by Mike Sanders
“Not exactly, I got the address though. I’m ‘bouta put that bitch’s life in the GPS,” she responded. Her younger cousin smirked at her ruthlessness as he watched her program the address into the system. The GPS display showed they were twenty minutes away from their destination. When they arrived at the club, Tan noticed how crowded the parking lot was. There was only one empty spot in front of the club, so she let her cousins park the car they were driving in that spot. She instructed Chico to pull around the side and park in the darkest spot he could find. They found a spot just off to the side of the club and parked there. The spot was not completely secluded, but it was dark enough for her to be obscured by patrons in front of the club.
They all got out of the cars and met near the car Tan had been riding in. Tan told them to go inside and wait for no longer than ten minutes before starting the ruckus because she didn’t want to risk the chance of security coming around and telling her she had to move. She watched as her family entered the club. Once they were inside, she took out the pistol, held it down by her side, and waited for her prey to emerge.
***
Justice was ending a call when she heard a frantic knock on her office door. Toni came in and screamed, “Them niggas out there fightin’!”
Justice faked surprise. “Are you serious? Is Twin handlin’ it?”
“Yeah, I think he got it.”
“Aiight, good. Go ahead back out there and manage, manager,” Justice teased. She waited for Toni to close the door before reaching into her desk and picking up her pistol. She carefully screwed on the silencer and checked the clip to make sure it was loaded. Satisfied her gun was ready to fire; she stood up and tucked it in the back of her jeans, gangsta style. As soon as she was on her feet, she heard what sounded like rapid gunfire emitting from inside the club area. That was her cue! She immediately ran to the door and peeped out. She saw everyone running and screaming as if they were in the middle of a terrorist attack. Justice’s nerves were shot! Not because she thought someone was shooting, but because she knew within the next five minutes she would be committing her second murder . . . she hoped.
***
Within minutes of her cousins entering the club, all hell broke loose! Tan saw everybody come running out of the club just as Carlos had predicted. From where she was standing she had a clear shot of anyone who came through that door. Half-naked strippers were struggling to balance themselves on heels while the dudes all but ran them over. Everyone she saw was irrelevant to her. She was looking for Justice, who she had not yet seen in the midst of fleeing patrons.
***
Justice made her way to the back door of the club and quickly exited into the rear alley. She pulled out the silenced pistol and held it at arm’s length as she cautiously rounded the side of the club where she knew Tan would be standing. Earlier Justice had told her staff to close off the back parking lot until Kanye arrived. That way, she made sure that all of the available parking spaces would be occupied, forcing Tan to park on the side of the building where she was now headed. Once she rounded the corner, she saw a woman with short curly hair standing near a parked car. The closer Justice got, the more she became convinced that the woman was indeed Tan. At a closer look, Justice also noticed Tan was also brandishing a pistol. Tan was looking at the front door and never saw Justice coming. She was a sitting duck! Justice monitored her breathing as she crept at a slow and steady pace. When she was close enough to secure a headshot, Justice raised her gun and took aim.
***
When Tan didn’t see Justice coming out of the club, she almost became impatient and wanted to run up in that bitch and start blazing. She decided she’d give her ten more seconds to come out.
At that moment, she heard footsteps behind her and she quickly spun around with her pistol raised, ready to fire.
Justice had stepped on a rock and it caused her to lose her footing for a second. That slight noise was enough to alert Tan that someone was coming. As soon as Tan turned around she was met eye to eye with her Archnemisis. It seemed as if time stood still for a split second as they both let off muffled shots.
***
Justice let out a shrill scream as a slug that hit her in the left shoulder spun around her and she almost went down. She momentarily lost her balance and ended up dropping her pistol. The gun slid across the asphalt, stopping near the gutter a few feet away.
***
Tan was not so lucky. As soon as she had let off her three rounds, she had been met with a quiet round of lead that pierced her chest. Only because of the rock Justice had slipped on, Justice’s dome shot was off target. The slug knocked Tan off her feet as she let off two more shots that went wildly into the air before her gun jammed. The asphalt rushed up and slammed Tan in the face. On her way down, she saw that justice had been hit also.
***
When Justice saw Tan fall, she regained her footing and rushed to retrieve her pistol from where it had fallen. Her shoulder was bleeding and her arm had become numb, she walked over and stood over Tan. Tan was lying on her back, looking up at Justice with a shocked expression, still squeezing the trigger to no avail. Her chest was on fire and her breathing was becoming labored.
Justice kicked the jammed pistol out of her hand. “You got what da fuck you been lookin’ for, huh? ” Justice spewed in pain.
Tan attempted to say something, but instead she coughed up a glob of blood. Then she managed to mumble, “See you in hell.”
“Nah, no time soon bitch” Justice responded. She had tears welling up in her eyes as she heard Monk’s voice in her ear telling her to send the bitch to him. Without hesitation, Justice squeezed the trigger and emptied the clip into Tan’s head and torso. Tan’s body jerked and spasmed as she took her last breath and began to exit this world. Justice wished she would have had more time to make the bitch suffer, but she knew she only had a few more seconds before the last of the patrons would exit the club. The entire ordeal took less than three minutes, but to Justice it seemed like an eternity.
As Justice tucked the pistol back into her jeans, she clutched her aching shoulder and ran to her car that was parked behind the club. She moved the cones that had her blocked in. So many mixed emotions were running through her mind as she climbed behind the wheel. Once again, she had taken a life and she silently thanked Carlos for guiding her through the whole ordeal and giving her the head’s up. She felt as if she was now in his debt.
As she drove away from the club, she inspected her bloody shoulder and saw that it was only a graze. She sighed with relief at the fact that she wouldn’t have to rush to a hospital. At a hospital with a gunshot wound would have made her an immediate suspect. She decided she would call a friend to bandage it and wrap it up once she got home. Driving down the street she could’ve sworn she saw a man standing on the corner who looked just like her brother, Monk smiling at her. He slowly nodded his head in affirmation of what she had just done, and at that instance, she knew her brother’s death had been avenged. Justice closed her eyes for a moment, and when she reopened them, the man had disappeared. Through the pain in her shoulder, she looked out her window, toward the sky and smiled. Just then, Sapphire came to mind and Justice silently thought; now I can forgive.
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
Carlos smiled like a proud father when he stepped before his baby. The mostly brick, one story, 2,500 square foot masterpiece was almost complete. With its large trees out front along its elegant brick driveway, Carlos’s dream house was coming alive from the pages of a New Home magazine. The flowers planted in the flowerbed on the right side of the house and around the base of the mailbox easily put it in the running for “Yard of the Month.” A white picket fence bordered the house and encircled his property in the back. With its address right on the edges of Ballentyne, Carlos was proud to see his dream come true.
“Just a few more days, and I’ll move in completely,” Carlos said aloud as he watched the people from DISH setting up to install their satellite. The Rooms
2 Go crew would be bringing in his living room, dining room, as well as some of the guest room sets within the next hour or so. Later on, he was going to have his master bedroom set taken from his current residence to the new place, as well as some of the mahogany and sable pieces he’d been collecting over the years. As the days drew closer for him to move into his new home, he enjoyed the comforts of staying at The Westin in downtown Charlotte.
Carlos had seen the news briefing about Tan’s death on Chicago’s news website and had assumed that Justice had done her thing. A part of him was worried when he called her and she hadn’t responded—but he knew she wasn’t dead because that would’ve been mentioned. When Justice finally reached out to him, he was beyond happy. He was concerned when she had told him that Tan had gotten off a lucky shot but he was put at ease when she told him it was only a graze. Her blouse and her front seat were ruined but she was ok.
Carlos’s excitement tripled when she had accepted his offer of coming to stay with him in the new house for a while. He could not wait to bring Justice to his new home. Carlos was about to enjoy the fruits of his labor and be out of the game for good.
As Carlos walked around the property, inspecting the new home for slight imperfections and coming up with ideas for what could be done to improve the house; he began to think about new business ventures. BobCutz was good, but he knew that being in a barber and beauty salon day in and day out would run him nuts. The thought of having a club ran across his mind, but he didn’t want to take the chance of competing with existing clubs like Fifth Element, Lux and Nine Three Five. A Laundromat or a car wash could be lucrative in the right neighborhood, but Charlotte was in the middle of a drought and they were prone to water restrictions that would greatly limit his business. He thought about having his own convenience store or a gas station, but gas was just as high as dope these days. Yet he knew that upon his retirement from the drug game, it would be a good time to diversify his business holdings. BobCutz was making a good profit and would serve as the perfect cornerstone to his legal ventures, but he knew that another business or two would round out his portfolio and keep all of his eggs out of the same baskets.
Carlos was easing War into position of “Boss” so he could start commanding his old empire. He had done what many drug dealers dreamed of but few have accomplished; he was going legit after having a successful run on top. Nothing seemed to be standing in his way as he stepped into his future.
Carlos’s phone vibrated in his pocket. “’Sup.” He answered after verifying Preme’s number on the screen.
“You ain’t gonna believe this shit.”
Carlos cursed to himself—he knew he wasn’t gonna like what Preme had to say next. Every time Preme started his conversation with those six words, what came afterwards was never good. It seemed like every time he tried to enjoy a little piece of sugar in his life, some twisted act of fate tried to stuff shit down his throat. “Two of the houses on Tuckaseegee got robbed.”
Carlos wanted to throw his phone at the side of the house. “The fuck!” War needs to be handling this shit, Carlos thought. That nigga the one runnin’ shit.
“Yeah, bruh, doors got kicked in and plenty work got took. I’m still looking into it.”
Carlos shook his head as if Preme could see him. “Okay. I’ll handle it in a minute.” Carlos didn’t wait for a response before he hung up the phone. “Fuck, fuck. FUCK!” Carlos was frustrated. It seemed that every time he wanted to take a step or two out of the game, he was getting knocked back a couple of feet into it.
He thought about the fact that the Westside was Lil’ Joe’s stomping grounds and if anybody knew something about this he would be the one to contact. After the bike party at BobCutz, Joe had told Carlos that he was about to start grinding for himself. Carlos was cool with that because he himself was about to be out of the game. It was understood that Joe was not to step on any of Carlos’s team member’s toes and if that line was crossed, it would be consequences and repercussions of great measures. Joe said that he understood but deep down, Carlos knew Joe wouldn’t respect that when it came to Preme. After Joe’s split from the crew, Preme was assigned to the Westside.
Some of the unresolved issues with Joe and Preme came to mind. The near fight with the two of them, the murder of Dave, and the murmurings on the street kept rising that Lil’ Joe had gotten a team of young niggas who was slanging on Tuckaseegee Road also. Carlos entertained the thought for a second, but then decided not to play into that. “Nah, I know that nigga ain’t crazy,” Carlos stated aloud.
Carlos thought back to the altercation between Joe and Preme, and he had almost regretted not letting the two handle that shit right then and there. He knew when it would’ve all been said and done, Preme would’ve been the one to emerge from the smoke still breathing. Joe talked a good one but Preme was a black-hearted killer with no conscious whatsoever. Preme had also wanted to body Joe shortly after they had bodied Dave in Opa Locka because he said he didn’t trust that nigga. Nevertheless, unlike a lot of niggas in the game, Carlos knew Joe wasn’t a snitch and Carlos didn’t see him as a problem at the time so he gave him a pass. A certificate of life so to speak. Now he had to deal with this shit!
Carlos scrolled for Joe’s name on his contact list and he touched the CALL button on the screen. After getting Lil’ Joe’s voicemail, he hung up the phone, mad as hell, but he didn’t want to let Lil’ Joe know he was pissed. He decided to call back a few minutes later, after a few rings he got the machine again, and he left a message:
“’Sup, my nigga, this Los. Hit me when you get this message, it’s important. One.”
Carlos put the phone back in his pocket and thought it had been a minute since he and Joe had talked. He wanted to give Lil’ Joe the same opportunity that he’d given Dave; the chance to clear the air. He knew that Joe was most likely to tell the truth, and whatever that truth was Joe would hold true to it like a man. Carlos had decided he’d not accuse Lil’ Joe of anything until he had a chance to talk to the man and hear what he had to say.
CHAPTER THIRTY- FIVE
Justice was fucked up at the thought of losing Kanye West’s party to a rival club a few blocks from her spot. But she knew there was no way in hell that Kanye, or anyone else on that level, or even a few steps under him would be coming to Phire & Ice after Tan’s body had been discovered leaking in her parking lot.
She knew that the possibility of her murking Tan would happen, but deep down, Justice had hoped that she wouldn’t have to do it at the club—but it seemed there was no other way. Detectives had concluded that Tan’s murder had been a direct result of the altercation that had gone down inside the club between the three Spanish men. Witnesses had collaborated the fact that a fight had broken out minutes before Tan had been reportedly murdered. No one even looked in Justices direction as a suspect. Her wound was so insignificant that no one saw it. She kept it bandaged and wore shirts with sleeves until it healed. Justice felt no remorse for how she handled her business. She felt good knowing that Tan went out the same way she had sent Monk out, face down on the cold asphalt.
After a couple of weeks of waiting for the news of the shooting to die down, Phire & Ice was back in business. Justice walked past the dressing room where the girls were changing and she felt good not seeing Precious and Virgin, and not having to deal with their scandalous asses. The ladies seemed to be getting along better and being more cooperative about all the bitches making money instead of the dollars being chased by a “select few.” The dressing room and the atmosphere in the club hadn’t been this calm since before the day she made the mistake of putting them two bitches on.
“Boss lady,” Toni called out from inside the dressing room. Justice didn’t even see Toni in the room with the girls. In fact, Toni should’ve had her ass in her office making sure things were being prepared for one of the minor league baseball players, who’d agreed to host a bachelor’s party for his friend at the club. Justice knew that after the shooting she was going
to have to take baby steps in order to land someone on the same level as Kanye back at the club again. Pulling off this bachelor’s party without a hitch was a first step in the right direction. “Boss lady!” Toni yelled again, interrupting her thoughts.
“Damn girl, I heard you the first time.”
Justice saw Toni was wearing a pinstriped black vest and blue silk tie with matching slacks and some heels. Her newly dyed sandy-brown locs had been pulled back into a ponytail that she loved to whip around like a white girl. “Anyway, boss lady, I just wanted to get up with you to say thank you for the opportunity.”
Justice hugged Toni from the side. She understood what it meant to be a black woman giving another sistah a chance to shine, and though that was not the intention, she was happy to give the girl an opportunity many had to fight for. “You don’t have to do all that. All you’ve got to do is make sure the club stays packed. Continue to network with the dancers and the promoters to keep the bitches interested in dancing in the joint because flying them here ain’t gonna make them dance. They have to see the potential of them doubling or tripling what you are paying to bring them here.”
Toni took notes in her mind. She had a level of respect for Justice being a woman of color in a predominantly male world. The fact that Justice could wheel and deal with the best of them was a plus. Her years of being in the streets, as well as being affiliated with niggas like Carlos and J.T. had served its purpose and prepared her well as she dealt with the men who handled most of the strippers and other issues that came with running this business.
“And when a bitch get outta line, you nip that shit in the bud the moment it becomes a problem. That way, the other bitches will stay in line and know not to try their luck.”
In reality, Justice shouldn’t have had to tell her that, but she knew there were distinct differences between herself and Toni. Justice was a street bitch; she knew how to get down for hers whether it be setting a nigga up to be robbed or finessing a nigga out of his wallet. Toni didn’t like niggas like that, and she’d also had a sheltered upbringing—she’d hardly gotten into trouble in school because she knew her parents would kick her ass. She graduated from college and held down legit jobs damn near all of her life. In addition, at heart, she could never be a street bitch. Therefore, Justice knew she could trust Toni long enough to make their partnership work, and she was willing to give Toni room to grow to be her own boss. Furthermore, Justice was secure with the thought that she would be coming back to Chi-Town often, so nothing would get so far out of hand that she couldn’t handle.