As Maine slowly eased his way through the apartment, he could hear soft R&B music coming from the back room. Holding his gun in a two-handed grip as he approached the back room, he quickly busted up in the room and saw a woman breast-feeding an infant. He raised his gun and sent a bullet through her skull. The woman collapsed straight back on the bed, and the baby rolled out of her arms onto the floor, screaming at the top of its lungs.
Maine checked the rest of the apartment to make sure there was nobody else inside. Then he disappeared out the front door.
Maine pulled up in front of his crib and let the engine die as he stepped out the car. As soon as he walked in the door, he saw his girlfriend Monique halfway dressed, and two of her girlfriends sitting on the couch.
“Fuck you going?” he asked.
“Out,” Monique replied. “You think I’m supposed to be stuck up in this house all muthafuckin’ day while you just out doing whatever? I don’t think so.”
“I know that’s right,” one of her girlfriends cooed.
“I’m out getting money,” Maine said, nodding down to the blood on his shoes. “And you out running the streets.”
“I can’t go out every now and then with my girls? Why I always gotta be ‘running the streets’? You must be out doing dirt. That’s probably why you never want me to go nowhere.”
“You know what? Just get your shit and get the fuck out!”
Monique smiled, her hands on her hips. “You kicking me out?”
“Either get out, or get put out,” Maine said in an even tone.
Monique saw the look in Maine’s eyes and knew he wasn’t bullshitting.
“Fuck you, nigga!”
Monique huffed as she grabbed a few things from out the back room. “Bitch-ass nigga! I was doing you a favor staying here. Talking ’bout get out or get put out—I wish you would put your muthafuckin’ hands on me!”
“You see, if I had a white bitch, I wouldn’t have to go through this kinda shit,” Maine spat. He knew she hated to see a white woman with a black man.
“Nigga, fuck you and your white bitch! I wish I would catch you with a white bitch. I’ll beat you and that bitch’s ass!”
“Just get out!” Maine smirked. “And hurry the fuck up!”
“Get a good look ’cause you ain’t gon’ never see me or this ass again,” Monique said as her and her friends left, leaving the front door wide open.
Maine closed the door and flopped down on the couch. After a long day, all he wanted to do was have a drink, get some head, and watch a movie until he fell asleep, but instead he had to come home to chaos and foolishness.
Chapter 3
Tone pulled up in front of the New Yorker Hotel and saw Serena standing out front looking super sexy. He tapped the horn twice and watched as Serena strutted toward the Benz and slid in the passenger seat.
She kissed Tone on the cheek. “I thought you was tryin’a stand me up.”
“Damn! A nigga can’t even be five minutes late.” Tone smiled as he pulled out into traffic.
“So where we going?”
“To go eat,” Tone answered quickly.
Thirty minutes later Tone pulled up to a nice soul food restaurant. “You like soul food?”
“I love soul food,” Serena answered with her glossed-up lips. “I’m glad you brought me here.”
“Why? What’s up? You wanna go somewhere else?”
“Nah, I just don’t like being around a lot of bougie people. I just like eating around down-to-earth people,” she tried to explain.
“I feel you.” Tone smiled.
Serena liked that the clientele at this soul food restaurant was mixed with white, black, and Spanish customers. That meant that the food was tasty, and appealing to everybody.
Once the two were seated, Serena popped the million-dollar question. “So what do you do for a living?”
Tone smiled. “You want me to lie or tell the truth?” “Both,” Serena said, matching his smile.
“Okay, I’m the local cable man, and I do electrician on the side.”
“Okay, now the truth,” Serena said, shaking her head and smiling.
Tone paused before he answered, “I control a big drug empire,” looking at Serena for her reaction.
“Fuck it! We all gotta do what we gotta do,” she said seriously.
Her response caught Tone off guard. “So you cool with that?”
“Yeah, my uncle and a few of his peoples used to fuck around in the drug game, and half of my family use drugs. So I’m no stranger to that type of stuff.”
“You ever had a boyfriend that was into that lifestyle?”
“Not yet. Why you ask?”
“’Cause, as you can see, I’m really feeling you. Everything about you. I’ve yet to meet a woman who I can talk to on some regular shit, feel me?”
“I feel you, but this ain’t gonna work.”
“What you mean? Why not?”
“Because we live in two different cities. And you have a life, and so do I.”
“What if I want you in my life?” Tone pressed.
“How are you so sure? You don’t know me like that.”
“I want to get to know you,” Tone said, looking Serena in her eyes. “I don’t care if I have to come out to L.A. once a month so we can be together. Whatever I have to do, I’ma do it.”
Serena smirked. “I hear you talking.”
“I let my actions do my talking,” Tone countered.
The two ate their food and sat and talked for about forty-five minutes in the restaurant before leaving. As they walked back to the car, Tone felt his phone vibrating. He looked at the caller ID and saw that it was Mya. He quickly put his phone on silent as he put it back in the case.
“So what you got planned for the rest of the night?” Tone asked as he slid in the driver’s seat.
“Go back to my room and get some rest.”
“You want some company?”
“That would be nice.” Serena smiled. “But that don’t mean you getting none of this good pussy.”
Tone smirked. “I just wanna spend as much time with you as I can before you leave,” he said as he pulled into traffic.
As the two drove chitchatting, a crackhead flagged the Benz down like his life depended on it.
“Fuck!” Tone huffed as he quickly pulled over to the side of the road and rolled his window down.
Serena was about to say something but decided to just keep quiet.
The crackhead ran up to the driver’s window all out of breath. “Tone, wassup, man? I thought that was you,” he said, trying to fix the collar on his shirt.
“Fuck you doing out here, Malcolm?” Tone asked, not looking the fiend directly in his eyes.
“Just out tryin’a get some fresh air.” Malcolm wiped the slime from the corners of his mouth. “You got a few dollars you can spare so I can go get me something to eat?”
Tone pulled five twenties from his knot and handed them to Malcolm. “Swing by my house tomorrow night so we can get you straightened up.”
“Okay, I got you.” Malcolm hurried off across the street.
Tone pulled off, a frown on his face.
“You okay?” Serena asked.
“Yeah, I’m fine,” he huffed. “It just bothers me to see him all fucked up like that.”
“He a close friend of yours?”
“Nah, that’s my brother.”
“Oh, I’m sorry to hear that.”
“It’s all good,” Tone said as he pulled up in front of the New Yorker Hotel.
“You still coming up?” Serena asked.
“Nah, I’m about to go back and try to find my brother before he gets himself killed,” Tone said, a sad look on his face.
“Okay. You know where I’m at if you need me.” Serena kissed Tone on his cheek and headed inside the hotel.
As soon as she disappeared inside the hotel, Tone pulled out his cell phone and dialed his pops’ number.
“What you want?” Det
ective Abraham grumbled into the receiver.
“I just saw Malcolm out here.”
“Fuck you telling me for?”
“Maybe because that’s your son.”
“That muthafucka ain’t my son!”
“Malcolm out here looking real bad, Pops. He needs our help.”
“Fuck Malcolm! I done helped that boy as much as I can. Once a muthafucka steal out my house, he ain’t considered family no more. He lucky I didn’t kill his ass!”
“He’s still your son, no matter what.”
“The only son I got is you, and if you start getting high, then fuck you too!” Detective Abraham hung up in Tone’s ear.
“Ignorant muthafucka!”
As soon as Tone stepped foot in the crib, he found Mya sitting in the living room waiting for him, a scarf on her head and her arms folded. “So we not answering phones now?”
“Not tonight, baby, please,” Tone said as he walked in the kitchen.
Mya quickly shot to her feet. “Fuck you mean, not tonight? You gon’ tell me something.”
“I was out and ran into Malcolm,” Tone said, pouring himself some orange juice.
Mya knew the deal about his brother’s bad crack problem and felt bad about it. “How is he?” she said, her whole tone changing.
“He look bad. I just hate to see him all fucked up and shit. No matter what I do to try and help, it seems like nothing works.”
“He ain’t gonna get that monkey off his back until he’s ready to,” Mya said, rubbing her man’s back. “Trust me, only he’ll know when enough is enough.”
“You right.”
After Tone went to the back, took a shower, and got in the bed, Mya hopped on his dick and rode it like there was no tomorrow, until the two both came then fell fast asleep in each other’s arms.
Chapter 4
“So, what I been missing?” Tone sipped on some vodka and orange juice. He looked around the warehouse and saw about ten to twelve soldiers just sitting around, telling lies and war stories.
“You ain’t really been missing shit.” Maine, who was drinking his vodka straight, downed his drink. “Your pops done busted mad drug dealers and took over their spots.”
“Word?”
“Yeah. So, I put a few soldiers in each spot.” Maine picked up the new machine gun he had just purchased and started tinkering with it. “But what’s good with you and that honey?”
“She cool.” Tone sipped his drink. “I think I can pull it off.”
“Well, shit. At least you gon’ get some pussy out of the deal.” Maine smiled. “I heard she fine too.”
Tone smiled. “Yeah, she good money.”
“Yeah, I bet.”
Just then Maine’s cell phone started ringing. He answered, “Yeah, who this?”
“Yo, this Li’l Man. That nigga Gruff out here in the projects right now. Get down here fast ’cause I think he about to leave.”
“Be there in a minute.” Maine hung up the phone, grabbed his new machine gun, and headed toward the door.
“Yo,” Tone called out, “where you going?”
“Just got the drop on that clown Gruff. I’ll be back in a second,” he said as he disappeared out the door.
Tone shook his head. He smiled when he saw Serena’s name flashing across the screen of his cell phone. “What’s good, ma?” he answered.
“You tell me,” she capped back. “I was just calling to see what was up for tonight.”
“I mean, what you wanna do? You know I’m down for whatever,” Tone told her.
“I think I wanna go out tonight, so put on your dancing shoes and come pick me up tonight.”
“Say no more. I got you. I’ll see you in about two hours.”
“A’ight, I’ll be waiting.”
Maine pulled up to the projects and double-parked his car on the ave and hopped out with his hoodie on, one hand tucked in his pocket. He wasn’t there to play no games, and couldn’t wait to teach this street punk they called Gruff a lesson he would never forget. Immediately he walked straight up to Li’l Man. “What’s good? Gruff still out here?”
“You just missed him,” Li’l Man said with a smirk on his face.
“Something funny?”
“Nah, I’m just saying ... what you looking for Gruff for? That nigga looked like he just killed ten people.”
Maine gave Li’l Man a comical look. He thought he sounded like a bitch. “So what? You his cheerleader now?”
“Nah, I’m just saying, I did time with him back in the day, and he a cool-ass nigga.”
“Let me ask you a question”—Maine stepped in Li’l Man’s face—“Gruff putting money in ya fuckin’ pocket?”
“Nah, it’s not even—”
Maine quickly stole on the li’l nigga, knocking him out with one punch. “Bum-ass nigga,” he mumbled as he stepped over Li’l Man’s body and hopped back in his whip. “I’m tired of playing with these niggas,” he said to nobody in particular as he headed over to the crib of one of Tone’s workers to go pick up some paper that he owed.
“You not leaving out this house another night until you tell me what’s going on,” Mya said, standing in front of the door so Tone couldn’t leave.
“What is you talking about?” Tone huffed. He knew sooner or later this moment was going to come. “Move out the way.”
“Fuck you!” Mya spat, not budging. “You done been out to the wee hours in the morning for the past three days, you gon’ tell me something.”
“Okay, okay. I been kicking it with this chick for the last three days.”
Mya smirked as she threw her hair in a raggedy ponytail. “You been doing what?” She charged him, swinging.
Tone grabbed Mya’s arms and wrestled her down to the floor and sat on top of her. “Chill.”
“All the shit we done been through, and you out with another bitch?” Mya growled, struggling to get up off the floor.
“Listen!” Tone yelled in her face. “I have to spend time with her. Her father is a big-time cat, and we just need her to feel comfortable with me so she can plug me in, that’s all.”
“Who the fuck is ‘we’?”
“My pops.”
“He always getting you in some shit. Why the fuck can’t you ever tell him no?” Mya asked, tears escaping from her eyes. She hated Tone’s father, who was always influencing him to do some dumb shit. If it wasn’t one, it was another.
“Baby, this shit is only gonna take two weeks, I promise you.”
“What about us?”
“What you mean?” Tone asked, confused.
“We just got engaged the other day. How you just gonna be fuckin’ with another woman? Did you even take the time out to think about how I would feel?” Mya didn’t wait for him to reply before she added, “If I was out for two weeks with another man, how the fuck would you feel?”
“Listen, I gotta do what I gotta do, point-blank. This is too much money to pass up on.”
“Oh, so now you a prostitute? ’Cause a prostitute will do anything for money, so I guess you a prostitute.”
Tone sighed loudly as he got up off Mya and headed for the door.
“You walk out that door, you ain’t gotta worry about coming back,” Mya said, hoping to stop her fiancé from leaving, but Tone just walked straight out the door.
“Fuck you!” she spat as she tossed the ring he had just given her a few nights before at the back of his head. “Take that piece a shit with you, you punk-ass bitch!” she yelled and slammed the door.
Tone hopped in his all-black Range Rover and pulled out the driveway. He couldn’t believe how Mya was acting. As much as they had been through, he couldn’t understand why she couldn’t just hold it down for two weeks. She knew she was the one he wanted to marry, so what was the big deal?
Bitches always care more about love than money. But if a nigga didn’t have shit and still lived with his mother, then we wouldn’t’ve even had a relationship to start with. Fuck that! Ain’t no bitch �
��bout to fuck up my money. He popped in 50 Cent’s new CD. Once I get all this money, she’ll love me again in two weeks, he thought to himself as he hit the highway, headed downtown to pick Serena up.
Maine stood in the lobby waiting for the elevator. “This shit need to hurry up,” he said. In a rush to get to the strip club, he was ready to just chill for the rest of the night, get drunk, and see some freaks. He stepped on the elevator and pressed the floor he was headed to repeatedly. Once the elevator reached his floor, he stepped off and found himself looking down the barrels of two 9 mm’s.
“I heard you was looking for me,” Gruff said with a smile. “I would’ve ran down on you sooner, but I didn’t even know what you looked like until earlier.”
Meanwhile, Gruff’s partner in crime, Maxine, stripped Maine of his .380 with the silencer on it.
Maine peeped that both stickup kids wore all black. Gruff wore a hoodie that right there told him that he didn’t play, because he didn’t even bother to hide his face.
“Nigga, get ya bitch ass over here!” Maxine growled. She grabbed Maine by the collar of his shirt and pushed him in front of the door he was looking for. “Knock, muthafucka!”
Maine wanted to turn around and knock the little bitch with the tough-guy talk the fuck out, but he knew at that moment he couldn’t. So he did as he was told and knocked on the door.
Immediately, Rodney opened the door. “Damn, nigga! What the fuck took you so damn long?”
Gruff quickly tossed one of his 9s in Rodney’s face. “Back up, playboy!” he said, busting his way up in the apartment and shoving Rodney to the floor. He quickly duct-taped Rodney’s hands.
Gruff then turned his attention on Maine. “Fuck you out here looking for me for?”
Baltimore Chronicles Page 16