animal was joyfully wagging its tail while the officer petted its face. He pointed to a plastic bag being zipped by two officers and answered.

  “Atta boy, doggie. You found the smoking gun.”

  Deedee was placed against the wall and patted down by an officer. Other officers quickly searched Eric Ascot and said, “You’re being charged in the death of a police officer…” Eric was taken by surprise and couldn’t focus. He was abruptly handcuffed, and arrested. Sounding like a preacher delivering a eulogy, the officer read him his Miranda rights.

  “Don’t worry, Dee. Get home and I’ll call you later,” Eric said with conviction.

  “Uncle E, I…”

  “I’ll be alright. Call Sophia and tell her what happened. I’ll be out soon.”

  “Sure you will,” an officer offered, sarcastically.

  The small army of officers and their dogs laughed. Eric was efficiently escorted out of the studio and into a waiting elevator. Deedee was left thinking, watching from the window as her uncle was led out the building. A band of reporters were already on hand downstairs. Camera bulbs flashed, recording the moment for the city’s dailies.

  In tears, Deedee gathered herself and dialed rapidly from the office phone. Holding the receiver to her ears, she waited while the call rang to a voicemail.

  “Hey Sophia, this is Deedee… The police just arrested Uncle E and he wanted me to let you know. You can call him direct—he has his cellphone. I’ll try to reach you later. Bye.”

  Deedee put the receiver down and plopped into the big office chair behind Eric’s desk. She spun the chair around, glancing at platinum plaques her uncle had earned. There were pictures of him and her father. Eric and his younger brother seemed so young and innocent back then. A whirlwind of events flashed across her mind.

  She found herself recalling her father’s death as he was being arrested. A case the police claimed was a drug deal gone wrong. Eric Ascot’s older brother, Dennis, had been caught in a sting involving a drug kingpin. No one was ever tried for his death. Those life-changing events had brought her and her cocaine-addicted mother to live with Uncle Eric. Eric Ascot was a top record producer. Well-respected in the music game, he had parlayed his talents into the movie industry. Despite the tragedy she lived through, her uncle had allowed Deedee to enjoy the fruits of his success.

  Her thoughts of happiness with Uncle E were quickly interrupted by memories of her mother’s sudden disappearance. No one had seen or heard from Denise Ascot in over twelve years. Eric Ascot had been her primary parent. He and his on-again, off-again fiancée, Sophia, had guided her from childhood through high school. She was now college-bound. Deedee put her head on the desk and sobbed quietly.

  2

  Exhausted and unshaven, Eric Ascot sat in the holding cell. He had not spoken to his attorney. The police had allowed him to keep his cellphone. It seemed like an eternity and he was still waiting for his lawyer to call back. He glanced at his phone, thinking of calling Sophia, his now-ex-fiancée, at her office. He had tried reaching out to her last night after the arrest, but to no avail.

  Eric heard shuffling noises coming from outside his unexpected confines. The first person to stop by this morning was the same officer who had allowed him to keep his cellphone. Eric watched him thinking the officer had probably returned early to confiscate the phone. Wiping his lips of breakfast, the heavyset, uniformed man stared at Eric for a minute. The officer cleared his throat and continued eyeballing other prisoners in the cell silently. His intense frown became a sardonic smile before he spoke.

  “I guess your over-priced lawyer hasn’t called yet, huh?”

  The disheveled Eric shook his head wordlessly. To prevent his anger from spilling over, Eric bit his lip.

  “He must be a busy man,” the officer smiled. “Hope your battery doesn’t run out with you waiting and all,” he laughed, walking away. “Get your Armani’s ready—the cameras are gonna start rolling soon. Another officer will be here to transport y’all down to Central Booking in a few. He’ll let you know if you can keep that PDA.”

  There was no fronting about this situation. Eric contemplated how right the officer was—his lawyer should have called back by now. The high price of retaining Max Roose might come with the best representation, but it also better came with no waiting. He had left several messages requesting to speak to Roose, only to be told over and over that he had gone fishing. Mr. Roose would get back to him as soon as possible.

  Eric closed his tired eyes momentarily, and made a silent wish. He wanted to be somewhere on an open range, fishing, hunting. Instead he was stuck in a cramped holding cell waiting to be booked. Banter came from the riffraff sharing the small space. Eric found himself fuming at the delay, the backchat, and the unbearable stench.

  Despite leaving messages for Roose that it was an emergency, Eric remained trapped. His brow furrowed in a cliff of frustration. Agitated, he angrily smashed the keys to dial his attorney’s cellphone yet again. Once more his call went straight to voicemail. He left another message, his mind working overtime.

  The afternoon raid by the police seemed too neatly wrapped. Everything appeared to work in concert to ensure he wound up in a cell. Even the question posed by the doorman at the building lobby now hung eerily in Eric’s head. Eric tried to piece together how his gun had left his home and gotten to his office.

  “I never took my gun out,” he mumbled.

  His cellmates’ ears perked up. Eric glanced at them to find they all wore blank stares.

  The possibilities seemed unlimited. Eric was determined again to speak with his attorney. The bizarre afternoon raid had become an overnight jail stay. Not sleeping all night long and waiting all morning was enough to make him explode. But he remained calm.

  He wanted badly to skip back into opulence. His marbled shower, warm water spraying from the silver nozzle washing him free of all the dirty slurs, was what he craved. He would settle for simple peace and quiet. Eric had endured the loud voices all night. In silence, he vowed never again to wind up in a cell. He stared at unknown faces and smelled the sweat. He yearned to be cleared of all this.

  The new morning brought no light on the inside of this dank hole, built for one and occupied by four. Eric sneered at the three smelly drunks sitting close to him. Maybe it was paranoia, but when his hand went to his pocket, Eric realized he had surrendered everything except this PDA he clutched. His thought shifted gears as he stared at the instrument in his grasp, but all he could do was wait.

  Still Eric’s mind roamed, covering all the possibilities of how the gun got into his office, a gun that was used to kill a detective.

  He knew his legal mess had started with the rape of his niece. His thoughts tur
ned to a fateful call he received from an old friend of the family, Busta. Eric was driving home when his cellphone rang. It was Busta calling to inform him of a grievous error. Seeking street justice for the attack of his niece, Busta and Eric had engineered the death of the man they thought was involved in Deedee’s sexual assault.

  Sitting in the cell, Eric stared at his cellphone like it was about to ring, and Busta would call again. Maybe this time he would make the right decision. His mind fell back to the time and place when he met the street informer known as Rightchus. He was on his way to Gee’s night club. Back then, his brother’s best friend, Busta was alive. Nether of them had calculated the full consequence of their actions. They had no clue that such actions would set off a chain of events which would eventually lead to Busta’s demise, and Eric’s present circumstances. Spurred by emotions, Eric’s thoughts went back to the time he first met with Rightchus.

  He gazed at the flashing low-battery signal. “Shit!” Eric yelled and then concentrated on the traffic. Within minutes he was at Gee’s club. He went through the heavy red wooden door, past the beefy security. Inside, Busta beckoned to him. Eric felt a trickle of sweat down his spine. He smiled uneasily and made his way to Busta.

  “Hey E., what’s up?” Busta greeted, giving him a hearty hug and a closed-fist shake.

  “What’s poppin’, Busta…? You better cut down on your visits to the kitchen,” Eric said, watching the large man chomping down on fried chicken.

  “No, see, when I get nervous I eat a whole lot more fried foods. Chicken…? Send us a bucket over to the booth, honey.”

  Busta gave his order to a passing waitress. Then he walked to a booth in the back of the busy café with Eric.

  “A bucket…?” Eric echoed.

  “Yeah man, a muthafuckin’ bucket. They have some good stuff up in here. Why? You have a problem with that?”

  Busta sounded husky, threatening. He returned to sipping from a glass of beer, saying nothing further. Eric had to do the talking.

  “Okay, okay Busta. Do you?”

  “We buried the wrong man. You know wha’ I’m saying?” Busta said, glancing around.

 

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