I just wanna know who's on here trying to get rid of black porn 👀 n black videos in general....a lot of black videos that weren't even sexual got taken down 😒 I just want Tumblr to know that's some bullshit don't nobody want to see white porn 24/7 b/c those mf videos not getting taken down. #bringbackoldtrumblr
I haven't been on here regularly and im missing so many stories from my favorite writers and I promise ima catch up but here's a few pictures 😘 sucks I cant post more than one video (i have more video than pictures) and Happy Holidays 🥂🥳
A/N: This is... idk what it is tbh lol it's filthy but its the first thing I've written in like 5 months that felt worth sharing so enjoy!
Warnings: NSFW, SMUT, BDSM dynamics, Daddy Smoke, Possessive/Mean Smoke, Sub Reader, Extreme Degradation, Forced Orgasms, mentions of reader x Stack Moore
“‘Jah… p-please… d-don’t make me,” you begged, your face stained with running mascara and foundation from your tears. You knew they did not move him. Knew he relished in seeing you like this.
Your sobs? Pleas for mercy? Cries for more? They were music to his ears. He would not stop until he got what he deserved: sweet, holy surrender.
Smoke grinned as he held you firm against his hardened chest, you had not realized his ploy when he slid behind you an hour ago. You only realized his game when your sleeping shorts and panties were tossed off the bed and his thick heavy thighs pinned your legs open and your hands beneath them.
Vulnerable.
Powerless.
He licked his lips at how your flower already wept for him. His broad bicep was unmovable across your chest while his hand played with your titty.
By your fourth orgasm, you knew what he desired. And you knew he would win in the end. Elijah “Smoke” Moore was not a man capable of losing. But it felt too filthy to even admit here. For him. The man holding vibrator to your oversensitive clit, forcing orgasm after orgasm until you unburdened yourself.
So he said.
Until you freed yourself of your secrets.
Any attempt to escape his grasp may have granted you a second of relief but it was met with swift correction: a sharp slap to your clit. The first time he did that was your third orgasm of the evening.
“Come on, baby. Just me n you here. Know you ain't gettin' shy on Big Papa. I’ll stop as soon as you admit it.”
His voice low and smooth pulled you under, enticing obedience from your very soul. Making you want to confess every filthy fantasy your mind conjured when you looked at the SmokeStack Twins. Not just your boyfriend Smoke but his other half, Elias "Stack" Moore, too.
How their combined presence forced need to the forefront and every logical thought out of your brain altogether.
“But see? I know this sweet body, baby. And I know you. And I know you know you can’t outlast me, baby. You could just give it to me… openly willingly like the good girl I know you are. Or I can drag it outta you, one orgasm at a time."
He admired the mess between your legs, your juices weeping from your cunt and glistening across your inner thighs as you tried and failed to find relief. He stole a taste every now and then, lewdly pausing to sink a finger inside you, your juices coating him like a melting popsicle on a hot day in the Delta. And he made sure to lick every drop clean.
And make you watch.
His torture was not without care, your lover checking in every so often, assured that he was taking it only as far as you could handle and desired. He enjoyed exploring your limits over the last few months, loved seeing how far you would push yourself before you folded. Because that was the only option here.
If you would not give it, he would take it.
He lazily introduced a new setting that caused your head to lull back into his shoulder. You pressed your face into his neck to quiet your whine as you tried to squirm away from its intensity. But your predator had ensured there was nowhere to go as he held you against his towering frame, his hard member seated between your ass cheeks.
Thinking about that did not help your situation. You’d fold with one stroke.
You suppose this time, it was true: you brought this on yourself. Smoke had given you a golden ticket. Handed you a get-out-of-jail free card at dinner to admit what was in your heart. Not just lust but true affections for him. But you squandered it. Outright discarded it as if it meant nothing. Despite the evidence he had against you.
You opted to play Smoke Moore the fool and thought he would let that go unavenged? And now, here he was, forced to show you that he was not like these other niggas.
He was a man who knew the answer to any question he asked before it left his lips.
A man who could see the insecurity of a man in the mere gait in his walk.
A man who could read the deepest desire of a woman in how she kissed.
So even if he was forced to introduce you to the rapture over and over again all night, he would get the truth he was owed. He always knew when his girls were close to breaking. The beauty of surrender was its uniqueness in every woman. How much of him they could withstand before they stripped away their walls, insecurities, and accomplishments and gave into their most basic human desire for pleasure. Before they acknowledged that the only way out was through him.
Before they became his.
And when the prize was as beautiful and sweet as the one beneath him, he had to… savor it first.
He could end this quickly but he knew it was not enough. He had to show you what he was capable of, show you the strings and limits inside you he could pull, some you would not even know existed. You wanted to be broken but he needed to show you what that meant.
And that lesson would not be learned with a quick orgasm. No, it would be through a painstaking show of his dominance. His ability to demand submission, loudly and proudly.
His tongue licked your neck lewdly, salty from your sweat, as he lowered the setting just a taste.
Enough relief to catch your breath.
Enough torture to remind you who remained in control.
He gave you a few deep breaths before raising his hand to slap your thigh, your body flinching away.
“I can’t.. It-it’s n-not… I d-don’t…” you started to stammer as if half-formed excuses would save you now.
“‘I c-can’t… d-don’t…’Y ou forgot how to fuckin’ speak to Papa, sweet girl?” he offered in a mocking tone as his wide palm came down swift as a lightning bolt against your inner thigh. He chuckled, glee dancing in his eye as he watched your body instinctively jerk toward his hand as the small explosion of pleasure hit you.
He did not miss the fitful groan that escaped when he raised his hand again but instead gently brought it down to graze his fingertips in the sticky mess at the apex of your thighs.
The fun we’re gonna have breakin’ this one, Smoke thought to himself. Such a slut already and Stack had not even touched her yet.
“Fucking slut.” He spat out in a chastising tone. “See? I already see who you are… what you need. I know that beautiful brain of yours is tryin’ to rationalize it. But you ain’t gotta use that brain for nothin’ other than to think bout us, angel. Me. Him. What we can do for you. Just tell me. Besides, don’t know how much more you got left.”
Your body burned from the inside out, this game of cat and mouse reaching a fever pitch. You knew there was no winning in it for you,. You knew his taunts were rooted in truth. You would surrender or your body would for you. For a man like Smoke, victory was victory. It would not make a single difference to him.
“It’s okay. I got eyes too, baby. I see how you look at him.” He increased the setting, your hips shamelessly rolling to meet his hand. You knew what coiled in your belly, the strongest, earth-altering orgasm of your life.
And yet, it was frustratingly just not enough. The setting he chose, kept you right on the precipice of your cliff. Freedom so near, you could taste its sweetness. Your hips moved in overdrive to see if you could get there. But then you felt his grip tighten around you.
Damn him.
“You know what I want.” That Southern drawl, honey laced with every sin and bad influence your mother and the church ladies warned you about growing up, beckoned you to let go.
Every syllable. Every touch of his rough fingertip against your silky skin. It all screamed, “surrender.”
He leaned closer into your ear.
“Admit you wanna be ours, baby.”
“I-I… I’m y-yours, J-Jah, I swear.”
He grinned at the whinny nature of your voice, the desperate plea to believe she wanted him even though she lusted after his brother like a whore. He did not mind it. It was ideal, truth be told. And for the first time in their brotherhood, he actually believed you were the perfect fit for them both. Thankfully for you, it was not an either/or. The rest of your life would be filled with both/and.
Both their cocks splitting your body apart. His hands and Stack’s tying you up to deliver corrections and punishments your smart mouth will most certainly earn. The joy of the both/and. And now, after a few months of discreetly folding you into their world, they were ready to claim you as theirs. Together.
Four months in the making leading to this moment. The moment you give him permission to let Stack loose. And this was the one area where Smoke made no attempt to tame him.
“I know, sweetheart. That ain’t gon’ change. Just tell me how you wish Stack was in here too, pushin’ you over the edge like this. Wish he was fuckin’ that tight pussy. I should warn you. He ain’t as… gentle as me. But you can take him. You want both of us fillin’ these delicious holes, don’t you? Both of us fuckin’ this sweet cunt till you’re dumb in the fuckin’ head n can’t walk straight? Fillin’ this sweet pussy till you’re round n pregnant with our babies. Over and over and over again.”
Your whines escalated to moans as your pussy clenched nothing, your hips bucked wilder, your body losing control with a near feral desire to cum. But nothing you could do would get you there. No, you needed him.
“You’re ours, baby. We knew it from the moment we met you. Imagine you ridin’ me like you love to n Stack fillin’ that tight back hole? Us coverin’ you in our cum, showerin’ you in the praise you deserve for bein’ our good girl.. But good girls tell Big Papa their fantasies, no matter how much of a disgusting slut n cum bucket they make them.” He gripped your chin roughly, an unnecessary but loved show of strength. “You don’t wanna be Papa’s bad girl, do you?” he asked, his voice lethal as his hand tightened just enough around your throat, knowing that even when he let you recover from this hell, he would still punish you.
“N-No. I… w-want… J-Jah… p-please… I c-can’t…”
“Say it for me, baby girl. You can do it if you wanna cum, sweet girl.”
His voice egged you on as you admitted your deepest secret, your fantasy you swore you’d never breathe out loud.
“I-I love you but… fuckkkkk, Smoke. J-Just like that. I-it’s not enough. I n-need h-him…” That last part was so shy and quiet in a way that did not match the way he held you open and willing while whispering the filthiest things in your ear.
“Who, baby? Say his name.”
“Stack…” you whispered his voice on a moan as he pressed the vibrator deeper into your clit, the pressure a promise of what mercy and bliss was about to come.
And now that he had drawn his brother’s name from the depths of your spirit, the rest flowed from your lips without a single barrier holding it back. Your lust for them was nothing short of an addiction.
“G-give me to him. I-I need you b-both to take m-me. Use me.” You panted as you neared the edge. “I w-wanna be your… whore. Make... m-make me your whore.”
Your words were tearful sobs, a prayer to the only God who could save you in this room.
“L-let me be yours.”
“You gon’ let me and Stack share this sweet cunt?”
“Yes!” You screamed, knowing that these declarations could most certainly be heard by his twin “slumbering” down the hall. But that only made you want to scream it louder.
“Anytime… Anyway we want?”
“Yes, yes yes!” You chanted, your brain not even processing his words.
The particulars of them seemed irrelevant when he already consumed you, owned you. As desperately as your body sought its release, you knew you could not fall until he allowed it and not a moment before.
“That’s my good girl. Cum for me, darlin’.”
His praise was drowned out by a guttural cry as he increased the setting, your body convulsing against him.
You felt weightless, if he was not anchoring you to him through it, you would float away from him and disappear into the clouds. You felt your body explode as Smoke talked you through it.
He continued to hold you as he removed the vibrator from between your quivering legs, the man studying the growing puddle beneath you. You squirted for him for the first time and it was beautiful. You were beautiful.
“You did so good for me, sweet girl. That’s all I wanted. You'll be our whore before you know it, baby."
And that was true. Stack would wait just enough time for you to forget about tonight and then he would pounce. You begged to be given away. Yearned to be their whore.
Why would they make you wait longer than necessary to fulfill your dreams?
When you least expected it... The SmokeStack Twins would be waiting to claim you.
Fin
A/N: Sooooooo this was supposed to be part of a larger one-shot that would be both twins x reader and honestly still might be hahaha depending on how I feel but honestly, I've been feeling so disconnected from my writing that when I realized how much I liked this, I decided to post it either way lol Hope you enjoyed it!
Summary: Amelia packed her things and took a train to Clarksdale Mississippi to reunite with an old friend, Annie. Annie promised she’d teach Amelia the art of Hoodoo. After a month, Smoke and Stack return with a plan to open a Juke Joint.
Warnings: SMUT
Part Seven
Shelby, Mississippi–Ora Mae’s Home, Late Afternoon
The sun was beginning to fold behind the trees, bleeding amber through the warped glass of Ora Mae’s kitchen window. Cicadas had started their evening cry, and the smell of burning cedar wafted from the little iron cauldron near the hearth. The old house creaked with age and memory, every wooden slat steeped in rootwork and ritual, every shadow cast long like it remembered something terrible.
Ora Mae stirred a pot of sweet bay tea on the stove, her fingers thick with rings and stained with ash and tobacco. Her hair, salt-white and pinned up in rolls, was wrapped in a faded scarf printed with protective sigils. Her dress clung to her like smoke—deep purple with loose sleeves—and her feet were bare, always.
Annie sat at the round kitchen table, palms curled around a chipped ceramic mug. Her dark eyes were fixed on the candle in the center—black wax, burning low, flame flickering hard like it knew something it couldn’t say out loud.
“No word from her?” Annie asked quietly, voice like sorghum syrup and dread.
Ora Mae shook her head once, slow, “Not a whisper. Not a thread of cloth. Girl vanished like she ain’t never been born.”
She ladled more tea into Annie’s cup, then poured her own and eased herself down into the chair across from her, the wood groaning under the weight of years.
“I been searchin’ every which way I know,” she continued. “Through the cards. Through the bones. Through the dirt out near the crossroads. Can’t even find a shadow to chase.”
Annie’s fingers tightened around her mug.
“I hate feelin’ this useless,” she muttered, “Like I come all this way just to sit with my hands folded.”
Ora Mae gave a soft hum, reaching over to press her hand over Annie’s.
“You ain’t useless, baby. Sometimes just bringin’ your light helps the dead remember they ain’t alone. That girl gone, but her spirit’s tremblin’ close. She feel us lookin’. We just gotta wait ’til she wants to be found.”
They sat in silence for a few moments, sipping their tea. Outside, the wind passed through the trees with a low whistle, like it had a mouth and a warning.
Then Ora Mae leaned in a little, sniffing.
Not dramatic. Not rude. Just…curious.
Her nose twitched again.
She narrowed her eyes at Annie and tilted her head.
“What you been gettin’ into, chile?”
Annie looked up, confused, “What you mean?”
Ora Mae sniffed again, slower this time. Her expression changed—wrinkled deeper, sharper. She wasn’t looking at Annie so much as looking through her.
“You smell different.”
Annie blinked, “’Scuse me?”
“Mmm…somethin’ sweet. Not perfume. Not flower. Somethin’ older. Woven.” Her voice dropped, tone shifting, “You been ‘round a fae?”
Annie’s whole body tensed, “What?”
Ora Mae sat back in her chair like the air had answered for her, “I ain’t sayin’ you know it. They don’t always show they full hand. But you carryin’ somethin’ that don’t come from here. Somethin’ old. Somethin’ from… in-between.”
Annie’s brows furrowed, lips parting, “No. No, I—no, I ain’t been ‘round no fae.”
“Mmm.”
Ora Mae didn’t press. Just took a sip from her tea, eyes still locked on Annie’s face, “Might not be malicious,” she said softly. “Fae don’t always mean harm. But they do shift things. Just by bein’. They call trouble even when they lonely.” She tapped the table once with her nail, “You might wanna look close at who you lettin’ lay up in your space. Who in your bed. Who got their hands in your altar dust.”
Annie didn’t speak. Didn’t move. Her fingers twitched. Her mind flicked back—to Amelia’s touch, her kiss, the shine in her eyes after love-making, the way the floorboards in the house felt different now.
But she said nothing. Just smiled, faint and small.
“I’ll be careful.”
Ora Mae watched her for a long moment, then reached for a leather pouch beside the cauldron, “Take this. Sprinkle it near your threshold when you get home. Just in case.”
Annie took it with both hands, “Thank you.”
They sat in silence again. The candle’s flame had calmed. The shadows had shifted. But Annie’s thoughts were not still. Something inside her had begun to stir. And she didn’t know yet whether it was fear…or understanding.
Afternoon—Clarksdale Train Depot, Summer 1932
The train pulled in slow, screeching against steel like it had something to say. Smoke hung back near the end of the platform, arms crossed over his broad chest, a cigarette burning low between his lips. His black suspenders were loose over a dusty cream shirt rolled to the elbows, revealing strong forearms flecked with engine grease and bayou grit. He looked like home. Like danger wrapped in devotion.
Annie stepped down from the train in a slow, poised glide. She was dressed in a cinnamon-colored wrap dress that hit just above her ankles, her dark skin glowing against the fabric like burnished mahogany. Her braids were wrapped up into a soft crown, loose tendrils kissing the sides of her face, and slung over one shoulder was her patched-up carpetbag stuffed full with roots, oils, books, and the faint smell of frankincense. She carried a smaller satchel in the crook of her elbow, and in her other hand, a wooden box carved with sigils. Her heart clenched, then swelled. Seven days gone, and it felt like a season. Longer than she’d intended. She was radiant and tired, hips swaying as she approached.
Her eyes scanned the crowd. When they landed on him, that smile lit her face. It wasn’t wide, wasn’t loud. But it was his. Soft around the mouth. Tender. And it struck him square in the gut. Smoke tossed the cigarette, letting it curl into the dirt, and stepped forward.
Smoke moved.
Boots crunching the gravel. Shoulders cutting through people. And before she could say his name, he was there—taking her bags in one smooth sweep, setting them on the truck bed, and closing the space between them until nothing fit but breath and heat. No words. Just arms. He gripped her tight around the waist and lifted her, spinning her once as her hat tipped back and her laugh rang out. She started to speak. But he didn’t let her. He cupped her face in both hands, thumbs brushing her cheeks, and crashed his mouth against hers.
Tongue, lips, teeth—all of it. Hungry. Heavy. Desperate. Like something inside him had cracked wide open and spilled into her mouth. Annie gasped into the kiss, startled, but melted the second his tongue slipped deeper. Her back hit the truck hard enough to rattle it. He pressed into her with his whole body, swallowing her little sounds, groaning low when her fingers fisted in his shirt. When they finally pulled apart, both panting, her lips were kiss-bruised. She blinked up at him, dazed and breathless.
“What was that for?” she whispered, voice like gravel honey.
Smoke leaned in, pressing his forehead to hers, nose grazing the bridge of her own, “I’m glad you back,” he murmured, thick-voiced, “Missed you somethin’ awful.”
Her hands came up to stroke the strong curve of his arms, grounding him, thumb brushing over his knuckles, “I missed you too, baby.” He kissed her again—slower this time, but still deep, tongues dancing like they needed to relearn each other. When he pulled back, he ran his thumb over the corner of her mouth, wiped the wet away like it was sacred. Then he opened her door and helped her up into the cab with care, sliding her bags behind the seat. As he started the engine, gravel crunching beneath the wheels, he glanced sideways, stealing another look at her like he couldn’t help it. The curve of her hip, the way her dress clung to her thighs, the quiet strength in her posture.
“How’d it go in Shelby?” he asked.
“No luck,” she said, her voice dipping, “Ora Mae and me tried everything. Cards, mirror, bones, conjure. That girl…she’s out there somewhere. But there’s somethin’ dark coverin’ her like a veil. Ora say she couldn’t even feel her spirit right.”
Smoke’s brow furrowed as he nodded, “I don’t like that.”
“Neither do I,” she replied. Then she shifted, “How’s things at the house? And the shop?”
Another pause.
Smoke licked his bottom lip, then tapped the wheel twice, “Same. Ain’t nothin’ broke. Just…different.”
“Different how?” she asked.
“I can’t explain it,” he said honestly, “Like there’s a buzz in the air. Like I been dreamin’ in my wake-time. Like the house don’t feel like ours.”
Annie nodded slowly.
Ora Mae’s words curled in her ears like smoke.
You been around a fae?
She blinked it away.
“And Amelia?” she asked casually.
Smoke’s eyes flicked sideways. Then back to the road, “Last I seen she was with Stack at the Shack. I think they went to town.”
“Mmm.” Annie smirked faintly, “You enjoy some of that sweet pussy while I was gone?”
That pulled a low laugh from him. He turned to her fully now, hand sliding to her thigh, “Once,” he said, voice rough, “She was sweet. Real sweet. Helped let off the cum I been holdin’ in. But I want you, Annie.” His eyes roamed over her like he meant it. Like he’d been starving, “I don’t want Amelia in our bed no more.”
Annie’s eyes lifted slightly, surprised but not angry. Her mouth parted just a little, “No?”
“Nah,” he said, his voice flat and final, “You gave me permission. I took it. But somethin’ about her…I can’t explain it. She too much light. Too much shadow. I don’t want her between us.”
Annie stared at him a long moment. She leaned in, brushing her lips over his cheek, then whispered at his ear, “Then don’t let her in no more.” Annie lifted a brow, “What happened?”
He shook his head, “Nothin’ yet. But…we’ll talk.”
He pulled her into another kiss—slower this time. Thicker with meaning. The truck rolled on down the dirt road, the Mississippi sun painting gold across the windshield. And though neither said it, something had shifted. The wind had changed. Whatever lived in the air around Amelia, it had changed them both. And now, as Clarksdale came back into view, they could feel it pressing closer. But for now, she was back. And that was enough.
The gravel crunched beneath the wheels of the truck as Smoke pulled up to the house, easing it into park with a low groan of the engine. The late afternoon sun draped everything in a golden hush, the cicadas singing their fevered song from the trees like they’d never stopped since she left. But as Annie stepped down from the truck and her boots hit the dirt, her skin prickled.
Something was different.
The house looked the same—shaded beneath the same wide oaks, porch still sagging with time and ghosts, the windows still smudged with dew and memory—but the air had shifted. The house felt fuller. Heavier. Not with dust or time, but with something unseen. The hair on Annie’s arms lifted. Her tongue pressed to the roof of her mouth. Smoke watched her. Watched the way she froze for just a second with her hand on the front door, eyes narrowed as if listening to something only she could hear.
She turned to him, “How things been?”
He scratched the back of his neck, looking down before meeting her gaze. “Been alright. Mostly. Stack been around. You know how he is.”
Her eyes lingered, And Amelia?”
He didn’t answer right away. Just opened the door and stepped inside. The screen door gave its familiar creeaaak, followed by the slam of the wood catching. Annie stepped in behind him. The moment she crossed the threshold, it hit her like perfume and lightning. A glow in the air. Not light, but something shimmering. Thick and golden. It didn’t sparkle—it pulsed. Like something had bled sweet magic all over her house in her absence. The scent of honey and crushed blooms hung faint in the corners, undercut by something darker—rot and old dirt. Something buried. Annie dropped her bags by the door.
“Smoke.”
He turned, jaw tightening, “I had a dream.”
She stilled.
“Ain’t like no regular one,” he added, “Felt real. Too real.”
She crossed her arms, voice low, “Tell me.”
He sighed, then began, “I was in the juke. Me and Stack. Place was hot, music playin’ slow, work bein’ done. Amelia was there. All lit up like sugarcane on fire. She—she let us have her. Right there. We both fucked her. One after the other.”
Annie blinked slowly. Her lips parted, but she said nothing.
“I woke up smellin’ her,” he said, voice cracking a little at the edge, “Sweatin’. Shook. Swore I had her on me.”
Annie’s gaze flicked up, “You thinkin’ it was a vision?”
Smoke hesitated, “Maybe.”
“Dreams like that don’t come uninvited,” she said softly.
“I saw her in the mirror too,” he added, voice darker now, “I was lookin’ and she—she was smilin’ back at me. But she wasn’t there. I shot the damn mirror.”
Annie’s mouth twitched, “You what?”
He led her down the hallway, “C’mere. Lemme show you.”
They stepped into their shared bedroom, and there it was—the mirror, shattered clean down the center, the top half cracked like a spider’s web. A bullet hole in the wall behind it. Annie stared, stunned. Her voice dropped low. “You know what it means to shoot your own mirror?”
“I wasn’t thinkin’. Just reacted.”
She stepped closer, “You cursed your own reflection, Elijah.”
He flinched. She only called him that when it was serious.
Annie’s voice turned cold, “What the hell is goin’ on that you ain’t sayin?”
Smoke didn’t speak right away. Just stared at her, hands curled into fists, chest rising slow and thick.
Then: “I fucked her…”
Annie blinked. Once. Twice. Then she shrugged.
“Yeah. I told you to take care of her if it came to that. You did. So what’s the problem?”
“I..I been feelin’ different, Annie. Like I’m possessed. Like I need her to breathe.”
“Ain’t your fault, Smoke…she got that touch. I feel the same way. But you ain’t sayin’ everything. You holdin’ something…”
But her voice didn’t carry judgment. Just calm. Like she’d already made peace with it. Smoke didn’t answer. He just grabbed her hand and led her down the hall. They stopped in front of Amelia’s room. The door was closed. He pushed it open. The room felt wetter than the others. Not in moisture—but in emotion. Like it had been humming while they were gone. The scent was dizzying—rosewater, salt, candle smoke, something older. Another mirror. This one faced the window and it was cracked too. Smoke knelt beside the bed. Reached under. Pulled up a slatted plank of wood, rough and split at the edge. From beneath it, he drew two small jars.
He held them out.
Annie didn’t take them at first. Just looked. One jar was thick with dark liquid—murky, viscous, like something that had spoiled from the inside out. Twigs, nails, bone fragments, bits of paper all suspended in the sludge. The other? Honey. Pure, golden, clinging to the sides like it had a heartbeat. A photo inside, edges curling. Dried rose petals floating like drowned whispers. Annie finally took them in her hands. One in each palm.
“She made these,” Smoke said, voice low, “Right? Them jars you do?”
Annie’s mouth was dry. Her conjure senses roared. She turned them in her hands, lips moving silently as she felt the pulse of the work. One jar spoke of rot. Decay. The slow killing of a man’s essence. Not instant. Not poison. But withering. The other jar sang sweetly. A song of longing. Of binding. Of pulling what she wanted closer. Of keeping.
“This here’s a rot jar,” Annie said, almost breathless, “This one…this one’s sweetenin’. Like the ones I make.” She looked up at him, face stricken, “Lord, what you done did, girl…”
Smoke sat back on his heels, “She ain’t right,” he muttered.
Annie looked at him sharply.
“She make me feel like I’m losin’ my mind,” he said, raw, “Got me actin’—thinkin’ like I ain’t never thought before. I sniffed her damn drawers the other night. Like some kinda dog. Snuck in and stole ‘em.”
Annie raised a brow.
“I ain’t proud,” he went on, voice thick, “But I can’t stop. It’s like there’s somethin’ buried in her skin. Power or poison—I don’t know which.” He looked up, eyes dark, “But I gotta know what she is.”
Annie stood there, heart thudding. Looking down at the jars in her hand like they might shatter if she breathed too hard. Whatever Amelia was hiding—it wasn’t small.
And Annie? She’d find out what. Even if it burned.
The house stood still. The porch creaked beneath Annie’s weight as she stepped up, glancing once at the door before her eyes turned east—toward the trees, toward the shack that held all her work, her altar, her knowing. Ora Mae’s voice stirred in her head like a breath of wind:
“When you get home, wash your hands in blessed water and rub ’em with salt. Walk around your place backwards and see what makes the hairs on your neck rise.”
She stepped off the porch again. Her boots pressed through dry dirt as she made her way toward the shack. The same path Amelia had walked a hundred times. The sun was high now, but the trees cast shadows long and thin. The air was still, but not quiet.
Birdsong faded. Crickets stopped. The silence felt…expectant. The door to her hoodoo shack opened with a familiar groan. Inside, everything was as she left it—neat bundles of dried herbs hanging from the ceiling, glass jars filled with oils, powders, roots. The altar sat at the back wall, layered with offerings: coins, carved bones, photographs, a silver mirror wrapped in red twine. She slipped off her gloves and lit a fresh candle—black, then white, then red. The flame wavered, as if unsure. She didn’t speak yet. Just moved through the motions. Annie filled the copper bowl on her altar with blessed water. She dipped her hands in and washed them slowly, her fingertips tingling.
Then she rubbed coarse salt between her palms, whispering a prayer:
“Let me see what’s hid. Let me feel what’s near. Let me know what’s mine, and what don’t belong here.”
She took up her walking stick—not for support, but for power.
And she stepped out.
Just like Ora Mae said, she walked the perimeter of the house backwards. Slow. One foot behind the other. Eyes open, neck tense, senses reaching past the veil. When she reached the southern window, her left hand twitched.
Goosebumps chased up her arms.
A shadow lingered by the flowerbed where Amelia often sat and hummed to herself.
Annie paused.
The dirt there looked stirred. Not dug, but shifted. Like someone had danced there, or…cast something. She crouched down and touched the ground.
Warm. Too warm.
She whispered, “You been layin’ tricks in my yard, girl?”
Her voice barely made a ripple in the thickening air.
But something heard her. She stood slowly and turned her head back toward the house. From inside, Smoke waited in silence. But outside, Annie now knew: something other had walked her grounds. It was soft and light and honey-sweet—but beneath that sweetness was a shimmer of wrong.
Not evil. But not human.
She adjusted her shawl and made her way back toward the porch.
“One step at a time,” she whispered, Ora Mae’s warning echoing like drums.
Annie didn’t run. Didn’t panic. But the next time she lit her altar candles, she would be looking for Amelia. Not as a friend. Not as a lover. But as a mystery that needed unbraiding.
The sun had begun its slow descent, stretching long orange shadows across the dirt road as Stack turned the wheel, guiding the car down a narrow back route thick with pine and hush. The windows were down, wind slipping in like fingers through Amelia’s hair, tossing it over her shoulder in dark, silken waves. She sat quiet, her hands folded in her lap, eyes locked on the passing trees like they might carry answers she didn’t yet know how to speak. Stack glanced at her out the corner of his eye. She’d been still the whole ride. Not cold. Just…quiet. But it wasn’t the good kind. He could feel her retreating, inch by inch. Could taste the storm brewing in her silence.
“I keep takin’ backroads lately,” he muttered, almost to himself, “Ain’t like I’m scared’a traffic.”
She didn’t smile. Just exhaled slowly, watching the road peel away in front of them.
“You think she still in town?” he asked.
Amelia nodded, barely, “If I know her…she’ll stay ‘til she gets what she came for.”
Stack gripped the wheel tighter, “And you ain’t ready to tell me what that is?”
Her lips pressed together. Her jaw worked. And still, she said nothing. He pulled the car off the road, gravel popping beneath the tires as they rolled to a stop in a shaded curve between two cypress trees. The cicadas were singing loud in the trees overhead, but between them, the air sat thick and expectant. Stack shifted into park and turned to face her fully.
“Amelia.”
She looked at him then. Finally.
He didn’t speak again. Just let the silence stretch and press—like a hand to the back of her neck, coaxing truth up from where she’d buried it.
Her voice, when it came, was quiet, “It ain’t easy.”
“I ain’t askin’ for easy,” he said, “I’m askin’ for real.”
She looked down at her hands. One of them trembled, and she clenched it into a fist to still it.
“She’s here because of me,” Amelia said, “Because of what I did.”
Stack’s breath caught in his throat, but he didn’t move. Didn’t push. Amelia licked her lips. Her voice was raw, like something torn open.
“She raised me after my grandmother died. Her and Nathaniel. He was her husband. A doctor. A preacher. A good man…or that’s what people thought.”
Stack’s eyes narrowed.
“He was…kind to me. At first. I was a girl in grief. Lost. He comforted me.”
A pause. Her chest rose, then fell.
“And then…it changed.”
Stack’s jaw locked, the muscle ticking.
“I didn’t mean for it to happen,” she whispered, “I never meant to fall for him. But I did. And he—he loved me too. Or maybe he just needed something he couldn’t find in her. Either way, it wasn’t right.” She paused, waiting for him to say something. He didn’t. Just let her keep going, “We kept it quiet. For years. I thought…maybe we’d run away. Maybe we’d find some kind of freedom in each other.” Her voice broke, “But we didn’t.”
Tears shimmered in her eyes now, but she didn’t let them fall. Not yet.
“One night, I told him I was leaving. That it was over. He didn’t take it well. He followed me out to the bayou. I tried to explain. I was upset, angry. My…I’ve always been tied to my feelings. And that night—something inside me snapped.”
Stack’s brows drew tight. The silence between them crackled.
“I didn’t mean to hurt him,” she said, voice cracking, “I swear to God, Stack. I didn’t mean to hurt him.”
“What happened?”
Her eyes finally met his—and they were wild. Vulnerable. Pleading, “He drowned. I didn’t even touch him. I just…I lost control. He stepped into the water and never came out.”
Silence.
Amelia’s shoulders slumped. She wrapped her arms around herself, suddenly so small.
“I ran. I left everything. Celine never forgave me. She knew, or she guessed. And now she’s here.”
Stack stared at her. The full weight of her confession pressed against his ribs like bricks. He could feel his pulse in his throat, his ears, the tips of his fingers. This girl—this woman—was danger. Soft and sharp. Sugar and blood.
“You ain’t scared of me yet?” she asked, almost like a dare.
Stack looked away for a second, jaw clenched. Then slowly, he turned back to her, “Terrified,” he said, voice low, “But I still wanna keep you.”
Amelia blinked, stunned. Her mouth parted like she wanted to speak, but the words were gone. Stack reached across the seat and touched her face, thumb tracing the soft curve of her cheek.
“I don’t know what the hell you are,” he said, “But you got me wantin’ to protect you from folks I don’t understand yet. From your past. From mine. From all of it.”
She let out a breath, shaky and soft. A tear slipped free, and he caught it with his thumb, “I don’t deserve that,” she whispered.
“Maybe not. But I ain’t lettin’ you go.”
And for the first time in weeks, Amelia closed her eyes and let someone hold her truth without dropping it. The sky was honey-thick and rust-colored by the time Stack pulled the truck into an alleyway just off Delta Avenue. Heat still clung to the brick buildings, the air syrupy with the scent of sweet pipe smoke, magnolia, and something faintly metallic drifting off the train tracks nearby. Folks were heading home or slipping into storefront bars to escape the dying light—shadows stretched long, gossip moved low, and Clarksdale leaned into the hush of early evening. Amelia sat low in the passenger seat, cotton dress plain and wrinkled from the ride. Her face was calm, but her fingers twisted the hem of her skirt in her lap.
“Sure you wanna do this?” Stack asked, voice like gravel. He kept his eyes on the rearview mirror.
She didn’t answer right away. Then, quietly, “I have to.”
Stack nodded once, shoved open the door, and helped her out. They ducked into the deep porch shadows of the old barbershop across from the modest boarding house. The wood beneath them creaked faintly with their weight, the air thick between them. They stood close, silent, the world going golden around the edges.
Then the boarding house door opened. Celine stepped out as if she’d never belonged to dirt or sweat or consequence. She floated down the stairs in a gown the color of rain-kissed pearls, her gloved hands clasped around a clutch too expensive for a place like this. Her hair was pinned in perfect waves. Her mouth painted deep red. And her eyes—cold, lined with calculation—swept the street before she turned and began walking west. Amelia didn’t move, but her whole body changed. Her shoulders locked. Her spine went rigid. Her breath stalled like her chest forgot how to take it in.
“She always did dress for the sermon she was gonna preach,” Amelia murmured, bitterly.
Stack leaned forward just enough to track her path, “She ain’t just walkin’. She headed somewhere.”
Amelia’s whisper shook, “She’s sniffin’ around the way she always does…using money like scent bait.”
They waited, breaths shallow, watching Celine disappear past the corner. Stack tugged on Amelia’s hand and they followed, ducking down a narrow back path that cut behind a feed store and spilled them out two buildings down. There, they paused. Hidden in the alcove of a shuttered dry goods shop, they watched. Celine had stopped beneath a wrought-iron lamp post. The golden light made her shine like something holy. But the man she was waiting for had no such softness. He approached with slow confidence, every movement precise. A tall Creole man—light-skinned enough to pass, clean-shaven, dressed in a cream suit that didn’t wrinkle and a Panama hat pulled low. His shoes were mirror-bright. His posture military. Stack didn’t like the way he carried himself—like he was used to being paid to find what other people wanted hidden.
“Who the hell is that?” Stack whispered.
Amelia shook her head, “I don’t know him.”
They watched as Celine and the man exchanged a few quiet words. Then she reached into her bag and pulled something out. Paper. Thin, maybe a photo.
She handed it to him.
The man nodded once, tucked it into his jacket, and tipped his hat. Then he turned and walked away. Celine didn’t follow. She stayed beneath the lamplight for a long beat, then turned on her heel and started back toward the boarding house.
Amelia’s hand had gone ice cold in Stack’s, “Shit,” she whispered, “That’s one of my photographs I bet. She’s…she’s putting money behind it now.”
Stack’s jaw locked. His grip tightened, “She handin’ out your face like a damn wanted poster.”
Amelia looked up at him, “You see now?”
“I see,” he said, “And I ain’t just gon’ stand around lettin’ this unfold.”
She looked down. Her voice broke a little, “She don’t care who she hurts. She’ll use folks to dig till she gets what she came for.”
He reached out, gently gripping her chin, turning her face up, “You sure you wanna keep runnin’?”
Beat.
“‘Cause I can end this. One way or another.”
Amelia blinked, throat working, “You don’t know what she’ll do if she finds out the whole truth.”
Stack leaned in, eyes dark and unshaken, “I know what I’ll do if she keep playin’.”
Then, he let her go. But not far.
They stood in the thickening dusk as the boarding house swallowed Celine back up, her white dress trailing behind her like the ghost of a grudge. And across the street, hidden in shadow, Stack stood beside Amelia and swore—if that woman meant to hurt her, she’d have to go through him first.
The night air pressed close to the shack, warm and humming. Outside, the frogs had already begun their slow percussion, but inside Annie’s root‑room the sound felt miles away—swallowed by candlelight and smoke. She moved like a woman half in prayer, half in battle. Her skirts brushed the packed‑earth floor as she circled the small table, laying out a white sheet of muslin. Two jars sat in the center: one cloudy gold, one the color of spoiled molasses. Their glass bodies caught the candlelight and threw it back in bruised shades of amber and brown. Smoke sat on the low bench near the door, hat in his hands, watching her. The lines of his shoulders were drawn tight. He’d faced men with guns and not felt this kind of unease.
Annie uncorked the first jar. The air inside was sweet, cloying—honey thick with old perfume and something faintly metallic, “That’s the callin’ kind,” she spoke, “To draw, to sweeten, to make folks lean your way.” She set it down and opened the other. The smell hit them both: sour, wet, and low. Rot and river mud, “And this one,” she said softly, “ain’t meant to bring nothin’ but ruin. You don’t make this by accident.”
She closed her eyes, touched both jars with her fingertips, and whispered words that weren’t meant for human hearing. The candles flickered, flame bending toward her voice.
Smoke shifted, uneasy, “You think she learned this somewhere?”
Annie shook her head, “No. This come natural. Like a snake learnin’ to shed its skin.”
From a shelf she took a small black bowl and filled it halfway with clear water drawn from the well before sunset. Into it she dropped a silver coin and a sprig of yarrow. Then she reached for a small velvet pouch, loosening the string. Inside lay an old finger bone, smooth from years of handling.
“This belonged to my mama’s mama,” she said, “Used when the sight need guidin’.” She looked at Smoke, “Give me somethin’ of yours. Something that’s been close to her.”
He hesitated, then pulled a short strand of hair from his head, rough and thick between his fingers, “She brushed past me once,” he said quietly, “and it felt like lightning in my ribs. That close enough?”
Annie took the hair, twisted it around the bone, and dropped both into the bowl. The water darkened instantly, like ink spreading.
“Now watch,” she whispered.
She began to hum—a low, circular sound that wasn’t melody but movement. The air in the shack thickened; the candles leaned in. The surface of the water shivered, though neither of them breathed.
Smoke leaned forward, “What’s it doin’ that for?”
Annie didn’t answer. Her eyes were fixed on the bowl. The silver coin vanished beneath the surface as if pulled down by a hand. Bubbles rose, then stilled. A faint light began to pulse in the blackness—soft at first, then steady, like a heart under skin.
Annie’s breath hitched. The glow wasn’t white. It was gold, the color of a candle seen through honey.
“That’s her,” she whispered, “That shine right there. It ain’t from this side.”
The glow grew brighter, swirling, forming the outline of a woman’s face—Amelia’s face—but blurred, eyes gleaming like two coins at the bottom of a river. Smoke jerked back, chair scraping. The candles flared tall and blue.
Annie forced her voice steady, “You see it now? That girl don’t conjure; she is conjure. Born with it in her bones.”
The image wavered, then collapsed into the water, leaving the bowl still and dark again. The smell of iron and jasmine filled the shack. For a long time neither of them spoke. The only sound was the ticking of the cooling glass jars.
Finally Annie said, “She ain’t human the way we know human. Somethin’ older made her.”
Smoke dragged a hand over his face, eyes wide but steady, “Then we best find out what, before it finds us.”
Annie’s gaze moved to the candles, their flames now steady again, “We will,” she said, “But first, I’m gon’ need dirt from the graveyard, red clay, a bird’s heart, and somethin’ she wore close. A slip. A ribbon. Anything that held her heat.”
Smoke rose slowly, the bench groaning under his weight, “You really think her touch still on it?”
Annie looked up at him, the candlelight burning in her eyes, “If she is what I think she is,” she said, “it ain’t never left.”
Outside, the frogs went quiet, as if the whole swamp had leaned in to listen. Then the wind stirred the curtains, carrying the faint scent of peaches and honeysuckle through the open door. Smoke turned toward it, jaw tightening.
“Smell that?” he spoke.
Annie did. And the look they shared said everything—that whatever had been hiding in Amelia’s sweetness had started to stir.
The sun had nearly vanished when Smoke crossed the treeline. The world behind Annie’s shack gave way to a low, shadowed slope lined with crooked pines and half-rotted fences, their posts leaning like tired men in prayer. The smell of pine needles, damp clay, and the faint scent of something dead hung on the breeze. Even the birds had gone quiet.
Smoke moved with purpose.
The list burned in his mind, each word etched like a ghost’s whisper.
“Cicely Brantley.”
The name had weight.
He found the graveyard tucked behind a thicket near Widow Clarke’s place—half-forgotten, eaten by ivy and time. Crickets stirred as he stepped through the rusted gate. The air grew colder. He moved carefully, his boots crunching over moss and brittle leaves. His eyes scanned stone after stone until he saw it—tilted to the right, the angel cracked down the middle like a spine split by sorrow. Cicely Brantley. 1832.
Smoke dropped to a crouch.
He removed his pocketknife, dug into the damp earth just beneath the headstone. The smell hit him first—old rot, mildew, something coppery beneath it all. The dirt clung to his fingers like something alive. He scooped a handful into the small canvas pouch Annie had given him.
Just as he was about to stand, he heard it. A creak. Soft. Far behind him. He froze. Muscles tensed. But when he turned, nothing was there. Only the still hush of trees. He spit to the side, muttered under his breath, “Ain’t got time for this,” and tucked the pouch into his coat.
Next: The Rusted Nail.
The juke joint loomed like a beast in the blue-dark. The east corner beam was wrapped in creeping jasmine, the scent heavy and intoxicating. Smoke slid his knife beneath the overgrown vines, fingers finding the head of a crooked, rusted nail jutting just beneath the wood line. He gave a low grunt as he worked it free. The nail groaned from the wood, fighting him like it didn’t want to leave. When it finally gave, it popped out with a squeal, and the entire frame gave a single creak—like the bones of the place were watching. Smoke didn’t linger. He turned, tucked the nail into his coat with the grave dirt, and slipped back into the trees.
Then: The Black-Eyed Susans.
They grew near the old creekbed down by Devil’s Hollow. He remembered Annie saying they bloomed this time of year like sentries—watching, warding, whispering. He found a patch glowing yellow against the dusk, their black centers turned like open eyes. He knelt, brushing dirt from their roots with his bare hand. He plucked them gently—three whole blossoms—and wrapped their stems in twine. A chill swept through the trees. He stood still for a moment, eyes scanning the dark. He thought again of the dream. Of Amelia’s voice in the dark. Of Stack’s face twisted with pleasure and warning. Of her skin glowing like heat.
He shook it off.
No time.
Final Stop: The Chicken.
Ebony waited near the coop behind the shack. She was bigger than he remembered, coal-black feathers slick with dew, her eyes bright and suspicious.
“C’mere, girl,” he whispered, whistling low—two sharp bursts.
She blinked. Cocked her head. Then, like some memory returned to her bones, she stepped toward him, cautious but willing. He scooped her up gently. Her feathers were warm, pulsing with life. She gave a quiet cluck, no fuss. Smoke tucked her under one arm like a delicate secret. He made his way back toward the shack. The moon had climbed now, soft and full behind a veil of cloud. When he reached the porch, Annie was waiting—candles already lit, white smoke curling from a small cauldron behind her.
She didn’t speak. She just opened the door, the air heavy with pine oil and salt, and Smoke stepped through. With every item on his person and the chicken cradled in his arms, he crossed the threshold into a space between worlds. The wind changed when the last candle was lit. It hissed low beneath the floorboards of Annie’s shack, curled beneath the walls like a serpent in prayer. Smoke stood by the doorway, one hand still damp from the creek water he used to rinse his face, the other resting on the holster at his hip—not out of threat, but out of habit. Annie crouched before the altar she’d built, a careful weave of bone, feather, flower, and flame. Ebony, the black hen, perched in her corner, eerily quiet.
Above them, the smoke curled heavy and slow. Something was here. And it wasn’t hiding anymore. Annie pressed her palm to the floor, murmuring a chant under her breath. Words too old for the tongue, passed from grandmother to granddaughter, split by fire and loss, bound back together with honey and grit. She’d prepared this rite before—for clarity, for truth, for finding what don’t wanna be found. But never like this. Never for someone she loved. The heat of the candles swelled in the room, and a gust of wind slammed the door shut behind Smoke. He flinched. The jar in his coat—that jar—had started humming again. Faint. Like a heartbeat beneath the glass.
He reached in, withdrew the honey jar first. The sweetening one. Annie didn’t look up, but her voice was flat when she said, “Put it down on the cloth.”
He did.
The second jar—the rot jar—he placed beside it, careful. It didn’t hum. But it stank. Sweet and wrong, like spoiled syrup and old roses. Something foul.
Annie turned.
She crouched before the jars, long skirt spread like a fan beneath her knees, eyes glowing in the firelight. Her hands hovered just above the glass, trembling.
“She made these,” Smoke said, low, “why?”
Annie stared at him.
Smoke’s eyes narrowed, “You told me once sweetenin’ jars was made for love. For drawin’ in what you want.”
“They are,” Annie whispered, “But it’s more than that.”
She touched the lid of the honey jar.
It jolted beneath her hand. The flame nearest to it flickered blue.
Smoke stiffened, “The fuck was that?”
Annie kept her hand steady, “It’s strong. Stronger than I ever felt.” Her throat tightened, “She made it when she first got here. I thought it was for me,” Annie said, voice cracking, “Maybe it was. Maybe it wasn’t. But it don’t matter now. It worked.”
Smoke’s brow furrowed.
Annie’s hand lifted, trembling. Her lips parted as she stared at the shimmer in the jar—how the honey seemed to breathe, to swirl slowly even though it had been sealed tight.
“She was stewin’ in it,” Annie said, “Bathin’ us in it. Me. You. Stack.”
He flinched.
“She sweetened us all.”
The room fell into silence.
Smoke took a step back. His gaze darkened, jaw tense, “You think she did that on purpose?”
“I don’t know,” Annie said softly, “But that don’t change what it did.”
The jar pulsed.
Annie picked it up, brought it closer to the flame. Inside, the contents shimmered like golden molasses threaded with glints of dust. But the magic inside wasn’t just hoodoo—it was older. Hungrier. Something that fed.
“Your obsession,” Annie said, staring at Smoke now, “Your dreams. Stack’s possessiveness. Me…losin’ myself in her. Fallin’ so deep I couldn’t see straight.” She turned to look him dead in the eye, “That jar did it. Not all of it—but enough.”
Smoke swallowed hard.
“She’s a feu follet,” Annie said.
The words landed like a thunderclap.
Smoke blinked, “A what?”
Annie’s voice was hushed, steady, “Fae. A kind of spirit, a trickster…sometimes they show as lights, other times like women. Draw you in. Burn sweet. Feed off the wantin’.” Her mouth trembled, “Some call ‘em will-o’-the-wisps. But ours? Our people down here? We call ‘em feu follet.”
Silence.
Smoke stared at the jar, “So you tellin’ me she…not human?”
“She ain’t just human.”
Smoke sat down hard on the bench. His fingers gripped the edge like it might break. He looked sick, “Goddamn.”
Annie nodded, voice cracking, “Yeah.”
The flame hissed.
He closed his eyes, “I felt it. All of it. Even before that dream.” He paused, “She got under my skin. Deep. Like she was put there.”
Annie knelt across from him, shoulders slumped.
“She got into all of us.”
They sat in silence, the truth thick in the room. The sweetening jar shimmered like gold wine. The rot jar beside it sat quiet, dark, and dead.
“What about that one?” Smoke asked, nodding to it.
Annie touched it.
Unlike the other, this one didn’t jolt. It moaned.
A soft, sloshy sigh escaped the lid. Annie grimaced, “It used to be sweet too. I can feel it. The energy’s shifted. Something good turned foul.”
Smoke leaned forward, “You think it’s cursed?”
“No,” Annie said slowly, “Not cursed. Changed.” She stared into the thick, blackened honey. Her eyes narrowed, “Something died.”
“Like what?”
Annie hesitated. “Could’ve been a hope. Could’ve been love. But whatever it was…it rotted from the inside.”
She held it to her ear.
And then, quietly, she whispered, “Or someone.”
Smoke’s jaw clenched.
“Someone died,” he said flatly.
“I think so.”
They exchanged a look. Fear blooming behind Smoke’s eyes. Annie set the jar down carefully, then sat back on her heels.
The shack held its breath.
Even the wind outside seemed to still—no rustle of leaves, no creak of the old cypress boards, no birdsong. Just the slow tick of dread inside Annie’s ribs as she leaned closer to the jar.
The rot jar.
Heavy. Viscous.
Too dark for the light to pierce.
Something about it had always felt off, not just the way it had been hidden beneath the floorboards like a secret too loud to bury, but the scent, the weight, the quiet hum of something unnatural locked inside. Now that she’d lit the herbs—calendula, red brick dust, and graveyard grit—the jar had twitched. Annie knew the signs. The dead were paying attention. Smoke stood behind her. He’d kept still this whole time, jaw tight, arms folded, that shotgun sense of him scanning every inch of the room. His presence was quiet, but Annie felt the tension radiating off him like heat from a stove.
“I’m not openin’ it,” she said, eyes never leaving the jar, “That’s askin’ for trouble.”
Smoke didn’t speak.
She reached for her small brass bowl, the one etched with sigils her grandmother taught her never to speak aloud. In it, she poured a bit of stormwater she’d caught during last month’s thunder. Whispered over it. Dropped a hair from her own head into the bowl and then—finally—lifted the rot jar, steady as prayer.
She held it just above the stormwater and whispered: “If what’s buried got a name, let it rise. Show me what’s beneath.”
The bowl trembled.
The honey within the jar shivered like something alive. And then—through the dark swirl, the ink began to lift. A name. Smudged, black, but legible now.
Nathaniel.
Annie’s spine snapped straight.
Smoke stepped forward, “Nathaniel?” he echoed, voice low.
She didn’t answer right away. Just stared at the name, as if saying it again might cause it to vanish.
“Nathaniel,” she whispered again, “That was… that was her lover. Back before she came here.”
“You sure?”
“She told me once. Just once. Never gave a last name. Just said…Nathaniel broke her heart. That it ended bad. Never said how.” She looked down again, “Now I know why she never said.”
Smoke stepped beside her, eyes scanning the jar, “You think she killed him?”
Annie didn’t speak for a long moment. Then, “I think…something happened. Something big. Big enough to make her run.”
They stood in silence.
“She left Louisiana right after it happened,” Annie added, her voice quieter now, “Found her way to me like a leaf on the wind. I thought she was just bruised. Thought time would heal her. But this?” Her fingers clenched around the rim of the bowl, “This is somethin’ else.”
Smoke’s jaw tensed, “She said she wanted peace. Said she was runnin’ from somethin’, yeah. But this don’t sound like runnin’—this sounds like coverin’ up a body.”
Annie didn’t respond. Her eyes remained locked on the rot jar, the name still floating like a ghost on the surface.
Nathaniel.
The ink began to curl again, dissolving back into the syrup-thick honey, like it had only come up for air.
“I thought I knew her,” Annie whispered, “I let her in my bed. My bones. My blood. And all this time…”
She shook her head.
“She’s powerful,” Annie said, “Too powerful to be hidin’ in plain sight like this.”
Smoke exhaled hard through his nose.
“She fucked Stack,” he muttered, “And me. You.” He looked over at Annie, eyes rimmed with something soft, like hurt, “You brought her into our home.”
Annie’s shoulders caved. Her voice was low.
“I loved her.”
Smoke didn’t say anything. Annie stared into the flame.
“She gave me warmth when I was lonely. Fed me touch when I hadn’t been touched in years. Looked at me like I was honey and not just bone.” Her eyes shone, “But she never told me who she really was.”
The pain landed slow, creeping through her limbs like cold.
“I don’t think she meant harm,” Annie whispered, “But she did bring it.”
Smoke stood. He crossed to the window, eyes scanning the dark woods beyond. His voice was quiet when he asked, “So what do we do?”
Annie rose to her feet, “We confront her.”
He turned, “She gonna lie.”
“She might,” Annie said, “But I’ll know now.”
They stared at each other. Smoke glanced back at the jars one last time, “You really think she killed someone?”
Annie’s voice was barely a breath.
“I think someone died because of her.”
And with that, the flame bent in the direction of the door—like the room itself had heard the truth, and was pointing the way.
They trailed him down Sunflower Avenue as the sky darkened to ash.
Clarksdale was winding into evening—shop signs flickering, doors shutting, and that deep hum of the Delta curling back into itself like a dog at the end of day. But Stack wasn’t easing down. He drove slow, following the man two cars behind, head angled just slightly to the left as he kept his eye on the cream-colored brim of a Panama hat bobbing down the sidewalk.
The Creole man was slick.
He had a light-footed strut, damn near elegant, and the kind of face that could melt into a crowd—light skin, sharp nose, gold tooth glintin’ when he smiled too long. Dressed to blend, like most informants did. But Stack had the drop on him now. And he wasn’t gonna lose it. Amelia sat in the passenger seat beside him, hands wrung in her lap. Stack cut the headlights and pulled the car into a side lot just off Issaquena. They watched the Creole man disappear around a corner near the old music shop.
“Stay close,” Stack said low, opening his door.
Amelia followed. The gravel shifted under her shoes.
They trailed him down the alley behind the boarded-up bakery. Evening light pooled through broken fences and rusted tin, throwing long shadows over the brick. Stack moved quiet for a man his size, and Amelia kept just behind him, her breath caught somewhere between her ribs. They caught sight of the man again—ducking into the back of an old rooming house. Stack didn’t hesitate. He strode forward, fast.
Amelia hissed, “Wait—”
But it was too late.
Stack grabbed the Creole man by the collar just as he opened the door and slammed him against the brick wall.
“Start talkin’,” Stack growled.
The man gasped, heels scraping against the dirt, hands up. “Hey! What the hell—!”
“You heard me.” Stack pressed a forearm into his chest, “You been tailin’ my girl. Passin’ off photographs like you workin’ for the damn Pinkertons. What the fuck you want with her?”
“I don’t—I don’t want nothin’,” the man said quickly, voice like cane syrup, “I was just paid to gather some information—”
Stack’s voice dropped, “By who?”
Silence.
Stack slammed him harder, “I said—by who?”
The man grimaced, “Fine! Celine. Her name’s Celine DuPont. Hired me outta Memphis. Said she was lookin’ for her niece.”
Amelia flinched.
Stack’s hand curled tighter into the man’s collar, “She say why?”
“Said the girl ran off,” he wheezed, “Said she was dangerous. That she mighta done somethin’. Told me to follow her. Take pictures. Report back.” He hesitated, “She said she wanted to bring her home.”
Amelia’s breath caught. Her skin prickled.
Stack shoved him back once more for good measure, then released his grip. The man stumbled, panting.
“Lemme see the photos,” Stack ordered.
The man opened his coat and pulled a thin leather folio from inside. He passed it over.
Stack opened it.
Black-and-white snapshots. Amelia at the general store. Amelia on Annie’s porch. Amelia walkin’ back from the creek, barefoot and lit from the back by the sun.
Stack’s eyes blazed.
“She been trackin’ her this whole time,” he said low, “Even before she came knockin’.”
He snapped the folio shut.
“Gather up everythin’ you got on her,” Stack ordered, “Now.”
The man didn’t argue. He ducked into his little room behind the boarding house and emerged moments later with a satchel. Folded papers, photo negatives, some kind of shortwave transmitter. Stack ripped the wires out of it before stuffing it all into the bag.
“You’re done workin’ for Celine,” Stack said coldly, stepping closer again.
The man nodded, sweating, “I got it. Loud and clear.”
But Stack wasn’t finished.
He leaned in, voice low and deadly, “You disappear. You vanish. And if I even smell you trailin’ her again? If I hear you passed her name to anybody—anybody—I’ma find you.”
The man blinked, heart hammering.
Stack narrowed his eyes, “And I ain’t just got eyes and ears in Clarksdale,” he whispered, “The Delta talk. And I listen. You heard of the Smoke-Stack twins? think twice, Cher ami.”
The man swallowed hard, “Understood.”
“Good.” Stack turned, “Come on, baby.”
Amelia moved silently beside him, still shaken. As they walked away, Stack didn’t look back.But the air behind them smelled like fear.
And something else.
Like the sharp crackle of secrets about to burn.
They rode in silence. The car rumbled over red clay and gravel, spitting dust in their wake like they were outrunnin’ the devil himself. Stack’s jaw stayed clenched, one hand gripped tight on the wheel, the other still itchin’ from how close he’d come to crackin’ that Creole man’s ribs clean through. Amelia sat stiff beside him, the satchel of photographs in her lap—a fresh wound bleeding between them.
The proof of Celine’s reach was right there in her hands. Folded snapshots of Amelia walkin’ to market. Bent corners from where they’d been hidden too long in some coat pocket. A photo of her sittin’ under a pecan tree, eyes half-closed, skirt caught in the breeze like she ain’t had a care in the world. She was being hunted. Documented. Watched in the same way you watch somethin’ you plan to trap. Stack pulled off the road near a low bluff, killed the engine. The sudden quiet pressed in hard.
Amelia didn’t speak right away. She stared out the window, her reflection faint in the glass—too faint for comfort, “She always liked pretty things she could control,” she said softly, “But I ain’t her daughter. I never was.”
Stack exhaled rough, then turned toward her, “You still think she’d really do it?”
Amelia met his eyes, “She already is.” She held up one of the photographs—one with her entering Annie’s hoodoo shack, “She hired someone to watch me. Paid him to find me. That’s worse than death. That’s…punishment. That’s humiliation. That’s her sayin’, ‘I see you. You still mine.’”
Stack reached over, took the photo from her hand and shoved it back in the bag. He didn’t want to look at no more ghosts, “I don’t like bein’ played,” he muttered, “And I damn sure don’t like someone thinkin’ they gon’ steal you out from under me.”
That made her glance at him—sharper now.
“You sound like I belong to you.”
He met her gaze head-on, “You do.”
Amelia’s throat bobbed, “But you don’t even know what I am,” she whispered.
“I know enough. I know what I see.”
She blinked, “What do you see?”
Stack leaned in, his voice low and gritty like gravel draggin’ across velvet, “I see how you got me dreamin’ things I ain’t never dreamed. I see how your scent still in my goddamn sheets days after you gone. I see how I been wantin’ to bite you every time you pass too close. You got some power buried in that pretty skin. And it ain’t just magic. It’s you.”
Her lips parted.
“Smoke said you was dangerous,” he added, voice going harder now, “Said you wasn’t right. Said you was hidin’.”
She flinched. Just a little. But Stack noticed.
“I told him I ain’t care.”
He leaned back again, eyes scanning the horizon like he was calculating the shape of whatever storm was comin’, “But now I see it too. You got somethin’ in you. Wild. Like light tryin’ to break out. But it’s twisted up with shadows. And that shit’s callin’ to me like it know my name.”
A long silence settled between them.
Then Amelia spoke, quiet as dusk, “So now what?”
Stack turned to her. His eyes weren’t angry anymore. They were somethin’ else—claimed, “Now I keep you safe. Even from her.”
She stared at him, “You sure?”
“I already burned the trail behind us, baby.” He reached over, his hand closing gently around hers. She didn’t pull away, “Only way through now is forward.”
The car rocked gently as it sped down a dirt road veined with sunset and cotton shadows. The windows were cracked just enough to let in the Delta air—heavy with honeysuckle, dust, and the scent of something about to break. Amelia sat curled tight against the passenger door, arms folded, head turned away from him. She hadn’t spoken in miles. Not since they left the Creole man with his tail tucked and secrets spilled. Stack glanced over, his fingers tightening on the wheel.
“You alright?”
No answer. Just the wind lifting her curls and a haunted sort of stillness.
“Amelia.”
She flinched like her name was a blade. Turned slowly, eyes rimmed red and too wide, “You say you wanna keep me,” she spoke softly, “But you don’t know what you sayin’.”
That hit him harder than he expected. Stack didn’t answer right away. He just reached out and laid a hand on her thigh, the way he always did to ground her—but this time, she didn’t move toward it.
“You already told me what happened,” he said low, “That man. The bayou. You told me.”
“I told you one thing,” she whispered, “But I ain’t told you everything. You don’t know what I’m carryin’. What I am.”
Stack’s jaw ticked. Without a word, he pulled off onto the shoulder. Gravel crunched beneath the tires. He killed the engine and turned to face her, “Then tell me. Or don’t. Either way…” he leaned closer, his voice rasping out rough and low, “I still want you.”
Amelia shook her head, “That’s ‘cause you don’t see me yet. You see what you wanna see. Somethin’ soft. Somethin’ you can touch. But you ain’t looked deep enough to see what’s starin’ back.”
Her voice cracked on the last word. She looked down at her lap, hands clasped so tight her knuckles ached, “I feel like rot, Stack. I came here sweet but spoiled. I brought a storm with me and I don’t know how to stop it. It’s already eatin’ through everything I touch.”
“That why you keep shrinkin’ away from me?” he asked, “You think I can’t take it?”
“I think I’ll ruin you.”
He was quiet. So quiet she almost regretted saying it. Then—
“Storm or not,” he said, leaning in, voice tight, “I’m stayin’ in it.”
Amelia blinked up at him. His face was backlit by a sliver of moonlight. She could see the veins in his neck, the clenched set of his jaw, the heat in his eyes.
“Whatever’s inside you, whatever it is,” he murmured, “don’t scare me. Not like losin’ you would.”
Amelia tried to swallow it down, the ache caught in her throat, but it was no use. Her lips trembled. Her breath hitched. And then the tears came—hot, silent, unforgiving. She pressed her fingers to her mouth like she could stop them, but her whole body shook with the weight of letting go.
Stack didn’t move at first. He just sat there in the quiet of that car, watching the girl he couldn’t shake come undone beside him. The moon slid behind a cloud, and for a second she looked like a mist over a meadow—soft and dissolving, too wild to hold. But he reached for her anyway.
“Hey,” he whispered, thumb grazing the side of her face, “Look at me.”
She did. Barely.
“I’m right here.”
That broke something loose. She let out a soft, helpless sound—half a sob, half a gasp—and turned toward him, crawling across the worn bench seat. Stack opened his arms just as she folded herself into him, her thighs straddling his lap, her tears dripping onto the collar of his shirt.
“I didn’t mean for none of it to happen,” she whispered against his throat, “I didn’t know what I was. I still don’t really understand. But whatever I am…it ruins things.”
“Nah,” he whispered, cupping the back of her head, his other hand splayed across the small of her back, “You don’t ruin shit. You reveal it.”
Amelia blinked, her tear-bright eyes locking with his. Something in her chest flipped. Opened.
She kissed him. Soft at first—uncertain, trembling—but when his mouth met hers with heat and hunger, she opened wider. Welcomed him in. Their kiss turned greedy, wet, full of tongue and ache. It was the kind of kiss that took its time tasting sorrow and burned it away with want. Her hands slid up his shoulders, fingers curling into his hair. She rocked forward in his lap, the fabric of his slacks rough against the soaked cotton between her thighs. He groaned into her mouth.
“Mmm, fuck,” he muttered against her lips, his hands gripping her hips, holding her firm against his rising length, “You sittin’ right on what you done stirred up, baby.”
“You sure you want me?” she whispered, breathless, still unsure, still trembling.
Stack didn’t hesitate. He pulled her head back just enough to look her dead in the eye.
“I don’t give a fuck who had a taste of them sugar walls before me,” he said, his voice low and guttural, “Don’t care if Smoke touched you. Don’t care if Annie touched you. Don’t care what you did with that preacher man. Or what he did to you. That was then.” His hand came up, fingers cradling her jaw, “This right here? This now? You mine.”
Amelia’s breath caught, “Say it again,” she whispered.
“You. Mine.”
He kissed her hard then—rough and possessive, like he was sealing it with his mouth. She melted into him, hips grinding slow and desperate in his lap.
“I wanna be,” she whispered, broken and warm and open, “I wanna be yours.”
“Then you are.”
His hands slid up under her blouse, palms hot against the softness of her back. She gasped when his thumbs grazed the underside of her breasts. Her nipples stiffened through the fabric, brushing his chest as they rocked together, caught between confession and fire.
“You think I care about power?” he rasped against her ear, “What you got buried under that skin? That magic? That light? Girl, that mine now, too.”
Her lips parted. Her back arched.
“Stack—”
“Ain’t no runnin’ now,” he growled, licking into her mouth again, “I don’t want the soft version. I want the whole fuckin’ storm.”
The windows fogged. Not from the weather, but from the heat curling off their bodies like breath in a glass jar. The bench seat creaked beneath them as Amelia pressed her forehead to his again, breath uneven, chest rising and falling against his. She was straddling him still, skirt bunched up around her hips, her thighs trembling from all that unshed feeling now pouring out of her in gasps and kisses and whimpers. Stack slid his hands down her spine—slow, certain—until his fingers found the backs of her thighs. He dragged them upward, thumbs curling to trace the softness there, just beneath the crease where her heat pulsed.
Then lower. And lower still. His fingertips brushed the inside of her thigh, dragging up the damp seam of her cotton panties.
She shivered.
“Stack—” she breathed, but her voice broke.
“Shhh, I got you,” he spoke low, mouth grazing her cheek, her jaw, then her neck, “Just let me feel it. Just a taste.”
His fingers slipped beneath the elastic and slid her panties to the side, slow. He groaned deep when he felt it—her bare, dripping heat pressed against the heel of his hand.
“Goddamn,” he whispered, voice thick with hunger, “So wet f’me…”
Amelia arched in his lap, hips jerking at the contact, her eyes fluttering shut. He didn’t slide in. Not yet. He just rubbed her—palm broad, fingers precise—slow, maddening circles over her slippery lips. Up to her clit. Down again to tease her opening. Just enough to keep her right at the edge. He kissed her shoulder while he worked her. Soft, slow kisses that burned. Then up the column of her throat. Her jaw. Her lips. Until he was kissing her again—wet, open-mouthed, messy. Like he wanted to drink her in.
“Mine,” he whispered against her lips. His fingers pressed deeper, “Mine,” he whispered again, kissing her harder.
She whimpered, thighs twitching. Her arms locked around his neck.
“Stack—please…”
He kissed the tears from her cheeks, his other hand cradling the back of her head, “You feel that?” he breathed, rubbing her clit with aching, possessive rhythm, “That heartbeat between your legs? That’s beatin’ for me now, girl. You hear me?”
“Yes,” she gasped, “Yes—yes.”
He bit her bottom lip, gently. Sucked it. Let it go with a wet pop, “You belong to me now,” he said, “Ain’t no past. Ain’t no preacher. Ain’t no Annie. Ain’t no Smoke. Just you…and me…and this fuckin’ heat.”
She moaned, rocking against him, fingers gripping his shirt so tight the seams cried out.
“Say it,” he whispered against her ear, “Say who you belong to.”
“You,” she sobbed, “I belong to you.”
He stilled his hand just long enough to growl—
“Good.”
Then he rubbed her faster, deeper, until her breath caught, her body trembled, her thighs clamped around his wrist like she was trying to trap the sensation there forever.
“Go on,” he coaxed, “Make a mess in my hand, sugar. Mark me up with it. Go on and claim me back.”
Her release came in a shudder. Silent at first—then a soft cry ripped free from her lips as her body trembled and collapsed against his chest.
He held her.
One arm wrapped strong around her back.
The other still cupped between her thighs, fingers sticky with all the sweetness he’d drawn out of her like a conjure. When she finally lifted her head, dazed and glowing, he kissed her temple. Then her lips again. Slow this time. Sweet.
“Don’t need to know what you are,” he whispered, “But I know what you do to me.”
She didn’t answer right away.
But her smile—shy, tearful, glowing—told him that maybe for the first time in a long while…
She believed someone might stay.
The rain started soft—just a whisper against the windshield like a breath caught in the throat. A few drops, then more. It was dusk now, and the sky above Clarksdale was draped in violet clouds, the kind that carried weight. The kind that loomed before a confession.
Stack hadn’t restarted the engine.
They sat in his car on a narrow backroad, the kind only people who had something to hide used. Cypress trees stretched like long arms overhead, their moss-draped limbs swaying slightly in the breeze. Amelia sat sideways in his lap, straddling him in the driver’s seat, the hush between them thick as syrup. Her dress was hitched high on her thighs, her bare legs warm around his waist, but neither of them moved now. Not after what he said. Not after what she felt bubbling in her chest, burning in her ribs, begging to be freed.
She watched him.
His hands were still on her—one cupping the round of her ass, the other pressed low, rubbing over her softness like he was learning her from the outside in. Slow. His voice still echoed between her thighs.
“Mine.”
Again and again. Like he meant to bind her.
And maybe he did.
Her lip trembled, “You sayin’ that like you know what you claimin’.”
Stack leaned in and kissed the corner of her mouth, “I do.”
“No, you don’t.” Her voice broke, small and sharp. She shook her head and tried to pull back, but he held her steady.
“I know enough. Know I feel different ‘round you. You got me wantin’ to protect you from folks I don’t even understand yet. Hell, you got me swearin’ I’d kill somebody if they so much as looked at you wrong.”
She laughed, but it cracked on the way out—shattered, “That ain’t love. That’s madness.”
“Maybe I want a little madness.”
Her hands trembled where they held his shoulders. Her fingers curled into his shirt, “What happens when the madness turn real? When I show you what I really am and you can’t look at me the same?”
“Try me.”
She looked at him then. Fully. Her brown eyes wide and glistening with unshed tears. Her lips parted, “Stack…”
“I’m right here, baby.”
She closed her eyes.
The first flash of it was soft. Like a firefly had landed on her fingertips.
Then it grew.
A warm, golden glow bled through her skin—tender at first, then radiant. Her hands lit up where they rested on his chest, like honey mixed with sunlight, like the kind of magic that couldn’t be faked. It poured from her slowly, ethereal, as if her pulse carried stardust.
The rain fell harder.
The cab of the truck flickered in that glow, amber light dancing across the planes of Stack’s face. His breath caught, sharp and low in his chest.
Amelia opened her eyes.
They glowed too—soft, bronze-gold and lit from within, like a hearth fire hidden deep behind a doe-eyed gaze. She watched him, terrified. Her whole body hummed with energy she could no longer hide, and in that moment, she looked like something ancient and untamed. Something made of swamp light and forgotten prayers.
“I ain’t human, Elias,” she whispered, using his name for the first time.
Stack stared, wide-eyed. Silent.
“My mama wasn’t from here,” she continued, voice trembling, “Not from this side, not from this world. She loved my daddy but she couldn’t stay. Left me on my grandmama’s porch wrapped in silk. Vivienne took me in. She kept me close and safe. Hid the truth till I was old enough to bear it.” She swallowed hard, “I always knew I was different. I could feel things. People felt things around me. Want, ache, pull. Sometimes I’d light up without meanin’ to. Vivienne said we was a kind of fae. Said the name—‘feu follet.’ A light that lures. A fire that flickers but don’t burn out. She said we came from deep bayous and old stories…from places where the dead still hum and the trees remember.”
Stack was still silent.
The rain thickened, tracing their silhouettes in the cab, but all he could see was her. Glowing. Scared. Real.
“I didn’t know how to name it till I went back. After it all. I found my grandmama’s letters, her jars, her stories…and it clicked. I ain’t a witch. I ain’t just a girl who runs hot and leaves ruin. I’m something else. Something that shouldn’t be here.” She lifted one hand between them, palm open, light swirling, “And now you know.”
For a long moment, nothing moved. Not the air. Not the truck. Not her. Just the storm pounding overhead, and the golden light illuminating everything between them.
Then Stack spoke, low and hoarse, “Goddamn, baby.”
She bit her lip, voice shaking, “You scared of me now?”
Stack cupped her face with both hands, “Terrified.”
She started to turn away, but he wouldn’t let her.
“But I still wanna keep you.”
Her breath stilled.
His hands cradled her jaw, thumbs brushing her cheeks, “I don’t care what you are. I don’t care what you glow like. I don’t care who touched you before. I want you. All of you. You hear me?”
Tears spilled over her lashes.
He kissed them from her cheeks, “You ain’t cursed, Amelia. You just powerful.”
She choked on a sob and folded into him, her glowing hands clinging to his shoulders like anchors. He held her. Rocked her. Let the light burn between them while the rain painted the windows with streaks of water. And when the glow faded—just slightly—and her tears eased, Stack pressed a kiss to her temple.
“Whatever storm you carry…I’ll stand in it.”
Amelia closed her eyes, and for the first time in a long time, she believed him. The rain beat harder now. It streamed over the truck’s roof in silver veins, blurring the windows and softening the outside world until there was nothing left but the heat of breath and the sound of two hearts pounding close.
Stack didn’t move right away.
He sat there, staring at her like she wasn’t real—but also like she was the only thing in the world that was. His hands were still cradling her glowing face, callused thumbs brushing the trails her tears had carved. Her skin was still warm with the soft shimmer of her power, dulled now, but alive, like dying embers still curling with light beneath the surface. And she was looking at him like she couldn’t believe he stayed.
Her bottom lip trembled.
Then he leaned in.
The kiss didn’t start soft.
It was hungry. Desperate. His mouth captured hers with a groan low in his throat, his lips parting hers as if he needed her—right there, right now, rain be damned. All tongue and heat and ache. His hands slid from her face to her jaw, then down, rough and sure, gripping her thighs, squeezing the flesh of them as if to ground himself in something solid. Amelia gasped into his mouth, but didn’t pull back.
She kissed him harder.
Climbed deeper into his lap like she was trying to crawl inside his chest and stay there. Her fingers found the back of his neck, clutching tight, the tips of them still warm from her glow. He moaned into her mouth and tilted his head, deepening the kiss until it became something more than just a kiss. It was a claiming. A vow. His tongue slid against hers, messy and hot, his breath hitching when her hips rocked against him, the friction slow but devastating. He cursed against her lips, one hand sliding beneath her ass to guide her closer, deeper. She was wet already—soaked from the heat, the confession, the release.
“You feel that?” he growled against her mouth, lips brushing hers as he spoke, “That right there? That’s mine. You mine, Amelia. Don’t care what magic run in you. Don’t care what you done. I want you.”
“Stack—” she breathed, but he kissed her again, cutting her off.
His other hand found the back of her head, fingers threading into her hair as he tilted her face up and kissed her so deep, so possessive, she whined against him—soft and helpless. It made him groan again, the sound reverberating from his chest straight into her core.
“I ain’t lettin’ nobody take you from me,” he said, trailing kisses along her jaw, down to the corner of her mouth, then lower to her throat, “You hear me? Not your aunt. Not even that power in your skin.”
She clung to him.
Eyes shining. Chest heaving. Every soft part of her pressed to every hard part of him, and he could feel it—that charge between them. Like her power had crawled under his skin and claimed him right back.
“I should’ve told you sooner,” she whispered.
He kissed her neck, “You told me now.”
“I was scared.”
“You still scared?”
She nodded.
He pulled back just enough to look her in the eye, his gaze dark and unwavering, “Good,” he said, “Means you got somethin’ to lose. But you ain’t gonna lose me.”
She made a sound between a sob and a laugh and kissed him again. This time softer. Slower. Her lips trembling but sure. A kiss that said thank you. A kiss that said I see you. A kiss that said stay.
Stack deepened it anyway.
Made her feel it in her stomach. In her thighs. In her chest. Until the whole truck fogged with heat and breath and the kind of hunger that didn’t end with touching skin—it ended with a soul handing itself over.
The cab was hot with breath and wet with sweat, the windows long gone to fog and shadows. The storm outside only made it worse—more secret, more sacred. The kind of heat that made it feel like the rest of the world was melting away. Amelia didn’t say a word. Didn’t have to. Her lips were kiss-bitten and her chest was rising fast, nipples stiff beneath the damp fabric of her dress. The dress had ridden up somewhere around her thighs, and Stack still had one hand beneath it—gripping, squeezing, coaxing. He didn’t breathe right when she reached down. Her fingers worked at his belt in frantic jerks, her bottom lip caught between her teeth. She undid the clasp, popped the button, and slid the zipper down with one sharp hiss of metal.
Then she reached in.
Her fingers brushed against hot, thick skin—already leaking, already twitching—and pulled him out like she couldn’t take it anymore.
Like she’d been waiting for this all her life.
Stack groaned through gritted teeth, his head thunking lightly back against the seat. His hips bucked, desperate, and she gripped him with both hands now, marveling for just a breath at how heavy he felt, how veiny, how ready. Long and fat and gorgeous.
“Shit…” he exhaled, chest heaving, fists clenched hard against the seat as her fist stroked him once, twice—then let him go so she could climb. She hiked her dress higher, exposing the sweet mess between her thighs. No panties. Just slick skin and trembling want. And then—without a word—she gripped his shoulders and lowered herself onto him.
All the way down.
Tip to base.
A long, nasty, wet descent.
Stack’s mouth fell open. He cursed, low and hoarse, his hands flying back to her hips like instinct, “Fuuuck—Amelia…”
But she didn’t stop.
She was already riding.
One hand flat against the ceiling of the truck, the other gripping the seat beside his thigh for leverage, her legs wide, her body bouncing, the wet plop-plop-plop of her dripping cunt echoing in rhythm with her need.
She took all of him.
Every time.
Grinding on the base, ass slapping against his thighs with each downward push, her movements feral—gritty—like she was trying to work the grief, the guilt, the confession out of her pussy. Like she needed his dick to survive.
And Stack—Stack was falling apart beneath her.
“Look at me,” he rasped, hands sliding up her waist, thumbs digging into her soft hips, “Look at me when you fuck me like that.”
She tried.
God, she tried.
But her eyes kept rolling back, lips parting in silent gasps, hair sticking to her face, her glow threatening to rise again beneath her skin. Her thighs shook as she bounced harder—plap-plap-plap—each collision wetter than the last.
Stack watched her like a dying man.
Head tilted back, sweat sliding down his throat, a vein bulging in his temple. His hands were everywhere—guiding her bounce, squeezing her ass, gripping her waist so tight she’d bruise from it.
“Doin’ me like that,” he moaned, nearly stunned, “You tryna ruin me, baby? You tryna take me out like this?”
Amelia whimpered, breath broken, riding harder.
“Shiiit,” he breathed again, voice wrecked, “Ain’t never felt pussy ride like that. Ain’t never had nothin’ this fuckin’ wet.”
He looked down between them, mesmerized by the way her pretty pussy stretched around him, swallowed him, gleamed with wetness, dripped down his shaft each time she lifted up.
Then came back down with that filthy slap.
Plap.
Plap.
Plap.
It echoed through the cab like a beat from the devil’s choir.
And Amelia—glowing, wild, soaked in sweat and tears and rain—rode him like he was the only altar she’d ever kneel to. Her eyes fluttered shut, her stomach tensed, her moans slipping out with each bounce, each shift, each delicious drag of his cock hitting every swollen, needy part inside her.
“Don’t stop,” he grunted, sitting up now, arms locked around her back, pulling her chest to his, “Don’t fuckin’ stop, baby, please. You feel so good—so fuckin’ good…”
Their mouths met again—teeth clashing, tongues tangled, both of them trembling, soaked in the storm of it.
The car shook.
Her body trembled.
And when she started to come—when her pussy clamped down in fluttering, helpless spasms around him—Stack held her tighter and let go, growling her name against her throat like a curse and a prayer in one.
He filled her.
Deep.
Hot.
So much she gasped from it.
Still grinding.
Still twitching.
Still clinging to him like her whole soul depended on it.
And maybe it did.
Because even after the storm outside began to quiet, the one between them only burned hotter. And neither of them wanted to let go.
The slap of their bodies echoed through the steamed-up cab.
Plap. Plap. Plap.
Sticky. Relentless. Wet as the storm outside.
Amelia was still riding.
Harder now.
Stack’s hands gripped her thighs, his jaw clenched tight as he thrust up into her, meeting each bounce with a snap of his hips so deep it lifted her. Their rhythm clashed, wild and brutal and greedy, until it wasn’t clear who was fucking who.
She cried out—a high, helpless sound—and grabbed at his shoulders for balance.
“Stack,” she whimpered, voice thin, breathless, needy.
He looked up at her, chest heaving.
Didn’t say a word.
Just stared like he couldn’t believe it. Like her riding him like this made no goddamn sense. The way her pussy gripped him, milked him, made obscene music every time she dropped back down—wet, creamy, suction-slick.
She was drenched. Both of them were.
The storm beat harder against the roof, but all Stack could hear was the squelch of her heat around him, the moans slipping out of her mouth, the quick gasps she made every time his cock dragged deep against her walls.
“Fuck,” he growled. “This pussy—this fuckin’ pussy—”
Without warning, he reached to the side and yanked the seat lever—it gave with a squeak, the seat sliding back and reclining slightly. Not much, but enough.
Enough to tilt her forward.
To make her hands slap against the seat just above his shoulders, planting firm beside his head.
And Amelia bounced.
For real now.
Her ass clapped against his thighs, loud and wild, her tits nearly spilling from her dress as the straps slipped down her arms. Her hair clung to her glowing skin, her back arched like a woman possessed.
She was feeding on him.
Desperate. Electric. Glowing from the inside out.
“Every time you fuck me,” she gasped, voice breaking like thunder over the rain, “my light smile…”
Stack’s brow furrowed beneath her, eyes locked on her face.
“My light,” she moaned again, hips jerking, her body trembling with pleasure so rich it was almost pain, “It smiles when you touch me. I feel it all over—all over, Stack.”
His mouth dropped open, panting.
Breath failing.
Pulse out of control.
The way she was moving—riding like she was born to do it, like she was gonna fuck him until her soul crawled out—was doing something dangerous to him.
And then she said it.
Filthy. Sweet. Slurred with lust.
“Your dick feel so good, baby. So good I can’t stop—I don’t wanna get off. I wanna stay right here. Wanna fuck you forever…”
Her voice cracked at the edges. She was whining now, grinding, her thighs trembling from the overstimulation. Her glow flickered beneath her skin, little shimmers lighting up along her collarbones and shoulders like fireflies had taken root in her.
She was so deep in it, so far gone, that even the air tasted like her now. Sex and power and fae sweetness mixing with the heavy scent of sweat and rain.
“Baby,” she moaned, eyes squeezed shut, “you fuckin’ me so good…so deep…”
Couldn’t do anything but thrust up into her with everything he had left. His hands slid to her waist, then lower, gripping the flare of her ass so he could keep slamming into her, the wet claps growing louder, faster, filthier.
He was drenched in her.
His thighs slick with her cream.
Her pussy so swollen and needy it was sucking him in, over and over, greedy for every inch.
“Keep goin’,” she begged, head thrown back, “Keep fuckin’ me just like that…”
Her glow was brighter now.
Flickering gold.
Lighting the whole cab in a low, eerie sheen—like candlelight licked the corners of the truck. Magic curled from her skin like smoke. Stack swore he could taste it on his tongue.
“I’m gon’ lose it,” he warned, voice thick with pressure, eyes dark, “I swear to God, I’m gon’ bust so deep in this pussy—you gon’ feel it in your fuckin’ throat.”
Amelia whimpered.
Then screamed.
And kept riding.
Kept feeding on him like his dick was the only thing tethering her to the earth.
Amelia was still bouncing—wild, slick, glowing—when Stack’s arms locked around her like a vice.
“Oh fuck—”
She barely had time to cry out before it happened.
That thick, strong bicep cinched around her waist, one hand hooking under her thigh, and with a growl from deep in his throat, Stack flipped her.
Her body hit the seat in a rush of air and heat, legs splayed, her back landing in the puddle of body warmth they’d made. The leather stuck to her skin, and the smell of sweat, sex, and him clung to everything.
She was breathless—spun, stunned, her dress bunched around her hips, her thighs wet and trembling. Stack hovered over her, panting, his chest rising like a man about to do damage.
Then—rrrriip.
He yanked his shirt open, buttons flying, some popping onto the seat, one hitting the floor with a faint clink.
Muscle. Heat. All man.
His chest glistened, the ridges of him carved from the kind of strength that came from work and war and wanting. Tattoos inked across his shoulders. Sweat dripping from his neck.
“Thought you was gon’ ride me into death,” he muttered, voice low and guttural, “Now I got somethin’ for you.”
He didn’t give her time to respond.
He dragged her back.
Shimmying between the narrow space, he lifted her with one arm, kicked the door open just enough for leverage, and maneuvered them to the back seat. It was cramped, but Stack didn’t give a damn. He was wide. Tall. Made for war. But he made it work like he’d been planning this his whole life.
And then he threw her down.
Her back hit the bench seat, legs falling open like petals in bloom.
And Stack climbed over her.
“Keep ‘em open,” he ordered, voice hoarse, “You hear me?”
Amelia could only nod.
Her glow shimmered faintly in the rain-soaked dark, her pussy swollen, spread, dripping for him. Lips puffy, glistening. The scent of her had soaked into his skin.
Then he slammed into her.
Deep.
Hard.
Her breath caught, eyes wide, mouth open in a silent cry.
“Oh—fuck—” she choked out, fingers clutching at the leather beneath her as her thighs shook from the force of it.
But he wasn’t done.
Stack gripped her legs—one hand hooked beneath her left knee, the other pressing her right thigh back until she was wide open and helpless, bared to the root.
And he fucked.
No mercy. No rhythm. Just pounding.
The truck shook.
Rocked on its tires with each brutal thrust.
Clap. Clap. Clap.
Her ass smacked the leather with every stroke, her tits bouncing wildly beneath the fallen straps of her dress, her throat working to swallow the moans that spilled out.
She couldn’t stop them.
Didn’t want to.
“Bangin’ my coochie out,” she gasped, barely breathing, “Stack—oh my God—don’t stop—”
“I ain’t,” he growled, sweat dripping from his jaw onto her chest. “You gone take this dick.”
He slammed into her again, deeper, rougher—his hips snapping forward, balls slapping wet against her ass, the sound obscene.
“Made for me,” he hissed, watching her face twist up with every stroke. “This pussy made to be fucked like this. Look at you. Glowin’. Creamin’. Drippin’ down my balls like you was born to fuck me.”
“Shit—Stack—please—”
“You beggin’?”He smirked, not slowing. Not at all, “You ain’t goin’ nowhere, baby. Not till I empty everything in you. Not till I fuck you so hard you forget how to walk.”
He leaned in.
Fucked harder.
The windows were drenched.
The seats were soaked.
And Stack was out of his mind—his abs flexing, thighs tight, hips slamming down like judgment day, like the world was ending and he needed to finish inside her before the light went out.
“Take it,” he growled, “Take this fuckin’ dick.”
The truck shook like thunder lived inside it. Rain screamed down the windows, trailing in frantic rivers—but inside, the storm was between them.
And Stack was deep.
So deep.
He fucked her like he was lost in it.
His hips were grinding, slamming, dragging through her like he was pulling her soul out through her cunt—slow when he wanted her to feel every inch, hard when he wanted to hear her cry. Not just stroke after stroke—stroke with purpose. Deep pulls that left her aching, toes curling, jaw slack.
And Amelia? She was gone.Moaning like a girl undone, the wet squelch of her pussy louder now, filthier, obscene.
“Oh my God, Stack—fuck me—please—”
Her hands clawed at his back, nails raking down the sweat-slick muscle. She was arching into him, thighs spread wide, dress shoved up to her waist, tits out, glowing like something unholy.
And then it hit.
That fae spark.
It flared up inside her, lit beneath her skin like wildfire. It wasn’t just sex anymore—it was energy, pulsing between her legs, seeping into the base of his cock, dancing up his spine like sparks crawling on nerve endings.
Stack gasped—mid-stroke—his body seizing with a shock he couldn’t name.
“What the fuck—?” he growled, hips stuttering for just a second.
She was glowing.
Inside.
Her pussy felt like satin and silk and sugar heat all at once—wet and hot and slick, but humming. Like it was feeding him. Stroking him with more than muscle.
Like her walls knew him.
Sucked him back in each time he pulled out, holding him tight, milking every inch.
“I—I don’t know what it’s doin’ to you,” Amelia gasped, eyes wide, chest rising, mouth trembling. “But I—I can’t stop—”
Stack’s teeth gritted. He couldn’t either. His body was locked, lungs barely catching air.
“F–f–ffuck me,” she cried, legs trembling. “Daddy. Please—don’t stop—don’t you fucking stop.”
That word.
That filthy, broken Daddy falling out of her sweet little mouth?
Stack snapped.
He drove into her with a groan so raw it cracked in the center, his face burying into her neck as he shoved her deeper into the seat.
Rocking her. Breaking her. Owning her.
Her glow burst bright beneath him.
And he didn’t care.
“Say it again,” he growled, lips hot against her ear.
“Daddy—”
Harder.
Deeper.
Her pussy clenched around him like velvet fire, pulling every thrust deeper into her center. Her whole body shook, lit from within, skin sparkling faint gold. Her voice cracked, caught between pleasure and tears.
“You feel that?” he grunted, one arm sliding under her lower back to anchor her in place. “That’s what daddy do to you.”
She sobbed out a sound so desperate it didn’t even have words.
Then he kissed her.
Messy. Wet. Devouring.
Their mouths collided like hunger made flesh, like starvation. His tongue forced past her lips, claiming her, fucking her mouth while his cock fucked her body. She kissed back like her life depended on it—like she wanted to be eaten up from every angle.
Every stroke—
Dragging.
Pulling.
Thick and full, brushing her walls in just the right spot, the head nudging her core so good she saw stars.
Stack groaned into her mouth, “I feel it. That magic. That glow. It’s in me now, girl. You done fucked me into it.”
She whined beneath him, eyes rolling, body squirming under the force of his thrusts.
“I need it,” she breathed. “Need you to fill me. Need it in my stomach, daddy—please—”
He grunted again, sweat dripping onto her chest, his abs tightening as he slammed into her again, deeper than deep, thighs flexing, fucking.
Fucking her like he was never gonna stop.
truck rocked like a storm lived inside it. Each slam of Stack’s hips made the frame groan, the leather squeal, the windows tremble in their seals. His chest was dripping sweat, falling on her glow-lit skin in hot beads that slid between her breasts, down her trembling stomach, pooling where their bodies met in slick, wet chaos.
And Stack was gone. Truly gone. Fucking like a man possessed.
Like a man claimed.
His thrusts had turned wild—raw—no longer timed, no longer methodical. He was chasing it now, chasing that edge like it held his salvation. Like her pussy had unlocked something in him no other woman ever could.
Amelia’s legs were shaking.
Her body was wrapped around him like it knew he was about to break.
“Daddy—please—please,” she cried, her voice barely a sound, “I can feel it—I can feel you—”
He snarled, low and brutal, “You gon’ take it.”
Her eyes rolled back.
Her glow exploded.
A shockwave of warmth bloomed from her center—inside where his cock kissed her womb—and rippled through his spine like fire. It wasn’t just fae magic anymore. It was her, pure and blazing, reaching into him and dragging his soul forward.
And that’s when it hit.
The nut.
It tore through Stack like a lightning strike.
“Fuuuuuuck—” he roared, muscles locking, hips driving forward in one final, soul-splitting thrust.
Thick. Endless. Vicious.
He nutted so hard it hurt.
Every pump forced hot, heavy rope after rope of cum so deep into her she swore she felt it behind her ribs. It filled her. Overflowed her. Marked her. Each release was dragged from his very core—gut-punched, mind-wrecked, face twisted in raw pleasure.
His entire body shuddered.
He was moaning. Groaning. Cursing. Chest heaving, jaw clenched, his thighs trembling from the magnitude of it.
“God—damn, girl—what the fuck did you do to me—”
Her cunt was still fluttering, gripping him like velvet vice, milking every last drop out of him. The slick schlup of it echoed in the cab with every little after-thrust as he instinctively kept pushing, not wanting to leave her, not wanting it to stop.
“Stack—” she whispered, voice shaking. “You filled me up. You filled me—full.”
And she meant it.
She could feel it in her belly. Heat and weight and magic curling in her womb like something alive. He’d poured everything into her. Not just cum. His breath. His soul. Stack collapsed over her, elbows on either side of her head, still buried deep, body twitching from the aftershocks.
They were both glowing now.
His skin glistened with sweat and her light, faint gold streaks like fireflies left fingerprints on him. His heart was racing in his throat. He couldn’t even speak. Amelia reached up and cupped his face with both trembling hands.
And kissed him. Soft. Messy. Full of everything.
Thank you.
I see you.
That was mine, too.
When they broke the kiss, Stack looked down at her with glassy eyes and a slack jaw, chest still heaving.
“I ain’t never,” he rasped, voice raw and barely there, “in my life…came like that.”
The rain softened against the roof. Gentler now. Slower. Like the sky was catching its breath. Amelia laid there on the back seat, thighs sticky, skin flushed, dress askew. Her lips were swollen from kisses, her chest still heaving, and her legs trembled faintly from the stretch of him still pulsing between her thighs. He was still above her. Breathing hard. Face damp with sweat and the glow she gave him. His dick twitched inside her once more before it softened, and he exhaled slow, like he’d finally given up the last of himself. He didn’t pull out yet. Didn’t speak. Just rested his forehead against hers, both of them slick and hot and trembling in the small, sweat-slicked space.
For a moment, she felt weightless.
Lit from within.
Her power had shimmered so brightly, it had wrapped around them both, made the air taste like sugar and copper, made the moment feel untouchable—like a secret held between gods. But then…her glow began to fade. Faint first. A soft dimming, like sunset slipping beneath the horizon. Then more. Faster. Until the light inside her vanished entirely, retreating back into the hidden places where she kept it locked up. And in its place came the familiar cold. That soft, curling ache. Stack kissed her cheek. And still, she didn’t speak. Because suddenly she was no longer light. No longer fae. No longer untouchable. She was just a girl. A girl who let a man see her.
Truly see her.
Not just her body, her sounds, her sweetness—but the thing she kept buried. That otherworldly part. The thing people feared. The thing her grandmother warned her to protect. She’d shown him. Glowed for him. Came for him like her magic had fused with his soul. And now it was quiet. So quiet. And that ache inside her—the one that always came after she gave too much—started whispering.
What if he’s only here for the shine? What if he saw it…and won’t stay? What if he’s scared now? What if you ruined it?
Her throat tightened.
The hand that had been gently stroking his back stilled. She hadn’t meant to let go like that. To burst with power. But it had been building, stirring beneath her skin since the moment she’d met him. Since the first night she’d looked at him too long, breathed him too deep. And now…now he’d had it. All of it.The light. The power. The mess of her. And she didn’t know what came next. She shifted slightly beneath him, trying to ease the burn between her thighs, trying not to wince as his softened cock slid from her, leaving her wet, aching, and empty in more ways than one. She turned her head, resting her cheek against the warm leather seat.
And whispered, “…Do you feel different now?”
Her voice was soft.
Afraid.
Stack blinked, still panting, still recovering from whatever explosion she’d just dragged him through. He looked down at her, confused. She didn’t meet his eyes. She was too scared he’d tell her the truth. That now that the magic was gone, maybe she wasn’t enough.
Stack didn’t answer. Not yet. He shifted above her—slow, heavy—his chest brushing hers, and her arms instinctively folded against her stomach. Not to push him away. But to cover herself. To hold something in. Her thighs pressed closed, even as the wetness between them seeped onto the leather beneath. She was still so full of him. But that fullness felt like a question now. Amelia turned her head further toward the car door, staring out at the rain-blurred window. Water streamed down it in rivulets—cool, silver-gray. And beyond that, the dark trees stood still. But now, after pouring it into him, after riding him until she cracked open and showed him everything—she felt smaller.
Exposed.
Like a secret someone else was holding now. The tips of her fingers curled against her arm. Her lips were still swollen from his kisses. Her hair stuck to her face. Her skin was cooling fast. But inside, where her light had burst and bloomed and burned, there was only quiet now. They took. And gave. They fed off sensation and poured it back twice as strong. They tasted love like a fruit that rotted if picked too early. And when they came—when they surrendered their glow—it meant something. She hadn’t meant to give it.
And now she couldn’t take it back.
Amelia’s eyes shimmered again—not with light, but with the first sting of tears. Not because she regretted it. Not because the sex wasn’t good. Not because she was ashamed. But because she’d wanted him to see her and stay. And now, in the lull between the storm and the silence, she didn’t know if he would. So she laid there. Still. Silent. Softening. And waited for the man above her to either reach for her heart…or walk away with the pieces she just gave him.
Did he feel different now?
Hell yes.
But not the way she meant.
Stack sat up just a little, still straddling her thighs, his hands braced on either side of her. He looked down at the slick between her legs, at the mess they’d made. At the faint shimmer still clinging to his skin. Her magic had marked him—he could feel it in his chest, in the back of his eyes, in the place where men usually just felt lust. This was deeper. He wiped a slow hand down his face. Then looked at her. Really looked.
And said, low, “…I love you.”
The words landed between them like thunder in reverse.
She froze.
Her lashes fluttered, but she didn’t turn. Her breath hitched—quiet, sharp—and for a second, she looked like she didn’t trust her ears. Like the rain must’ve drowned out the meaning. But Stack didn’t take it back. He didn’t soften it. Didn’t dress it up. He just let it hang.
Truth.
Ragged and naked and real.
“Even with not fully understandin’ what you are,” he said, voice lower now, throat thick, “Don’t know how you shine the way you do. But it ain’t just that light I’m holdin’ onto.” He reached out, fingers brushing the side of her face, “You gave me somethin’…since the day I met you…in this moment…that I ain’t never had in all my years. Not like that. Not with nobody. Not even close.”
Finally—finally—her eyes turned toward him.
Wide. Wet. Searching.
“You thought showin’ me who you are would make me pull away,” he said, eyes not leaving hers, “But baby…it just made me see you clearer.”
Her lips parted. He leaned in, pressing his forehead to hers again, their breath mingling in the space between them.
“I love you, Amelia,” he whispered, “Not just your power. Not just your glow. You. The woman who ran. The woman who stayed. The woman who lit me up from the inside out and didn’t even know she did it.”
Silence stretched again. But this time, it was warm. Safe. Charged. And for the first time in a long time…Amelia didn’t feel afraid. She felt held. She didn’t move right away. Didn’t blink. Didn’t speak. Just stared up at him, her eyes wide and soft and wet at the edges, like something inside her had been cracked open too fast, too deep, and she didn’t yet know if it would bleed or bloom. Stack’s forehead rested against hers.His breath was still shaky. And in the quiet after his words—words that had changed the air itself—Amelia finally spoke.
“…Say it again.”
Her eyes didn’t leave his.
And in them—behind the sheen of tears, beneath the ache of everything she’d kept hidden—was something almost too fragile to name.
Hope.
“I love you.”
His words still lingered in the space between them.I love you. And Amelia…she felt it in her chest. Thick and sharp and warm. She hadn’t moved. Not really. But her face had shifted, softening at the edges, the ache behind her eyes slowly unraveling into something else—something tender. Something terrifying. Her hand reached up, fingers brushing the side of his jaw, still damp with sweat and glow. And in a voice that broke just a little—
“I love you too,” she whispered.
Stack’s breath caught.
“I feel seen,” she whispered, “Like you looked at me and didn’t flinch. You still want me.”
Stack didn’t speak right away. He just leaned in and kissed her. And this time, it wasn’t just heat or hunger.
It was everything. A kiss that pulled from the deepest part of him. His mouth moved over hers slow, but full, his lips brushing her bottom lip before he captured it again, his hand fisting softly in her curls. Her arms wrapped around his shoulders, pulling him closer, both of them still sticky and warm and tangled up in the scent of each other.
Between kisses, his voice came out hoarse—
“I love you, girl…” Another kiss, “…don’t care if it’s fast.”Another, “I feel it in my fuckin’ bones.” He pressed his forehead to hers, “I ain’t never believed in soulmates before,” he said, “But now? Shit…it’s like my body knew you before my mind ever caught up.”
Amelia blinked, her mouth parted against his. And he smiled—soft, a little breathless, like he couldn’t believe this was real. Then slowly, he helped her sit up. The space between them was tender now. Heavy with meaning. And for the first time in what felt like forever, Stack moved with care. He reached into the front seat and pulled out a clean handkerchief from his jacket pocket. Folded, pressed, still smelling faintly like tobacco and cedar. He knelt between her legs on the truck’s floorboard, kissed the inside of her thigh once, then gently began to clean her.
The car hummed steady beneath them, wheels chewing gravel, the afternoon sinking into that dusky hour where the whole sky went honey-colored at the edges and the trees cast long, tired shadows. Stack kept one hand on the wheel, the other resting on his thigh, just inches from where Amelia’s hand lay open. She wasn’t touching him. Not yet. But her pinky finger brushed his every time they hit a bump, like her magic was still trailing behind her glow, trying to decide if he really meant it—if he meant what he said back there in the rain.
You belong to me. And only me. I love you.
God, she had glowed.
Not figuratively—literally. Lit up like a matchstick in a dark field. Her fingertips had shimmered like fireflies caught in slow water, and he swore he could feel it in his chest, like something cracked open and hungry stirred inside him just to bask in it. He glanced at her now. She was leaned against the window, curls damp from the sex, eyes far-off. Real far. Like she was riding shotgun but her spirit was somewhere else entirely.
He hated that look.
That look that said I’m waiting for you to change your mind. Stack gritted his jaw, sharp profile catching the last of the fading light. His voice came low, like gravel dragged slow through honey, “You alright?”
Amelia nodded, but it wasn’t real. Wasn’t nothing about her nod that felt sure.
“You don’t gotta be scared of me,” he said, tapping the steering wheel with his thumb, “I already told you. I love you.”
Still, she didn’t speak.
Stack shifted in his seat, “I meant what I said. Don’t give a damn what Smoke say. Or Annie. Or if you set New Orleans on fire and left the ashes in your wake.” He turned his head slightly, voice thickening, “I’ll take you burnt up, babe. Still gon’ want you.”
Her voice was barely a whisper, “For how long?”
He didn’t answer that. Not right away. Just exhaled through his nose and leaned forward to squint past a fogged-up patch on the windshield. The truck slowed down just enough for him to pull off to the side of the road. The gravel crunched beneath the tires.
Engine idling. Evening insects whirring. The rain from earlier still lingered in the air like the ghost of something that hadn’t finished speaking.
He turned to her, “That ain’t fair.”
Amelia’s eyes finally met his. Big and soft and shining with leftover tears. She was shaking her head before he could even speak again.
“You ain’t seen the worst of me,” she said, “Not yet.”
Stack leaned in closer, brow furrowed, “And you think that’s gon’ make me run? After everything you just showed me? You think I’m the type to tuck tail ‘cause my girl got light in her bones and fire in her blood?”
She blinked, trembling, “I ain’t human.”
“You mine,” he said, “That’s all I need to know.”
A quiet sound broke from her throat. Like a sob trying not to be one. He reached over, slid his hand behind her neck and drew her in, foreheads pressed together, warm breath shared.
“We gon’ figure it out,” he murmured, thumb brushing her jaw, “Whatever you got buried, whatever comes next—we handle it together.”
A beat passed.
Then another.
And then her lips met his. Slow. Soft. But hungry. As if she was kissing him like it might be the last time, like the weight of her truth was still heavy but she wanted to carry it into his mouth. Stack kissed her back, hand on her throat, thumb tracing the line of her jaw, whispering between kisses.
“Mine. You hear me, baby? I said mine. I love you, Princess.”
And she did. Again and again. When she finally slid back into her seat, legs curled beneath her, Stack let the moment settle in the cab. Let her rest her head on the glass. Let her breathe. Then he put the truck in gear. He didn’t know what was waiting at Annie’s. But something deep in his gut, ancient and animal, was curling tight.
Something said: protect her. Keep her close. Brace for what’s coming. And so he drove— eyes fixed, hand steady, heart prepared. He would follow her into hell if he had to. And tonight might be the first step.
They came together, hand in hand. The old door of the shack creaked open under Stack’s palm, and the scent hit them first—a thick, resinous cloud of smoke and sage, bitter at the edges. The glow of the oil lamp on Annie’s altar flickered like a warning. Shadows danced long across the walls, and the heat inside the shack didn’t come from the weather.
It came from judgment.
Annie was seated at her altar, spine straight, hands folded in her lap like she’d been waiting for a confession. Her eyes were rimmed with the shine of something unreadable. Not quite anger. Not yet grief. Not yet. But something was already unraveling in her throat. Smoke stood nearby, leaned against the wooden beam by the hearth, arms crossed over his chest. His gaze was a stormcloud—low and thick, watching without blinking. Watching Amelia. Amelia’s fingers tightened inside Stack’s as she hesitated. Something felt…off. The pressure in the room wrapped around her body like a noose. Her fae energy, usually fluid and unseen, now recoiled—like it was meeting another force head-on. The wards in Annie’s shack hummed in silent protest. Stack kept his posture easy, shoulders square, like he hadn’t just walked into a storm, “Evenin’,” he said, casual.
Neither of them replied.
Amelia looked between the two of them, trying to smile through the silence, “Annie?” she asked, voice soft, “Everything alright?”
Annie didn’t blink. Her voice came low. Steady, “You got somethin’ you wanna tell us, sugar girl?”
The warmth in Amelia’s cheeks faded. Her hand slipped from Stack’s. “Tell you…what you mean?”
Smoke stepped forward, slowly. Not a threat—yet—but close enough to let her feel how sharp the air had turned, “Don’t play dumb,” he said, “You been hidin’ somethin’. We can feel it.” His voice darkened, “I felt it the moment I laid eyes on you. The day we came back. Couldn’t name it then…but it’s been hangin’ in the air ever since. Stickin’ to my bones like swamp heat.” He glanced at Stack now, something accusatory flaring in his expression, “You still feel it too, don’t you?”
Stack’s jaw ticked.
“This that same shit you tried last time?” he asked, low and dangerous.m, “Sayin’ she dangerous? You wanna pull that again, Smoke? ’Cause I ain’t in the mood.”
Annie’s voice sliced through the space like flint.
“We ain’t askin’ what you felt, Elias. We askin’ her. Let the girl answer.”
Amelia’s mouth opened, then closed. Her voice caught in her throat. She looked to Stack, then back to Annie, confusion and fear rising in her like tidewater, “I don’t know what this is,” she said, barely above a whisper, “But if this about me bein’ here, or if I overstepped, I—I didn’t mean—”
Smoke interrupted her, “Don’t play in our faces now. You been in this house, walkin’ ‘round with your little glow. Leavin’ jars behind. Leavin’ questions. You knew this moment was comin’. Now act like it.”
Amelia blinked fast, her lips trembling, “I don’t know what you talkin’ about.”
Annie didn’t flinch. She just exhaled slowly—the kind of breath that said she already knew Amelia wasn’t going to tell the truth.
“Mmm,” Annie murmured, “Thought so. Thought you would come up in here lyin’.”
The room was still.
And then—slowly, purposefully—Annie stood from her altar and reached beneath it, drawing out something unseen. The moment cracked open. The silence between them swelled, thick with heat and something darker. Amelia’s skin prickled. Her pulse skittered. She’d been in Annie’s shack a dozen times, but tonight the shadows leaned in different. The altar candles flickered like they knew something she didn’t.
Stack’s thumb pressed to the inside of her wrist, trying to ground her, “This ain’t right,” he muttered, but not loud enough to stop it.
Smoke’s voice was a dry strike of flint, “Sit down.”
Amelia hesitated. She looked to Annie. Nothing but cold resolve in her face. Smoke nodded to the low wooden stools near the altar.
“Both of you.”
Stack bristled, “What the fuck is this?”
Annie still hadn’t blinked. She moved behind the altar slow and sure, like a priestess preparing sacrifice. She didn’t speak until the air grew sharp with burnt sage and suspicion.
“You wanna know what we found?” she said, not bothering to look at Amelia, “You been keepin’ secrets, sugar girl. But you weren’t as careful as you thought.”
Smoke crouched near the altar, lifting something wrapped in black cloth. He placed it down like it might bite. One jar. Then another. Glass, murky and pulsing with old light. One full of golden syrup thick as honey, petals floating soft as sighs. The other darker, fogged with rot. The liquid inside was no longer sweet. It was rust and ruin.
Annie pointed to the first, “This here?” she said, “A sweetenin’ jar. Real old. You been workin’ root.”
Amelia’s breath caught. She didn’t speak.
Annie tapped the second, “And this one? This used to be sweet too. But somethin’ died. And now it’s rotten. Love don’t rot like that unless there’s grief tied to it.”
Stack leaned forward, eyes narrowed, “What the hell is this?”
Smoke answered him, his voice flat and low, “These jars got names stitched into ‘em. Intent. You know what a sweetenin’ jar does, Stack?”
Amelia reached for Stack’s hand, but he didn’t take it. His eyes were locked on her. On the jars. Annie’s voice was like a needle threading through every crack in the room, “It pulls hearts. It twists want. Makes someone crave you. Be sweet on you. Fall deep. Even if they wouldn’t have been otherwise.”
Stack blinked, once. The air shifted, “You sayin’ she used that shit on me? On us?” Stack huffed in disbelief, “Nah…what I feel is real—nah.”
Annie didn’t answer. She didn’t have to.
Amelia’s voice cracked, “No. I—Stack, please. That ain’t how—”
Smoke cut in sharp, “What’d you do? Come here with sugar in your blood and a honey jar in your bag, just waitin’ to stir us up? You fucked my wife. My brother. Me. And the whole time, you had this sittin’ on your shelf? Playin’ mind games? Twisting hearts?”
Stack stood now, almost knocking his stool over with a sharp scrape. He didn’t look at Amelia—his eyes were fixed on the jars like they’d spat at him.
“You left this part out,” he said, voice tight, low, “When you told me about Celine. About Nathaniel. You said you ran ’cause you was scared. But this?” He jerked his chin at the jars, “This look like somethin’ else. This look like intent. Like you planned somethin’.”
Amelia’s throat tightened. Her voice wavered, “I didn’t come here to harm nobody—I swear to you. I came ‘cause I ain’t had no other place to go. Annie was the first person on my mind.”
“You ain’t need my help,” Annie cut in, voice sharp as broken glass, “You ain’t need to be my apprentice. You had your own damn craft. You came here to hide. Not to learn. I TRUSTED YOU. You lied to me, Amelia. Used me and my house and my protection for your own selfish reasons—”
Amelia’s lower lip trembled, “That’s not true…”
Stack’s stare didn’t leave the jars. His jaw worked, “Why would you put me in one of these?” he asked, his voice quieter, hoarse, “Was it me, Amelia? Tell me you ain’t put a root on me, baby.”
Before she could answer, Smoke snapped, voice like a gun cocking, “The rot jar got a name in it. We couldn’t see it at first—but Annie worked it.”
A beat of tension.
“Name in there was Nathaniel.”
Amelia froze.
But Stack didn’t. He straightened slowly and turned to them both, “Yeah,” he said, “I know. She told me.”
Smoke’s head jerked. Annie’s eyes flicked between them, “She told you?”
Stack nodded, “Nathaniel was her aunt’s husband.”
Annie blinked, “Husband? Celine?”
Amelia looked down, saying nothing. Her silence screamed. Stack kept going, “Celine’s here, by the way. She came lookin’. Showed up at the shack earlier askin’ questions. Been stayin’ in town under a false name. Turns out she paid some high-yellow nigga to trail Amelia. Take pictures. Been sendin’ ‘em back to her for weeks.”
That landed like a blow.
Smoke’s face twisted, “So she knew?”
Stack shrugged, “She knows somethin’. Enough to get on a train and come knockin’.”
Amelia closed her eyes. Her whole body dipped like something inside her had come loose. Then—her voice. Barely audible, “I didn’t mean to kill him.”
Smoke’s face darkened, “You killed him?”
Her eyes opened again—glowing faint, rimmed with tears, a faint shimmer building beneath her skin like a heat mirage.
“It was an accident. I led him into the bayou. I just—I was upset. I lost control. And my light—my light took over.”
The room dropped into stunned silence. Annie’s voice came next. Just a breath.
“Feu follet.”
Amelia met her gaze. Annie took a slow step back, almost like the name itself pushed her, “That’s what you are. A bayou light. Fae.”
Smoke’s shoulders lifted, his breathing uneven, “So it’s true. That power I been feelin’ since the minute I saw you—wasn’t just in my head.” He pointed to the honey jar now, lips curled, “You sweetened us up. Caught us with light and rootwork. Had us all thinkin’ it was love.”
Annie’s arms crossed tight. Her tone was icy, “You lied to all of us. Lied with that glow in your skin. Lied with your lips, your mouth, your cryin’. Made us feel special. But it was spellwork. You ain’t need my craft. You came with yours tucked right in your little bag. You used me.”
Amelia’s voice broke, “Please…I never meant—”
“Don’t,” Smoke cut in, his voice cracking like thunder. “Don’t lie again.”
Stack stepped in, reaching for her arm. His grip was firm, steady—but there was pain in his eyes.
“You shoulda told me, baby. All of it. Every piece. I told you I loved you. Meant it. You shoulda given me the truth.”
She grabbed his hand, “I was scared you wouldn’t want me no more.”
Stack didn’t pull away, but he didn’t draw closer either. His stare bored through her, “This what you do when you scared? You make jars? Hide secrets? Twist love?”
“You said you loved me. I feel that it’s real…” Ameila trembled, “Stack—”
Annie’s voice was cold iron now, “You don’t get to be scared when folks died behind your silence.”
Smoke shook his head, bitter, “You came here runnin’, and we opened the door. Let you in. And what’d you do?” He pointed at the jars again, “You rooted yourself in us. Made yourself a place. And now everything’s comin’ apart.”
Amelia could feel her light swelling, pressing against the room, pushing into the creases between floorboards and bones.
Something in the air crackled. She shook. And then the tears came. The room held its breath.
Amelia’s light pulsed in waves now—hot and humming. Like heat off coals. Her tears shimmered as they fell, but her face had changed. No longer pleading.
Just glowing. Wild, beautiful. Dangerous.
Stack stepped toward her again, his hand out like he might calm her, catch her before she cracked, “Hey. Look at me, baby,” he said, voice low, “We can get through this. But you gotta breathe.”
She blinked hard. Her mouth trembled, “I didn’t mean for any of this to happen,” she whispered, “I didn’t mean to hurt nobody. I was just…I was alone.”
Annie’s voice cut through like a blade, “But you did hurt people. And now you still hidin’ behind that sad little light like it don’t burn.”
Amelia’s jaw twitched.
“That light of yours…” Smoke’s voice came low, cold, “It don’t save. It hurts. Hurts people who get too close.”
Amelia’s eyes flashed. She looked at him like he’d slapped her, “I don’t hurt nobody on purpose.”
“Don’t matter,” Smoke said, stepping in, his expression storm-dark, “You bring your secrets here, your power, your tricks—and folks get burned.”
“I was scared,” she choked out, “I was alone. I didn’t come to do harm—”
“But harm came anyway, didn’t it?” Annie snapped, “Soon as you crossed my threshold.”
Smoke’s voice dropped low, guttural, “You fucked us all. With that sweet tongue and that spellwork. Like a little bayou whore with a sugarbox.”
“Enough.” Stack’s voice thundered, deep and sharp. He turned on Smoke, chest tight with rage, “She ain’t what you sayin’. I know her!!”
“You sure?” Smoke snapped, “Or you only think you know her ‘cause she bottled you up and poured herself into your fuckin’ bloodstream.”
“Man, cut that shit!” Stack shouted, “I’m warnin’ you now.”
“Or what?” Smoke’s tone dropped. His hand was near his hip, that old instinct flaring, “You gonna hit me over her?!”
The room vibrated with the threat. Annie was already moving around the altar, trying to get between them. But it was Amelia who broke.
“STOP!” she screamed, her voice echoing, light flaring around her like it had torn through the seams of her skin.
The walls shuddered. Shelves rattled. The altar groaned. And Stack—closest to her—was flung backward by the blast of fae energy, like a body hit by an invisible wave. He crashed into Annie’s shelf of dried herbs and glass bottles, knocking them all to the floor in a smashing rain.
“STACK!” Amelia screamed.
He didn’t answer. His body hit the ground with a sickening thud. Still.
Smoke moved fast—faster than thought—gun drawn from his waistband. The glint of metal caught in the candlelight.
Smoke moved fast—faster than thought—gun drawn from his waistband. The glint of metal caught in the candlelight.
“Don’t take another fuckin’ step,” he growled at Amelia, “I swear it.”
Amelia stood frozen. Light sparking from her fingertips. Her mouth parted in horror.
“I didn’t mean to—Stack—”
“Back up!” Smoke bellowed, “You don’t get to cry now. You don’t get to grieve him. You did this!”
“Please,” Amelia sobbed, “Please, I didn’t mean—”
“You did. And you don’t get to run from it this time.”
But she did. She turned, bolted through the door, the light in her chest flickering like a candle about to go out. Annie shouted after her—voice cracking—
“Amelia!”
But she was already gone. Out the shack. Into the trees. No coat. No shoes. No plan. Only light. And grief. And the wreckage left behind. Branches whipped past her face as she ran, wild and blind, her lungs clawing at the night air. Amelia didn’t know how long she’d been running—only that her legs burned, her curls were soaked from the rain, and her heart was splintering with every step. She tore through the trees like a hunted thing, her dress catching on underbrush, the damp earth sucking at her shoes. Her sobs were broken things now, hiccupped between gasps as her light buzzed beneath her skin—too hot, too shaken, too close to shattering. She didn’t stop until the forest thickened around her. A dense wall of pine and fog wrapped her in shadow. Her knees buckled, and she crumpled against the base of a gnarled cypress, clutching her sides as she broke down. The cries came raw—high, keening, guttural. Not just grief. Guilt. Rage. Fear. Her hands trembled as they buried into the damp moss, her whole body bowing forward like the earth might swallow her whole and end it.
And then—her light twitched. Amelia’s eyes snapped open, wet lashes fluttering. Something ancient stirred in the air. The kind of wrong her fae blood recognized before her human mind could name it. The atmosphere shifted—like the wind had forgotten which way to blow. The smell of rot crept in behind the scent of pine. Coldness slithered between the trees.
Something was here. Her spine went rigid. Her fingers began to glow faintly at the tips, as if her power had flared in warning. Unbidden. Protective. She stood slowly, eyes wide, heart galloping now for a different reason.
That’s when he stepped out. From between the blackened trunks, a figure emerged like a smudge against the night—tall, thin, disheveled in long, tattered wool. His coat looked torn from decades of wandering. Boots scuffed. Hair damp and clinging to his forehead. Pale. Chilling. Leprechaun in stature. And his eyes. Too shiny. Too empty. Dead. They gleamed, his eyes a deep, blood-red color that grows, like a thing that didn’t belong in any season of the living. He inhaled deeply, nostrils flaring as if the very air was intoxicating. Then he smiled. A wide, too-sharp grin that never reached his eyes.
“Well, well, well…” he drawled, voice rich and cracked like a violin outta tune, “Ain’t you sweet, darlin’. Bit far from home, ain’t you? Wrong realm.”
Amelia took a step back, fists clenched at her sides, her light humming low like a warning bell.
“Who are you?” she asked.
He tilted his head, lips twitching, “Name’s Remmick.” He let the name hang like a cigarette burn, “And you are?”
She said nothing. Her silence only made his grin widen.
“Aw, now don’t be shy. Let me guess…somethin’ soft. Somethin’ sweet. Somethin’ not from here.”
He stepped forward. She stepped back.
Remmick sniffed again, sharp and slow, like he was tasting her scent on his tongue. A shudder ran through his shoulders. His smile faltered—twisted into something…hungrier.
“Mm. That’s it. That smell. Been waitin’ a long time to catch one of your kind.” He licked his bottom lip, “Fae blood. Hot and ancient. But you…you ain’t full-blood, are you?” His gaze narrowed, and his eyes flared red, glowing from within like something lit behind bone, “You smell like a halflin’. Not dull. But not pure neither. Still powerful. Still just as tasty.”
Amelia’s stomach dropped. Her glow brightened on instinct, her fingertips trembling with heat, “Stay away from me,” she warned, voice cracking.
But Remmick was already stepping closer. One foot dragging slightly behind the other, like something unhinged. The hunger in him was no longer subtle. His shoulders rose and fell as he breathed her in like opium.
“I can’t do that,” he said softly.
Her voice shook, “Why not?”
His mouth twitched. The last of the false charm drained from his face, “’Cause I’m hungry. And I need to feed. Had a little taste in the town over but…been sleep a while…”
Then—his jaw clicked. With a sickening sound, his lips peeled back to reveal long, sharp fangs. Not clean, elegant fangs like myths told of. These were jagged. Ancient. Yellowed at the base. Designed not to pierce—but to tear.
Amelia screamed.
Her light burst like a flare. And the woods swallowed her scream whole.
My name ain’t important. But people call me Smoke. They say I’m the quiet one. That’s fine. The ones who whisper are always the ones who know the most. I don’t talk unless I need to. Don’t show unless I’m already three steps ahead. And I don’t touch what I ain’t ready to own.
That’s the rule. Because when I touch?
I keep…
The road to his house doesn’t show up on maps.
It snakes through pine and magnolia, then dips into shadow. Gravel crunches beneath the wheels of his blacked-out Charger—every inch of it matte, low-slung, and muscled like the man behind the wheel. The gate doesn’t creak. It opens on command, coded, unseen. He keeps it that way. Cameras blink red from the trees, tucked where eyes don’t wander unless they’ve got something to hide.
The house itself rises like a secret: matte black siding, obsidian wood, steel-lined corners. No porch chairs. No flowers. Just trimmed grass, smoke in the air, and a pitbull named Whisper chained to stillness.
Inside, it’s cooler than expected. Not cold, but still. The air smells like cedarwood and firewood and cigar smoke that’s clung to the walls like memory. The lights are low—always low. Just enough to see, never enough to expose.
Velvet blackout curtains hang heavy over the windows, drowning daylight before it ever touches his skin. A single speaker hums from somewhere hidden—Bobby Womack, gravel-sweet and haunted, drifting slow over concrete floors polished to obsidian shine.
This isn’t a home. This is a den.
Smoke moves through it like he was born here, though he wasn’t. His bare feet land soft on a dark rug that stretches like a shadow across the hallway. He shrugs out of his leather jacket, hangs it on a hook beside a single packed duffel bag—always ready. His gun is already inside. His backup phone, too. He never unpacks it.
He doesn’t need to. He’s never off the clock.
A row of jackets—bomber, black denim, hooded zip-up—hang beside the door like armor. Beneath them, only three pairs of shoes on the metal rack: gym sneakers, black Timbs, and a pair of Nike slides worn smooth from repetition. No guests. No women’s heels. No mess.
Just him.
In the kitchen, everything’s matte black. Cabinets. Appliances. The fridge hums low. A bottle of Uncle Nearest 1856 Premium Whiskey rests beside a French press, untouched but ready. Inside the freezer, glass-clear cubes sit waiting like polished ice bullets. A drawer on the left holds cast iron pans, perfectly seasoned. The drawer to the right?
Blunts, grinder, silver lighter, pre-rolls. A tin of soft baby wipes.
He doesn’t label anything. He just knows where it is.
The living room dips into silence, sunken leather couch spread wide, built to take a body—his or hers or both. A turntable gleams under a focused spotlight, with vinyls stacked like scripture: D’Angelo. Marvin. The Isley Brothers. Mama’s Gun.
There’s one piece of art on the wall—black-and-white, large, and centered: the back of a nude Black woman, faceless and arched, shoulder blades rising like wings. Strong. Tender. Untouched.
No one knows who she is.
Smoke does.
But he’ll never say.
His office is darker than the rest. A command center. Monitors line the wall—four curved screens, all powered down for now. The curtains in here never open. The candle on the desk burns cedar and oud, slow and expensive.
Only three things ever rest on the glass surface:
A sleek silver laptop.
An encrypted phone.
A Glock 19 in the drawer, matte and cold, waiting.
The room smells like concentration. Like tension. Like thoughts too heavy to say out loud. The wall behind him is lined with books: Baldwin. bell hooks. Morrison. Code manuals. Erotica. Street poetry. A collection of things that say exactly who he is—but only if you look long enough.
This is where he watches her.
His bedroom is soft in a way he doesn’t explain.
The walls are oxblood, rich and close. The bed is king-sized with a matte leather headboard and cotton sheets so smooth they whisper when he moves. The comforter is heavy. Smells like him—smoke, oud, and skin.
On the left nightstand:
A silver watch.
An ashtray.
A small pistol.
Black Tahitian Vanilla & Bourbon Oil, unopened.
On the right:
Two paperbacks.
A glass of water, half full.
A pack of incense with one stick gone.
Unused condoms, placed but not touched.
The mirror across from the bed is quiet. Not showy. It just sees.
Underneath the bed: a black lockbox.
No one’s ever opened it.
Not even him lately.
The bathroom is steam and slate, dim and clean.
The black tile drinks light. The rainfall shower hisses from above, built with a bench tucked in shadow. The towels are black and thick, folded exact. On the counter: beard oil, Tom Ford cologne, silver clippers, a sleek lighter.
One hidden drawer holds things that don’t get used often:
Silk blindfold. Rope. Lube. A card he never gave her.
He opens it. Closes it. Stares at himself in the mirror.
He presses lotion into his palms—a dark amber oil, thick and rich with spice and wood. Slow. Methodical. Fingertips to knuckles to the soft inside of the wrist. He smooths it into his chest, the sheen of it catching light like warm lacquer poured over muscle. Not a flaw in sight. Skin kissed bronze, taut across his shoulders, tattoo crawling over his ribs. Precision.
He doesn’t smile in the mirror.
Just watches. Still.
Like a man already mourning his self-control.
Not yet.
He moves back into the hall. Everything muffled.
Whisper pads beside him—black pitbull, silent, trained to obey. The dog doesn’t bark. Just watches. Just waits.
Smoke moves through the house the way wind moves through trees—felt more than seen. He doesn’t turn on lights. Doesn’t need to. His body already knows the layout. His mind’s already thinking ahead.
“Discipline’s everything.”
He tells himself that before every set in the gym.
He tells himself that before every job.
He tells himself that when he watches her—face glowing from the screen, soft and tired, whispering things she doesn’t mean but he believes anyway.
She doesn’t know he exists.
Not yet.
But this house? This silence? This den?
It’s already hers.
The alarm doesn’t sound.
It vibrates.
A soft hum beneath his pillow, enough to pull him from sleep without shattering it. The house stays dark. The clock reads 5:27 AM.
He doesn’t linger.
Smoke moves like a man built from ritual.
Before his feet hit the floor, he’s already cataloging the day, the weather, his muscle ache, the silent pulse of the security feed running through his mind. There’s no rush. No chaos. Just structure.
He stretches, bones clicking, the weight of the night sliding from his shoulders. His sheets smell faintly of oud and clean cotton. The dog is still asleep by the door, one ear raised, waiting.
The floor is cool beneath his feet. Concrete polished smooth, almost black. He crosses the room, pulls the blackout curtain back just enough to let a single blade of dawn light cut through the red of the walls. Outside, fog hangs low over the trees. The driveway disappears into it.
Silence. Always silence.
The Ritual
By 5:35, he’s in the kitchen.
A single mug. Black ceramic. No design. No color.
He pours his coffee from a French press, slow, careful— no sugar, no cream. His silver rings clink against the mug. The faint sound echoes through the house.
He stands by the counter, half-shadowed, half-awake, watching the steam rise. The smell of dark roast mixes with cedar and last night’s cigar smoke. His jaw is still rough from sleep.
He doesn’t check his phone yet. That comes later.
For now, the music.
He taps the Sonos panel and lets Al Green fill the room —warm, scratchy vinyl from the record player in the living room. “Simply Beautiful.” It hums low under the hum of the refrigerator.
His eyes close for a second. Breath in. Breath out.
Routine anchors him. Keeps him from unraveling.
The Gym Discipline
By 5:50, he’s gone.
The Charger purrs down the empty road—black on black, no headlights until he hits the main road.
The gym isn’t a franchise. It’s one of those industrial spaces on the city’s south side—concrete floors, iron racks, bare bulbs. No Wi-Fi. No posing mirrors.
The regulars know him, but no one talks to him.
He nods at the man behind the counter, scans his tag, and goes straight to the back where the weight benches are.
His rhythm is precise—pull, exhale, control, reset.
When the weight strains his shoulders, his breath doesn’t break.
He doesn’t grunt. Doesn’t flex for anyone. Just keeps pushing, veins rising in his arms, sweat beading along his hairline.
There’s power in repetition. Power in silence.
The music fades into his pulse.
Every rep is an act of prayer.
Every breath, an exorcism.
The Return
By 7:05, the fog’s burned off the yard.
He strips in the bathroom—drops the hoodie, the joggers, the compression tee. His reflection waits in the mirror: six feet of muscle, broad shoulders, dark skin slick with sweat.
His tattoos are barely visible in the dim light.
The thin black circuit design on his left bicep glints faintly, the scorpion behind his ear hidden under the fade. He traces none of them. He knows what they mean.
Cold water hits his skin like a blade.
He doesn’t flinch. Just tilts his head back, lets the chill cut through the heat.
Steam rises, curling against the slate tiles.
He scrubs his beard with slow precision. Oils his skin after. The scent of oud wood and smoke clings to him —masculine, rich, unmistakable.
By 7:30, he’s dressed: black joggers, gray thermal, silver chain with the onyx charm. His watch. His rings.
He reads while he eats. Always reads.
A Baldwin paperback cracked open on the counter. Notes in the margins. Pen between his fingers.
His breakfast is clean—oats, fruit, protein, coffee refill.
The house hums around him.
It’s a rhythm now—the quiet before the day starts to test him.
He checks his phone finally.
One encrypted alert from the office.
Three client messages.
And a bookmark he doesn’t touch yet—the one leading back to her.
He’ll get there.
After he’s earned it.
After the work is done.
Discipline first. Desire later.
That’s what he tells himself.
Even when both start to feel like the same thing.
The Charger eases onto the street like it belongs there —windows tinted black, the engine tuned low. It’s not the loudest thing on the block. Just the one that gets remembered.
Smoke doesn’t speed. He doesn’t weave. He glides.
Through West End. Past the muraled walls and stoops with plastic chairs and ashtrays full of rainwater. Down boulevards lined with tired convenience stores and corner churches, liquor stores with iron gates, and streets named after saints and presidents.
He sees everything.
But nothing sees him.
The Barbershop Above the City
He parks in East Point.
Not on the main strip—never too close. Three blocks down from a quiet corner where nobody minds their business, but everybody knows not to speak it.
The barbershop looks like any other from the outside— sun-faded posters of old-school fades, grillz, and celebrity cuts taped crooked in the window. Inside, it hums: clippers buzzing, chairs spinning, old heads debating boxing and politics over the whine of a portable fan.
But Smoke doesn’t sit in a chair.
He nods once to the man behind the register—heavyset, beard dyed red, eyes sharp—and slips through the side door, up the narrow staircase past chipped paint and burnt incense.
Upstairs, the air changes.
The music cuts out.
The walls are thicker.
Here, above the noise, there’s a hallway of private rooms—rooms that “rent by the hour” to men who need silence, not a shave.
Room 3 is his.
Unmarked. Unnamed. Just a matte black door with a brass number and a biometric lock. Inside:
A desk. Heavy, unadorned, built low.
Two chairs—one for him, one never used.
A wall safe behind an ink-black painting.
Locked drawers full of backup drives, burner phones, old IDs, USB tools, and gloves.
He doesn’t stay long.
Checks the feed. Encrypts a message. Scrolls through accounts under names that aren’t his. Then he’s gone.
He never stays longer than 12 minutes.
Discipline. Always.
Errands in the City’s Blind Spots
Gas station off Cleveland Ave.
He doesn’t fill up. Just tops off. Always enough to leave. Never enough to stay.
He watches the parking lot reflections in the glass.
Laundromat off Pryor Street.
He drops a sealed envelope inside a half-broken dryer.
A kid with no socks will come pick it up in two hours. The washer next to it is rigged with a second envelope. The cycle always spins clean.
Restaurant stop—Slim & Husky’s
He don’t eat inside. Never does. Orders light: lemon pepper flatbread, side of greens, a cold Jamaican ginger.
Tips big. Says nothing. Makes the cashier blush anyway.
His eyes? Always scanning. Not twitchy. Just trained.
Mirrors. Shadows. Cars parked too long in one spot.
People underestimate how much you can learn from the shape of a man’s shoulders as he walks away.
Or a woman’s eyes when she’s trying not to look.
The Stakeout Begins (But No One Knows Yet)
He parks two blocks down from a daycare in South Fulton.
Windows cracked.
Phone dark.
Seat leaned just enough.
He’s not hunting.
Not yet.
Just watching.
Just making sure.
He doesn’t know her name yet.
But he knows the car.
The walk.
The worn tires and the cracked taillight.
The time she always runs late—6:12 PM.
Sometimes her son’s got a little plastic bag of goldfish. Sometimes a blue hoodie, slipping off one shoulder. Sometimes a light green baby backpack on her arm like she forgot she’s too tired to carry anything else.
He watches her from behind glass.
Not with hunger.
With claim.
Something about her moved inside him when he first found her on that screen. But this? This is real.
This is what her face looks like when she ain’t selling softness.
When she’s just trying to make it to the next moment without unraveling.
And that…that’s what unraveled him.
He doesn’t follow her home.
Not the first time.
He watches her pull off.
Waits ten minutes.
Then leaves.
The rhythm is set.
Routine.
Observation.
Obsession.
But on paper? It’s just another errand run.
Another quiet day.
Another man nobody sees until it’s far too late.
Night folds itself over the trees that ring Smoke’s house until even the air goes black.
Back At His Den
Inside the office the only light comes from four curved monitors and one candle that burns low, its smoke curling against the wall like slow breath. The room is sealed tight: curtains drawn, vents hushed, the hum of his machines filling the quiet.
He sits back in his chair, silver rings clicking once against the armrest. The glow from the main screen turns his skin the color of midnight chrome. His eyes—flat, patient, too dark to read—catch the reflection of movement on the screen.
Account active: camera0ff.
No messages. No emojis. No noise.
He never types a word. He never needs to.
Her stream opens in silence first: pixels sharpening, color blooming from gray into warmth. She’s there in the little rectangle—LaceyBlaze69—framed by soft amber light. The background shifts each night: sometimes lavender, sometimes gold. Tonight it’s dim rose, the color of dusk held too long.
She isn’t talking yet. Just setting up. Adjusting a candle on her desk, the flicker catching the side of her cheek. Her hair’s pulled up loosely, a few curls sliding down near her ear. She looks tired—but the kind of tired that reads real. That’s what keeps him here. The authenticity of exhaustion. The quiet before she becomes whoever they think she is.
Her shirt is off‑shoulder, gray cotton. Not a costume tonight. Casual. Intimate. Smoke notes that instantly; she dresses down when rent’s close. Her eyes dart to the corner of the chat—she’s watching the tip count climb. Her smile flickers and fades.
He leans closer. The cursor of light travels across his cheekbone. Every motion on her side registers as a shift in his own breathing.
She’s talking now, low and husky, greeting the chat. Names flood the sidebar—handles he’s catalogued in his head like case files. He recognizes most of them. He’s seen the rhythms of their tipping, their favorite phrases, the way their hunger leaks through keystrokes.
He watches her eyes skim the usernames. Watches her lips part when she spots camera0ff.
That’s the moment the first tip lands.
Five thousand tokens.
No message.
Just the sound effect—a tiny chime that breaks the hush.
She exhales. Softly. Her fingers pause on the keyboard.
He doesn’t move. Doesn’t blink.
The light of her screen glazes his face, every micro‑expression tightening then relaxing. He knows this room too well—the way the shadows bunch behind her curtain, the cheap tripod reflection in her mirror, the small plant that’s starting to brown in the corner. Details most viewers skip past. He collects them all, arranging her life in the dark like a puzzle he’s almost solved.
Another tip. Smaller this time. Then stillness.
He waits. She shifts. Laughs lightly at something someone else wrote, the sound traveling through his speakers and into the soft air around him.
Smoke’s hand hovers near the mouse but never clicks. The muscles in his jaw jump once, then settle. He’s studying, not participating. Every gesture, every glance, filed away.
She leans forward to adjust her camera; for a heartbeat the lens fills with her eyes—brown, bright, unguarded.
It hits him like a slow‑building ache, right under the ribs.
That’s the part that gets him. Not the performance. The in‑between.
He sits there long after she signs off, the screen gone dark except for his reflection staring back.
In that reflection, his expression doesn’t change, but his pulse does. A quiet metronome against the silence.
He kills the light. The monitors fade to black.
The house holds its breath with him.
He doesn’t know it yet, but this—this watching, this quiet cataloging of her world—has already rewritten his own.
Smoke doesn’t move right away. Doesn’t speak. Doesn’t blink.
Still sitting in his chair like he’s mid-breath and hasn’t decided whether to finish it.
That’s the thing about obsession.
It doesn’t roar at first.
It creeps.
Soft as a sigh.
Outside, the trees rustle in their hush. Inside, his office feels colder with the light gone, like the candle knows she left the room. The flame gutters, long and thin.
He pushes back slowly, the leather chair groaning beneath him. One long breath slides out of his nose, and he reaches for the candle. Snuffs it with a whisper of two fingers. Smoke curls in the air, gray on gray.
Only then does he rise.
Bare feet on hardwood. Heavy steps. Still shirtless, still in his slacks, the silver chain around his neck catching moonlight from the slivered gap in the curtain.
He moves quiet. Like he’s done this before. Because he has.
Down the hall, past the second bedroom nobody sleeps in, past the mirror he doesn’t look into right now, into the kitchen. He doesn’t turn the light on.
Just opens the fridge by muscle memory and pulls out the tall bottle of water. Drinks half of it without stopping. The cold hits his chest like something holy. A distraction. A reset.
But it doesn’t work.
Not tonight.
Because tonight, she looked straight into the camera—just once—and it felt like she knew. Like she knew who she was talking to, even if she didn’t understand how she knew it. And that look? It branded itself behind his eyes.
He opens a drawer. Pulls out a blunt. Lights it at the stovetop flame. Leans against the counter, back tense, shoulder muscles flexing beneath his skin. Smoke curls out his mouth slow. Slower than usual. He doesn’t pace. He never paces. He just stands still and thinks—but that’s the problem now.
He’s thinking too much.
Her real name still presses under his tongue like a secret he hasn’t earned.
But he knows it.
He knows now.
And that changes everything.
He flicks ash into the sink. Stares at nothing. Imagines the soft pink light behind her in that room, the way she leaned into the lens. The tiredness in her eyes beneath the showgirl smile.
It wasn’t a performance tonight. Not really.
It was a woman trying to hold it together.
And something about that—about her—cut him somewhere old.
Back in his bedroom, the bed’s still unmade from the night before. He never makes it. He just lays down like a man laying down with a full mind.
He leaves the blunt in a tray on the nightstand, still burning.
On the dresser across from the bed, one of his monitors is still on sleep mode. The faint outline of the streaming site’s logo floats across it. He watches it drift. Watches it vanish and return again.
He’s not tired. But his body lays still.
One arm across his chest. Fingers touching his chain.
She doesn’t know he’s here.
Not yet.
But Smoke knows himself.
And he knows that this—this quiet spiral, this tight ache in the gut, this unnameable possession curling under his ribs doesn’t go away.
Not until he gets closer.
And closer.
And closer.
Obsession don’t start big. It starts with a flicker. A voice. A laugh. A look too long.
Then it spreads.
She showed up on my screen one night, slow-rolling her hips to some trap soul beat I used to fuck to. The kind of girl with quiet fire behind the eyes. A mouth too smart. A body too soft. I told myself it was curiosity. Research.
Just a burner account. Just a scroll.
But that little red light hit the corner of the frame and I ain’t been the same since.
A man like him didn’t chase ghosts. But her? She’d crept into his bloodstream. Her voice. Her face. Her fucking mouth. That window flicker was all he needed. The cam show lights that blinked to life upstairs like a neon confession. He knew it then. She was real.
And if she was real, she had roots.
He wasn’t looking for a name. He was looking for the break. The tell. The weak stitch in the digital mask. Smoke pulled a still frame from the last stream. Paused her mid-turn. Her eyes were half-lidded, mouth parted, lit pink-blue from the LED glow of her setup. He ran a reverse image scan—not through commercial indexes, but through a bastardized cross-network search engine he’d written himself. Something between AI triangulation and metadata scraping. Slow. Dirty. Deep.
At first, nothing but a wall of dummies.
The usernames were throwaway. ‘LaceyBlaze69’ ran back to a fan site, but he knew that was dead-end skin bait. IPs pinged from proxies. Standard camgirl obfuscation. She was smart.
But not smarter than him.
He followed the soft trails: an old wishlist from 2021 under a defunct handle. A comment someone left under a tub oil listing— “you smell like melted sugar, Blaze.” That same username had retweeted a Reddit thread a year ago. “Blaze got that creamy real head energy. Y’all asleep.”
That username? Burned. Deleted. But it didn’t vanish from his logs. Smoke leaned in. The M. Brooks. He opened another pane. Scraped the backend of the wishlist history and peeled the address metadata that had once been linked. It was partial. A city, not a street. Atlanta.
He switched scripts.
Ran the burner ID through Venmo dumps, Cashapp transfers. Found a single connection. A name tied to a sister’s payment ID. Someone who used to tag “for diapers 🍼💙” in her notes. The baby’s name wasn’t listed.
But hers was. Malaya Nicole Brooks.
Smoke didn’t blink. Just inhaled once, deep through his nose, chest expanding slow as he sat back and let the name soak in.
Malaya. It sounded right.
He opened another pane and fed the name through a social archive. Pulled cached results. Image tags. Scraped anything not sealed behind a private wall.
There. Buried.
An old baby registry. Archived. Still cached.
Malaya Nicole Brooks. Age at the time: 24. Expected due date listed as January 5th. Registered in Atlanta. And below that, two saved items: a grey bassinet and a small wooden name puzzle. The kind you custom-order.
He copied the name. Dropped it into a final search. One last hit blinked into life. A private Instagram. No posts since last year. Profile picture barely visible through the blur. But when he clicked? There she was. No filters. No gloss. Just her and her boy. She was on a blanket, cheeks bare of makeup, curls pulled back, eyes squinting into the sunlight. That same mouth. That same skin. Her face leaned against her son’s, their noses touching like a secret between them.
Smoke sat still.
Every tendon in his jaw locked tight. His fingers hovered over the mouse but didn’t click. He didn’t need to see more. He saw enough. His chest rose once, sharp. Then the words left his mouth quiet, like a verdict…
“Got you now.”
Smoke didn’t save much—not in the way other men did. No messy folders labeled Favorites or SheBadAF, no collections of porn cluttering his hard drive. He didn’t hoard. He curated.
He archived.
In the deep, encrypted section of his personal server—beneath firewalls laced with custom scripts and backdoor diversions—sat a folder marked only by a black glyph: 𖤐. Hidden in plain sight. Inside, each file had no name. Only dates. Timestamps. Noted by show duration, lighting setup, outfit color.
He knew her schedule by now.
Mondays, she usually didn’t cam.
Tuesdays were slow—sometimes quiet shows with half her face in shadow.
Fridays, though? That’s when she danced. Put on lipstick. Wore silver hoops that glinted when she bounced.
He had ten clips from Fridays alone.
Smoke sat back in his office chair, barefoot, sweatpants low on his hips. One hand on the trackpad. The other resting between his thighs—not jerking off. Just there. Holding the ache.
He hit play.
There she was—centered in her frame, back arched, thighs slick with oil.
No face. No name.
But he knew her now. The way she twitched when she came. The slow drag of her middle finger. The hush in her voice when she whispered fuck like it meant something real.
He paused on a frame.
Zoomed in.
The blanket behind her was creased different that night. In the corner, just behind her shoulder, a sliver of shadow—the curve of a framed photo nearly cropped out. Blink and you’d miss it.
Smoke didn’t blink. He logged the image.
Tagged it: Possible family photo
Then closed the window, jaw tight. He wasn’t watching for porn anymore. He was watching her. And he was getting close. He wasn’t supposed to know her name. That was the rule. The unspoken barrier between watcher and watched. Keep it fantasy. Keep it clean. But Smoke never played by rules he didn’t write. The night he saw the daycare magnet on her fridge, cropped into the corner of a low-angle shot where she bent over too far—he screenshotted it. Enhanced. Zoomed. Ran a reverse image search on the phone number.
Found it.
A daycare center off Hollowell Parkway. Low-income zip code. Five-star reviews from desperate working moms who called the director Miss Tasha like she was the second coming. Two more clicks, a scraped parent roster uploaded to the county site, and he had it.
Brooks, Malaya N.
Emergency contact listed: Antwan Riggins.
Co-parent. Address listed in East Point. Smoke already had eyes on that house.
From there, the rest unraveled.
📌 Driver’s license (active, Georgia—updated with her current address six months ago; Smoke accessed it through a database sweep he’s not supposed to have)
📌 County court record (small claims—back rent dispute, dropped due to non-payment)
📌 Instagram (private)
📌 Facebook (ghosted, but not deleted)
📌 Venmo history (a tip-off—emoji trails that matched her cam patterns)
📌 Amazon wishlist (cross-referenced—same lip gloss, same LED light strips she used one Thursday)
Her name tasted real in his mouth now.
Malaya.
He closed his laptop. Sat in the dark. Let the name settle on his chest like heat. And once he said it out loud in the quiet of his office—just once—there was no going back. He closed his laptop. Sat in the dark. Let the name settle on his chest like heat.
This wasn’t just curiosity. This was hunger.
The pink light came on at 10:27.
And Smoke stopped breathing.
The Charger sat tucked beneath a dying streetlamp on the far side of the alley. Engine off. Lights off. Tinted windows holding the dark in place. From this angle, he could see the second floor of the duplex across the street. Just enough of it to count. She lived on the left unit, mirror of the one beside it. Second floor. Front window. Curtains drawn just loose enough to leak color when the ring light flicked on. He knew the schedule by now. Not just her cam shows. Her life.
6:45 AM—blinds crack open. She’s up. Messiah’s cereal bowl hits the counter by 7.
8:12 AM—she locks the door behind her, diaper bag and small hand in tow.
5:37 PM—they’re back. Groceries or nothing at all.
10:27 PM—the show begins.
Tonight? He was already there. Smoke didn’t light a blunt. Didn’t lean back. Didn’t blink much. He just sat. Elbows on thighs. Hands folded. Eyes fixed. The porch light on her side of the duplex was dead. No motion light in the shared yard. The grass between units hadn’t been cut in weeks. Weeds curled around the bottom step like they were listening too. That second-floor window? A soft flicker. Then a burst of blush pink.
The string lights.
Same ones he’d seen reflecting off her skin when she played shy for the camera.
She was up there.
Live.
Not just a username now. Not a tab on his browser. Not a fantasy spread across pixels and playback. A woman in a duplex. A mother. A body he could almost smell.
Smoke’s jaw flexed.
He clocked the shadow of her shape pass behind the curtain. A curved silhouette. Slender up top, thick at the thighs. Moving like she was multitasking, setting things down, pulling something from a tote, checking the baby monitor.
The light shifted again.
She’d turned the harsh overhead off. Just the ring light and the string lights now. She was on. And so was he. But not in the way she thought. He didn’t watch her show from the car. Didn’t need to. Already had Camera0ff queued up on his phone, notifications silenced, screen dimmed. Just in case. But this? This was different. This wasn’t about jerking off or tipping under burners.
This was…territorial.
That was his girl.
She just didn’t know it yet. The curtain fluttered once. Just a corner, like maybe it caught a breeze. But there was no wind. Smoke’s stomach tightened. He sat still. Stone-still. And then, a shape moved behind the thin fabric again. She was adjusting the ring light. Bending over slightly. His mouth went dry. Not with lust. With need. Real, physical need. The kind of need that doesn’t live in your dick. The kind that lives in your blood.
This is where it changes, he thought, This is the threshold.
She’s no longer just something he watches. She’s someone he knows. Someone he plans for. Someone he’s willing to protect. Even if that protection looks a lot like possession.
The elevator doors slid open with a low chime, spilling a wash of amber light over Smoke’s boots as he stepped out onto the rooftop.
Midnight had draped itself like velvet across the Atlanta skyline—sharp angles of steel and glass glittering under the watch of a low-hanging moon. The rooftop was lit in layers: bronze up-lighting against obsidian stone planters, strings of warm Edison bulbs crisscrossing overhead, and hidden spotlights that threw low shadows across honey-toned wooden decking.
Clusters of high-top tables and plush black lounges carved the space into intimate pockets—one corner edged with tall palms in matte black pots, another with a fire pit surrounded by curved seating upholstered in wine-colored velvet. A crystal hookah sat on the ledge, glowing blue.
The scent of sweet tobacco, expensive perfume, and something floral—jasmine, maybe—drifted through the air, thickened by laughter and bass. A DJ spun something deep and sultry—Kaytranada on the turntable, rolling waves of rhythm that made the ice in whiskey glasses clink in time.
Women in floor-length silk and glittering mesh slinked through the crowd. Legs and lace. Red lips and diamond necklaces. The Black elite in their prime—rappers-turned-investors, sons of Southern oil magnates, HBCU legacy kids dipped in quiet generational wealth. Escorts too, most likely. Models, no doubt. No one here wore anything by accident.
Smoke moved through it like shadow—combat boots silent on the wood, black pants molded to powerful legs, the charcoal grey waffle-knit Henley hugging his frame like a second skin. His sleeves were pushed to his forearms, showing ink and muscle. Silver rings gleamed on his fingers—some engraved with runes, one wide and flat with a wolf etched across the band. A thick silver chain sat against his collarbone, catching the lowlight, and a single hoop hugged his left ear. Still. Calm. The kind of man that didn’t need to speak to be noticed.
He didn’t belong in this world of curated extravagance. But his brother did.
And sure enough, Stack stood across the rooftop like a man born into royalty.
Elias “Stack” Moore wore a double-breasted suit the color of night wine—dark maroon, rich as velvet, tailored like sin. No tie. Collar unbuttoned low enough to show his smooth chest and the tip of a tattoo peeking out. His loafers were black crocodile. He wore a single ruby pinky ring, a watch that cost more than rent in Buckhead, and a gold tooth that flashed when he smiled.
Stack wasn’t just holding court—he was the court. People leaned in when he talked. Laughed when he laughed. Two women had already touched his chest just since Smoke had stepped in. A server handed him a glass of something top shelf, and Stack raised it without breaking eye contact from across the space.
Smoke gave him a slight nod.
[COMM EARPIECE ACTIVE]
STACK: “’Bout damn time. You blendin’ in with the furniture in that greyscale, bruh.
SMOKE: “Somebody’s gotta make sure your ass don’t get shot.”
Stack chuckled softly through the comm. He was already walking. Smooth, unhurried, weaving through the crowd with predator ease. When he reached his brother, they dapped up—tight, brief, real.
STACK: “You see that lens in the palm frond planter behind the DJ booth?”
SMOKE: (gruff) “I installed it.”
STACK: “I know. Wanted to make sure you remembered this my party.”
Smoke gave a slow, amused shake of his head.
A woman passed by wearing nothing but silver chains and a sheer catsuit. Stack didn’t even look. Not because he wasn’t tempted—he was just looking at someone else.
Over by the bar.
A woman in a deep red dress.
Backless. Low neckline. Diamond body chain glittering between the slope of her breasts. French roll tight and elegant, but a few free strands framed her sharp, hypnotic face.
Fine.
And she was sipping her drink slow. Watching him.
Stack didn’t smile. Just lifted his glass. Their eyes met.
Held.
She blinked slow. Didn’t look away.
SMOKE: “You know her?”
STACK: “Not yet.”
The DJ switched up the track—slid into a flipped mix of Sade and Larry June, and the crowd swayed deeper into the beat. Stack leaned in, adjusting Smoke’s collar like an older twin by seconds.
STACK: “I got a meet in ten. Someone dirty wants something rare. I want you on that feed, just in case.”
SMOKE: “They comin’ armed?”
STACK: “Ain’t they always?”
Stack stepped back and smoothed the front of his jacket, eyes flickering back to red dress as she turned on her heel, slow like a cat, and disappeared behind the velvet curtain leading to the private section.
Stack’s grin was lazy. Dangerous.
STACK: “She movin’ like she trouble.”
SMOKE: “So’s this party.”
STACK: “Ain’t that why we throw it?”
Smoke just exhaled once through his nose and walked toward the far end of the rooftop—where his portable console sat, disguised as a small humidor case in a corner near the server station. He pulled a cord from his back pocket and jacked in, eyes flicking across the infrared feed—heat signatures, security patches, wireless grid clean.
No signs of tampering.
Not yet.
And somewhere behind velvet and shadows, Stack was walking into the kind of deal that got men rich. Or killed.
But that’s why he had a brother in the dark.
The velvet curtain swayed gently as Stack stepped through, leaving the beat of the rooftop party behind like a memory.
Inside, the room was cooler—lit by flickering wall sconces and a low, amber chandelier shaped like a blown-glass bloom. The walls were matte black, hung with gold-framed photos of Atlanta landmarks twisted into surreal art. A cigar case rested on a mirrored bar cart, untouched. A single white orchid bloomed in a jet-black vase on a glass table. Every detail had been Stack-approved.
Three men sat waiting.
They weren’t from here.
No silk, no ease. Cheap suits trying to look expensive. Diamond earrings that screamed insecurity. Two of them were broad-shouldered and stiff, barely speaking. The third—thinner, meaner, older—sat in the center, legs crossed, fingers adorned with rings that didn’t match. His eyes tracked Stack like a hunting dog.
Stack adjusted his cufflinks and smiled just enough to disarm.
“Apologies. Good taste takes time.”
He strolled to the table like he owned it and poured himself a drink from the crystal decanter—Louis XIII, of course. He didn’t offer them any.
“So.” He sipped, slow, “You boys come all this way for what, exactly?”
The thin one leaned forward, voice low and cracked.
“We’re lookin’ for a piece. Old. Rare. From the Cairo haul.”
Stack didn’t flinch, but he clocked it.
Stolen antiquities.
Messy.
“That’s specific. Most folks just want crypto art, or a Picasso from somebody’s dead mistress.”
“We’re not most folks.”
“Clearly.”
He leaned back in his chair, legs wide, one arm draped over the back. Slow blink. Calm breath.
“And you think I have what you’re looking for?”
“No.” The man smirked, “We think your ghost brother does.”
Stack’s jaw ticked, barely.
He tilted his head.
“That supposed to be funny?”
The man smiled wider.
“The Moore Twins. Everyone’s heard of you. One walks into the fire. The other rewires the building while it burns.”
Behind the scenes, Smoke’s voice crackled in Stack’s earpiece.
SMOKE: “He’s carrying. Right hip. Glock. The one on the left’s got a knife in his boot. Front guy’s pacemaker is wireless—could kill him in ten seconds.”
STACK: “Not yet.”
SMOKE: “Say the word.”
STACK: “We good.”
Stack tapped a silver ring against his glass, slow.
“Let’s skip the poetry. What do you want?”
“We want access. To your broker. The one who makes files disappear. The one who scrubs names, rewrites surveillance, fakes biometrics. The Ghost.”
“You want my brother.”
“We want to pay him. Handsomely.”
Stack smiled. This time, it touched his eyes.
“That’s the problem. You think my brother need money.” He stood, “This meeting’s over.”
One of the bodyguards twitched. A half-step forward. Stack didn’t move—he just stared. And smiled slower.
“Do that again, and I’ll send your heart home in a champagne flute.”
The room went quiet.
Thick with tension.
Stack turned his back on them—casually. Poured another drink. His voice was calm, but cold.
“You brought Cairo business to my city without clearance.
You insulted my blood.
And you walked into my party with bad breath and cheap linen.”
He swirled the drink.
“Go home.”
The thin man stood, slow. Jaw tight.
“This isn’t over.”
Stack finally looked back. Eyes hard now. Smile gone.
“You right.”
Behind the mirrored bar cart, the hidden lens above the orchid blinked red once.
Transmission logged. Faces captured.
Grid reset.
SMOKE (through comm): “Feed’s scrubbed. You clean.”
Stack adjusted his jacket, smoothed his hand down the lapel.
“Tell your boss: next time he wants the ghost, he better pray the ghost don’t want him.”
The men left without a word.
Stack finished his drink.
Behind him, the orchid kept blooming.
Untouched.
But not unnoticed.
The night had stretched deeper since the meet—wind curling low around the rooftop like it was listening. The DJ was still spinning, but the tempo had slowed, dripping into a syrupy blend of old Southern soul and modern trap drums. Most of the crowd had migrated toward the fire pit, glowing orange and gold against the silhouette of swaying palms.
Smoke stood at the edge of it all.
One hand wrapped around a lowball glass he hadn’t sipped.
The other tucked in his pocket, thumb grazing the lining like a silent metronome.
He was watching Stack move through the afterglow of the party like nothing had happened. Like he hadn’t just threatened to send someone’s heart back in crystal. Laughing low with a woman in black feathers. Nodding at some young investment bro who clearly wanted to be him. Still looking like the most dangerous man in a room full of rich ones.
But Smoke had seen the shift. The twitch. The jaw tick.
And he didn’t like what he saw.
“Yo.”
Stack turned mid-pour, one brow arched, bottle of cognac suspended mid-air.
“That your version of ‘hello’ now?”
“Why’d you let ‘em walk?”
The bottle clinked softly as Stack set it down.
“Straight to business, huh?”
Smoke didn’t smile. He stepped in closer, boots heavy on the deck. The shadows curved around him. Even with the noise of the party behind them, this space between the brothers felt…still.
“I had eyes. Ears. One word from you and I could’ve dropped two of ‘em where they sat. The third wouldn’t’ve made it to the stairs.”
“I know.”
“So again—why’d you let them walk?”
Stack leaned against the bar, one hand on the counter, the other casually adjusting the cuffs of his wine-colored suit. Still calm. Still cool. But his gaze flickered sharp for a moment.
“Because they weren’t here for blood, Smoke. They were here for access. They’re desperate, not dangerous.”
“Desperate gets people killed.”
“So does ego.”
Smoke exhaled slowly through his nose, jaw tight.
“You can’t keep assuming your name’s enough to stop a bullet.”
Stack’s eyes softened. Just a little.
“And you can’t keep tryna solve every problem with kill-switches and code.”
They stared at each other for a moment.
The silence between them always held weight—history, war, blood, loyalty. A language no one else understood.
“They knew who you were,” Smoke muttered, “Said your name. Knew mine.”
“Everybody’s watching something.”
“Yeah. But not everybody lives to watch twice.”
That earned the ghost of a smile from Stack.
“Damn, you sound just like Mama.”
Smoke finally took a sip. The liquor hit like truth. He stayed silent. Stack pushed off the bar and stepped in close, lowering his voice.
“Look—I knew what they wanted. I let ‘em talk. Let ‘em sweat. Let ‘em walk out thinkin’ they might have a shot, because people like that? They move loud when they think they’ve won. That’s when they make mistakes. That’s when you catch ‘em.”
“You baitin’ ‘em.”
“I’m always baitin’ ‘em.”
Smoke stared at him hard, then finally nodded once.
“Next time, tell me the play before you toss the line.”
“Next time, bring better whiskey.”
They shared the briefest smile—tight and tired, but real. A bond forged in twin fire, tempered by shadow. And just as they turned to part, Stack’s eyes drifted sideways—back to the bar, where the woman in the red dress was laughing with someone, a slow swirl of her drink catching the chandelier light.
Smoke didn’t answer. Just tapped the side of his glass once and disappeared back into the darker edges of the party.
Smoke stood off to the side of the rooftop, away from the crowd, the glow from his smartwatch throwing ghost-light across his skin. He checked it again. Then again.
01:42 AM.
No alerts.
No pings.
Still, his jaw was tight—muscle ticking near his temple. Something in him was humming too loud to ignore. He brought his fingers to the small device clipped discreetly to the inside of his belt—looked like a fashion detail, but when tapped twice, it activated the portable sweep.
A quiet pulse rippled across the rooftop space.
No wireless interruptions.
No new heat signatures.
No anomalies in signal drop.
Stack was still safe.
Smoke exhaled, but it wasn’t relief. It was protocol.
His eyes flicked back toward his brother, who now leaned solo against the bar, swirling dark liquor in a crystal glass. Laughter floated from the fire pit behind them. The DJ had shifted into something darker—Brent Faiyaz on a slowed reverb, dragging smoke and sin through every beat.
Stack was calm. Too calm.
Smoke started walking over, but Stack turned his head first—felt him coming. He always did.
“You bouncin’?” Stack asked, voice smooth, almost lazy.
“You good?”
“I’m always good.”
“You sure?”
Stack tapped a knuckle against his glass.
“You swept?”
“Just did.”
“Then I’m good.”
Smoke nodded once. But his eyes kept moving—just for a second—searching corners, exits, rooftops across the skyline. Not paranoid. Just trained.
That’s when Stack frowned, glancing toward the bar again.
“She gone.”
Smoke paused mid-step, “Who?”
“Red Dress. The one with the eyes and the attitude. Backless. Slick. Mysterious. She was watchin’ me all night. Then poof.”
Smoke looked toward the bar. Empty glass, lipstick mark. No trace. She was gone.
“You talk to her?”
Stack shook his head, more amused than disappointed, “Nah. Just watched her watch me.”
“Thought she’d circle back.”
Smoke’s gaze narrowed just slightly.
“Maybe she will.”
Stack didn’t answer, just gave a low whistle under his breath and glanced down at the empty spot one last time.
“Guess the ghost gets ghosts now.”
Smoke turned, eyes still sweeping.
“Keep your eyes open.”
“I always do.”
They clasped hands—tight, no words—and Smoke leaned in close, voice low, just for Stack:
“If anything feels off, don’t wait. Text the string.”
“I got it.”
“You better.”
Stack grinned.
“Damn, you leavin’ like I’m goin’ to war.”
Smoke’s eyes stayed locked a moment longer before he finally turned, boots heavy on the deck as he walked toward the elevator.
The city swallowed him up as the doors closed.
And Stack stayed where he was, still holding that half-empty glass, still staring at the ghost of a woman who moved like she’d been born in smoke.
The gate whispered open to the gravel of Smoke’s long driveway, then shut with a mechanical click that echoed down the trees like a secret.
Whisper—the black pitbull—lifted her head from the porch but didn’t move. She knew the rhythm of his truck. The way the engine growled then fell silent.
Smoke stepped out into the still night.
The weight of the party rolled off his shoulders with each step up the porch. Boots heavy. Posture tighter than usual.
He keyed in the code.
The house welcomed him with silence.
Inside, the cool air met his skin. The scent of cedarwood, clove, and cigar memory wrapped around him like ritual. Everything in place. Floors clean. Music low—an instrumental loop of D’Angelo’s “Send It On” weaving through the walls like smoke trails.
But he didn’t take off his boots.
Didn’t drop his keys.
Didn’t even pass through the kitchen.
He needed to see her.
Straight to the office—his war room.
Where obsession lived.
The blackout curtains stayed drawn.
Four curved monitors. All sleeping.
A single candle flickered on the glass desk—cedar & oud —burning low.
He sat in the matte black chair and tapped the command key. He enters a long password, masked in dots. Camera0ff. His private handle. The one that never speaks, never tips on-screen. Just watches.
Smoke stares.
Hard.
The room lit up.
Not white, not blue. Red.
Her stream was already live.
LACEYBLAZE69 —FRIDAY NIGHT: POV + REQUESTS
And there she was.
Malaya.
Oiled. Naked. Red light bleeding across her deep, golden-brown skin. Long rope twist braids falling to her thick ass, swaying with every curve of her body.
Heels still on. Legs spread, slowly twisting at the waist.
Biting her bottom lip.
Licking it.
Giggling—soft. Feminine. Tipsy. There was no baby monitor in the background tonight. No sippy cup tucked behind a ring light. Just her. Uncaged.
She was dancing slow to DVSN. “Too Deep” was playing low. Almost muffled.
One hand cupped a breast, thumb brushing a slick nipple. The other hand dragged oil across her belly. She turned her back to the camera, rolled her hips in a figure-eight. Ass shaking soft. Teasing. Deliberate.
Only half her face was in frame.
Eyes low.
Mouth parted.
Never blinking.
And Smoke…
He sat back slowly, legs spreading wider.
Combat boots still on the floor.
One hand gripped the leather armrest.
The other drifted to his crotch—not touching, just resting. Fingers curled. Twitching.
His dick was already thickening, swelling slow behind the fabric of his pants.
He didn’t breathe right.
Shallow.
Unsteady.
The screen reflected red across his face, cutting a clean line over his sharp jaw and under his cheekbones like war paint.
His thumb grazed his bottom lip.
Then he dragged it across the stubble of his jaw. Slow. Like he was feeling something warm rise up from beneath the surface.
She laughed again. High, soft. Whispering something to no one in particular, “I’m feelin’ good tonight…might let y’all watch me touch it. Y’all want that?”
She leaned in, pushed her breasts together, licked a line between them, tongue slow like syrup.
He caught the glint of a stretch mark there. Gold and delicate, like lightning trapped beneath her skin.
Another curved under her hip.
The soft ripple at her belly when she arched.
Smoke watched it all.
Watched her body with the kind of reverence reserved for sacred things.
Every flaw? Mark of survival.
Every curve? A place to hold her down.
He didn’t blink.
Didn’t touch himself.
Not yet.
But his eyes tracked her like a sniper.
From the curl of her toes to the shine on her lips to the subtle shift in her breath when her fingers danced lower.
And then…he opened a second screen.
The one synced to a different identity.
🕶️ YungCipher has entered the room.
He didn’t chat.
Didn’t speak.
But the moment her hand brushed her inner thigh, a tip appeared.
Malaya didn’t react at first.
But Smoke knew she felt it.
She always did.
She was still dancing—oiled, glowing, red-lit and loose—but the second her hand brushed the inner curve of her thigh, her eyes fluttered like something passed over her skin.
A pause.
Just one beat.
Then—
+1,111 tokens — from YungCipher
The tip landed like a hand on her thigh.
She gasped—small, involuntary.
Not for show.
“Mmm…there you go…”
Her voice was soft, wine-sweet.
She shifted back on her knees, spreading wider.
Heels dragging slow on the floor beneath her.
The camera caught everything:
Her lips parted.
The gleam on her chest.
That subtle dip in her lower belly where a baby once lived.
Her breasts full, mouth wet, thighs trembling now.
She reached for herself—delicate at first—fingers grazing over her mound. She dipped between, pulled back slick.
Smoke watched it all, unmoving.
One elbow on his thigh.
The other hand still resting on his dick—hard now, heavy behind the fabric of his pants.
Not stroking.
Just…present.
His thumb grazed his bottom lip.
Eyes half-lidded.
Tracking her with surgical hunger.
“It’s like you feel me…like you inside my head…”
She whispered it soft—like a spell.
Not to anyone specific.
But Smoke felt it land.
Direct. Possessive. Personal.
She moaned again, slipping two fingers down and in, arching back—
+6,969 tokens —from YungCipher
The sound she made wasn’t pretty.
It was real.
Raw.
“Ah—f-fuck…”
Her hand stuttered.
Eyes fluttered closed—
Then opened again, slower this time.
She locked on the lens like it was someone’s eyes.
Like his.
“YungCipher…you’re nasty. And I like that.”
Smoke’s chest rose—finally.
A slow inhale.
A low, controlled exhale through his nostrils.
She wasn’t even faking anymore.
She was talking to him.
And he hadn’t said a single word.
Still, she moved for him now—legs wide, hand coated, lips parted.
Not putting on a show.
Offering herself.
He didn’t blink.
Didn’t look away.
Just watched the arch of her foot.
The twitch of her jaw.
The way her body carried the truth of motherhood—softened in some places, scarred in others. And still? The sexiest thing he’d ever fucking seen.
He opened his wallet.
Selected the pattern.
Waited for the moment when her breath caught—
+1,111 tokens
(half-second delay)
+1,111 tokens
(another beat)
+1,111 tokens
Her eyes fluttered shut again.
Her legs jerked wider.
Her other hand gripped the sheets out of frame.
“Mmm…this one’s for you, baby…”
Smoke leaned back then.
Finally.
Still not touching.
Still holding himself like a promise.
And on screen, she began to unravel—
All for him.
The red light spilled across his face like blood on silk.
And for the first time all night…he exhaled.
He wasn’t supposed to do this.
Not yet.
Not like this.
But something about tonight…something about the way she was laid out for them—for him—just knocked the air from his lungs and left him burning.
Her name lit the screen in neon pink: LaceyBlaze69 is Live.
Her camera opened with that slow, sultry rhythm she always used. Red light. Low angle. Jazz spilling from the laptop speaker, soft and slow like smoke. Her thighs were already parted when she leaned back, fingers slipping lower, glistening from the very first touch.
And Smoke didn’t even mean to at first.
Just let his palm rest heavy over the thick length rising against his pants, fingertips grazing the outline, then curling slightly. Gripping. Flexing.
His breathing had already changed. Shallow. Slow.
He hadn’t even touched skin yet and still he felt close to crumbling.
She was the reason.
His reason.
Because that pussy?
That pussy was insane.
She had a fat pussy—fat in the way it sat like a pillow between her thighs, even when closed. Thick, plush outer lips you could see from across the room. Soft-looking. Parted just enough that her inner lips peeked through—slick, shiny, a deep flushed brown that darkened the wetter she got. Her clit was swollen, plump and twitching just beneath her middle finger. And the way she played with herself? Slow at first—petting her folds like she was shy about it, even after all this time. Then deeper. Wetter. Cream pooling when she spread herself wide with two fingers and circled lazy over the top.
Smoke’s grip tightened.
Still over his pants.
Still fighting it.
🕶️ YungCipher: “Tilt the cam. Let daddy see how creamy it is.”
She read it. Paused.
Bit her bottom lip, then dragged the camera closer—slow, knowing. The frame shifted, tightening like a close-up on a dream. Now her pussy filled the screen. Every glistening inch.
🕶️ YungCipher: “That’s it. Show me that fuckin mess.”
She obeyed. She always did.
Fingers spreading those thick lips wide till her inner folds were dripping. Creamy and fluttering like she needed to be touched—really touched. She rubbed slow and shallow, then dipped deep—two fingers curling in and pulling out glistening white, strings of it clinging between her knuckles.
Smoke groaned.
Finally gave in.
He shoved his pants down, no ceremony.
Briefs too. Everything in one motion.
And that dick?
It came out vicious.
Big. Heavy. Slapping against his thigh with a weight that made him hiss. Girthy, dark brown shaft with thick veins that throbbed up the side, his skin flushed with heat and tension. The tip was fat, flushed deep plum with a slit that glistened, wet with pre-cum. His balls hung low, heavy, drawn tight and aching. No trimming—he’d let the hair grow back, thick and coarse above the base like he liked it, like he knew she’d like it when she finally got a taste of it.
He wrapped his hand around the base and held.
Didn’t stroke yet.
Just gripped.
🕶️ YungCipher: “You got me grippin my shit, mama. You proud of that?”
She moaned aloud. Just from the text.
Her breath hitched.
She circled her clit faster.
🕶️ YungCipher: “Tell me what that pussy smell like. Bet it’s sweet. Bet it taste like peaches and cream.”
She gasped, her hips rocking up toward the camera.
“YungCipher, I—fuck—” she breathed, “It’s drippin. My pussy’s fuckin drippin. It’s sticky, I can feel it on my thighs…”
Smoke spat in his palm.
Rubbed the head.
Shivered.
His stroking had a rhythm. Always did.
Long, firm drags from base to tip.
Then a twist. A squeeze.
Thumb rolling over the head.
And when the pre-cum leaked thick and warm, he moaned low, eyes locked on her creamy folds twitching around her fingers.
🕶️ YungCipher: “I’d eat that pussy till you cried. And then keep eatin. Wouldn’t stop. Not till you begged. Not till you came on my fuckin face.”
She whimpered.
Her other hand slipped beneath her, rubbing just beneath the lips—lower, slower—then back up to her clit.
Her fingers glistened. Her thighs trembled.
Smoke’s eyes darkened.
His chest rose.
Fist pumping now, slow and filthy, dragging that fat dick up and down while his balls bounced lightly beneath, wet with sweat and lust.
🕶️ YungCipher: “Play with it messier. I wanna see that cream.”
She obeyed.
“Y-yes, daddy,” she whispered.
She dipped two fingers deep and pulled them out—slick. shiny. obscene.
🕶️ YungCipher: “Look at that shit.”
🕶️ YungCipher: “Put it in your mouth. Taste yourself.”
And she did.
Slow.
Tongue curling around her fingertips, licking up her own cream with a soft, shuddering moan.
That’s when Smoke really lost it.
His head tipped back.
His mouth opened.
His hand never stopped.
Fisting. Stroking. Balls clenching.
Breath hitched and voice caught in his throat like a man possessed.
This wasn’t just pleasure.
It was possession.
It was filth.
It was her.
He whispered it to the empty room—low, ragged, primal:
“…mine.”
The room was alive now.
Her camera was so close Smoke could count the glisten on every inch of that swollen, creamy pussy. The red glow of her LED strips made her skin shimmer like it was bathed in heat. Her thighs were trembling. Fingers soaked. Clit twitching under each pass.
And all around her?
The sounds.
Chime.
Chime.
Ting—ting-ting.
WHRR-click. (A DM.)
Ping. (Another tip.)
Tokens were flying like rain. Her screen lit up with usernames stacking fast.
🔥 NothinButNecks tipped 33 tokens.
“Zoom on your neck. Please. Please. Please. I need it.”
🍯 JustForTheTaste sent a rose.
“That little dab of gloss makin me crave you, mama. Say ‘sticky’ for me?”
She smiled faintly.
Didn’t answer.
Didn’t need to.
Smoke saw the flicker in her eyes. The one she always gave when she saw something she liked. But then she dipped those fingers lower. Spread wider. Brought the camera so close the focus shifted for a moment—went soft—then re-locked on that thick, sticky shine between her folds.
Chime.
Chime.
Chime.
💸 BILLS4U tipped 400 tokens.
“What’s your cash app, babygirl? I got a light bill to pay.”
Smoke froze. That name. That fucking name again. It always made his jaw clench. Always made his hand slow just enough to feel the burn of control slipping through his grip.
She giggled at the tip. Real. Sweet. Then looked into the lens and said:
Smoke’s eyes dropped to the corner of the chat. Watched the timestamp match the moment he tipped earlier. Timing too tight. Too aligned.
BILLS4U wasn’t him.
But the look in her eyes wondered. And the fact that she wondered? Made his dick throb in his palm. He stroked again. Slow. Twisting his wrist at the top. Watching that thick head gleam.
🕶️ YungCipher: “Pull it open for me. Both hands. Show me that drip.”
She saw it. Smiled.
Obeyed.
Both hands slid down, fingers spreading those fat outer lips wide, tugging until her inner folds stretched, juicy and pink and dripping. A soft strand of cream fell between her legs. Camera still locked in. The red glow made it shine like lacquered candy.
“Mm…you like that?” she asked, voice soft and messy, “That good good?”
🕶️ YungCipher: “That’s the prettiest pussy I ever seen.”
🕶️ YungCipher: “I’d suck on that clit till you couldn’t see straight.”
🕶️ YungCipher: “Stick my tongue in and lap that cream right outta you.”
🌴 SwampKing has entered the room.
“Ain’t no tongue like a Southern one. You still taste like peaches, babydoll?”
Smoke stopped. Just for a second. That name. That fucking creep. The one she blocked. The one she told the chat she banned after he sent that voice note. Saw someone who looked like you near that daycare. She hadn’t gone live for a week after that. Had changed the nameplate on her door. Stopped walking to the corner store. Smoke’s breathing turned cold. His fist paused around his dick. Grip tight. Knuckles flexed.
She didn’t respond to SwampKing. Didn’t read the comment aloud.But he watched her expression shift. Just for a second. A flicker. She scooted back slightly. Shoulders stiffened.
Chime.
Ting.
WHRR-click. (Another tip. Another message.)
🕶️ YungCipher: “Ignore that. Focus on me.”
🕶️ YungCipher: “Tilt back. Show daddy what’s mine.”
And she did.
Like she knew.
The camera tilted. Legs lifted. Her pussy filled the screen again—fat and messy, folds slicked in a wet halo of cream. Her clit throbbed under the red light, twitching with each breath.
“I gotchu, daddy,” she whispered.
And just like that—Smoke lost the last thread of restraint. He added more oil again in his hand.
Jerked rough now.
Fast.
Muscles flexed. Shoulders shaking.
“Fuck,” he hissed under his breath, watching her rub herself harder, messier, the sound of slick fingers loud as hell through his headphones.
Squelch. Squelch. Moan.
Chime.
WHRR-click.
She whimpered. Called his name. Not his real name. But the only one that mattered right now.
“YungCipher…”
His stroke was brutal now. No finesse. No mercy. Just the wet sound of his fist gliding over thick, leaking skin—slick with spit and pre-cum—pumping from root to tip in a rhythm made just for her. Muscles in his forearm jumping. Jaw clenched. Throat dry.
The way she looked? Spread wide. Fingers working both holes. Cream dripping down to her ass. Pussy throbbing with every moan. She was right there—
And so was he.
🕶️ YungCipher: “Keep fuckin’ playin in it till you squirt, baby.”
🕶️ YungCipher: “Show me how you lose it.”
🕶️ YungCipher: “Make that mess. I’ll fuckin drink it.”
She gasped.
Tilted her hips higher.
“Ohhh shit—yes, yes—daddy, I’m—”
SPLASH.
A loud, sudden squelch of her soaking the cam mat. She squirted hard, body bucking.
Camera shook.
She moaned loud and real, breathless, nearly sobbing through the aftershocks.
Smoke grunted.
Low.
Rough.
Then—
“Fuck—fuck—fuck—”
He came.
Hot, thick ropes spilled through his stroking hand, across his abdomen, some of it painting the flat of his chest. His abs tensed, back arched, muscles quaking through release.
He sat there.
Panting.
Breathing heavy in the dark, cum slick across his stomach and fingers, screen still glowing in front of him.
And then—
Knock. Knock. Knock.
She froze. Not a moan. Not a giggle. Not a “hold on, baby.” Just full-body stillness. She looked toward the off-screen hallway.
Eyes wide.
Alert.
Then she reached fast—clicked something on her laptop—
“Sorry y’all, that’s my time for tonight. I’ll—I’ll be back tomorrow…”
Click.
Cam offline.
Smoke’s whole body stiffened.
No goodbye. No wink. No countdown or cash-out.
That wasn’t planned.
He wiped a hand across his stomach, sticky with release, and stared at the blank screen in silence.
But his focus had already shifted. Who the fuck was at that door? He couldn’t shake it. Showered in silence. Didn’t touch his phone again. Didn’t clean the mess off his keyboard. Didn’t even hang the towel after drying off—just threw on black jeans, black hoodie, black fitted cap.
Grabbed his keys.
Glove compartment: loaded. Just in case.
His Charger roared to life like a low growl from the dark.
He peeled off into the night.
1:14 a.m.
East Decatur.
Parked two houses down from hers. Engine off.
He’d been here before, weeks ago—just to know.
To see.
To study her routines.
Now he sat there in the dark, a shadow in the driver’s seat, one hand on the steering wheel, the other twitching with tension.
Upstairs.
Second floor window.
There.
Her light was on.
He leaned forward, slowly, adjusting the rearview just so.
She was in view now. Baby on her hip. Face flushed. Talking fast. No…arguing.
Smoke squinted.
The figure in front of her—a man. He couldn’t quite make him out. Low haircut. Tan hoodie. He moved like he had history in that space. Like he’d been there before. The baby was awake, clinging to her.
Smoke’s fists curled.
Jaw ticked.
One vein in his neck throbbed with pressure.
He didn’t like this.
Didn’t like the way the man stepped too close. Didn’t like the way she turned her face, like she didn’t want to be looked at. Didn’t like that she had to explain herself when just twenty minutes ago she was soaked and shining for him.
Not him.
Smoke.
Camera0ff. YungCipher.
Her only real one.
He leaned back in his seat, shadows swallowing his expression. Let the darkness breathe around him. But in his head? He was already playing out every scenario.
What if that man touched her? What if the baby wasn’t just visiting? What if this whole time…she was his?
Smoke’s fingers tapped the steering wheel. His jaw popped from how tight it clenched. His pupils were wide. Voice low. Breath calm.
But inside? Inside he was ready.
“Touch her wrong,” he whispered, staring through the windshield, “See what the fuck happen.”
some men don’t knock—they monitor
The Charger sat like a beast in wait, all matte black and breathless in the shadows across the street. Engine quiet. Headlights off. Smoke leaned low in the driver’s seat, one hand resting against the wheel, the other curled tight around the edge of the window.
Then: a baby’s cry. Thin. Hungry.
Then her voice.
Malaya.
Sharp. Tired. Cutting through the humid air like something wounded trying to sound strong. Smoke didn’t blink. Just reached into the glove compartment and pulled out a flat matte-black case, flipped the latch with a thumb. Inside: a thin rigged tablet, a directional receiver, and a stacked audio card wired to a portable power cell. It wasn’t a bug—he’d never crossed that line.
Didn’t have to.
The surveillance kit was tuned to a custom parabolic mic. It drank sound from distance—bounced it, filtered it, cleaned the air of wind and gap. A tool from his old days. Government ghostwork. Private contract work. Quiet work.
He slid the earpiece in.
At first: a whisper of static. Then came the voices, faint but sharpened under his tech.
“—told you, Twan, I can’t keep waitin’ on you. Messiah need diapers, wipes—”
“Man, don’t start that rent talk again.”
Smoke’s eyes narrowed. The voice was casual. Lazy. Too loud for the space he occupied.
Antwan. That’s the name. The sperm donor.
“You know I been lookin’ for work.”
“You said that last month.”
“Why you actin’ brand new? You the one out here gettin’ slick money. Where that come from, huh? Some dude slidin’ through while the baby sleep?”
A pause.
Then Malaya—soft. Measured. Cold enough to cut a man’s ego down to the bone, “You don’t get to ask me anything no more.”
A breath. A shift. A door slams.
Smoke’s jaw flexed.
No words. Just that low hum of violence in his chest.
He tapped the screen, rewound the audio, saved the clip, then ran the visual playback from the lens tucked near the upstairs eaves. The man leaving was easy to track—caught by the backlight, hoodie pulled low but face visible long enough.
Smoke isolated the still. Zoomed in. Ran it through one of his burner search suites.
Known Associates: Shanice Collier (girlfriend), three children, two confirmed baby mothers, one currently filed for restraining order
Smoke scrolled down slow. Saw a photo—Twan on a porch with a blunt in one hand and a red solo cup in the other, posing next to a grill. Caption: “Real daddies cook.”
He stared at it for a long second.
Real daddies show the fuck up.
He closed the tab. Shut the case. Set it aside like a tool he might use again.
Malaya’s upstairs light went off. Her window dimmed to black. The house quieted, but Smoke didn’t move. Didn’t drive off. He just sat. Watching. Memorizing.
The way the curtain in Messiah’s room had a small rip in the corner. The metal alignment of the fire escape. The fact her porch light flickered twice before cutting off. He noted it all. Logged it in the part of his mind that catalogued threats, exits, patterns. This wasn’t just curiosity anymore. Wasn’t even just obsession. This was claim.
She was his now.
He didn’t say it out loud—but it rang through him, loud as gunfire in a hallway. When he finally turned the key, just before the sun thought about showing its face, he said it in a low voice only the Charger could hear:
“Ain’t nobody knockin’ on that door again…unless it’s me.”
You see…people think dominance is loud.
But real control? It’s quiet.
It’s knowing she’s walking around with a little piece of you inside her, and she ain’t even realize it yet. It’s waiting. Patient. Focused.
It’s watching her live her life like she still got choices.
with all the bullshit going on i’ve taken the time to backup all my fics and drafts. i wanted to share a few things for all my fellow writers and those of you who enjoy reading my work.
first, here’s my backup blog! i’m gonna be reblogging my things there, so feel free to follow me.
second, i’ve been saving my fics to ellipsus. it’s extremely writer friendly and they are anti-AI which is wonderful. it’s an alternative to google docs for anyone who is interested in trying out something new. there’s also a way to export files directly to AO3!
sending every ounce of my love to @eye-raq and the other black writers who have gotten their blogs taken :33. it’s extremely disheartening that this is happening within such an amazing and needed community :(
Summary: In the thick Mississippi heat of the 1920s, identical twins Elijah “Smoke” Moore and Elias “Stack” Moore return home from war—ragged, restless, and searching for something steady. Promised opportunities have dried up, and the only offer worth taking comes from August Langston, a wealthy Black ranch owner and old friend of their father’s. August gives the boys work and a place to sleep on his sprawling land just outside Clarksdale.
Part three: (this got to be too long and I am pissed because it was getting good! I’m having a lot of fun with this filthy ride! 🥵🥵🥵)
A 1920s Southern Gothic sex comedy where a frustrated ranch wife fucks two dangerous twins behind her husband’s back—and everyone’s sweating, scheming, and sinning under the Mississippi sun.
The room was dark but not silent.
Cicadas murmured through the open window like they’d witnessed everything. Elijah Moore—Smoke—lay flat on his back in a narrow guest bed that smelled faintly of cedar and rose soap. The sheets were cool against his skin, but sweat still lingered at his collarbones, in the crooks of his elbows, beneath his knees. The ache between his legs had dulled, but his heart hadn’t slowed—not once since she left them.
He stared at the ceiling. Wide awake. Naked.
His chest lifted with each breath, slow but uneven. The shadows from the swaying pecan tree outside filtered through the curtains and moved across his body like restless ghosts. His clothes lay in a heap on the floor. Belt unbuckled. Shirt hanging half-off the chair like it had tried to crawl away and failed.
His lip was still wet. He licked it absentmindedly.
He could still taste her.
Delphine Langston.
Lord, have mercy.
He’d never had head like that before. Not even close.
He’d been with a few women—quiet encounters in borrowed rooms, rushed touches behind juke joints, lips that tried their best. But nothing like this. Nothing like her. Not the shy girl who giggled too much. Not the one who whispered scripture after she came. And damn sure not the woman in Mound Bayou who bragged she could suck the soul out a man—but barely touched the edge. Not even the kind of dame who prided herself on taking men apart slow, with spit and eye contact and a wicked little smile.
Delphine had ruined him.
Mouth like silk. Tongue like salvation. Like she knew his body better than he did.
She didn’t ask. She took. Worshipped him. Broke him slow.
And now he was hooked.
What Delphine did? That wasn’t just head.
It was possession.
She swallowed his whole name and made him thank her for it. She moaned while she sucked—moaned like his dick was the sweetest thing she’d ever tasted. Like she was hungry. Like he was her last supper and she meant to savor every bite. She held eye contact through the whole thing—like it mattered to her, seeing the life drain out of his control, watching him jerk, watching him beg. Because he did. He begged. Once or twice. Maybe more.
Her mouth was wet and filthy and divine.
And then—she made them eat her.
Both of them. One after the other. Smoke had gone first, of course. Delphine looked at him and said, “C’mon then, soldier. Show me what that mouth been trained for.”
He hadn’t said a word. Just dropped to his knees like he’d been called home.
And Lord…that taste.
Sweet like peach brandy. Slick and hot and soft as velvet. He had to hold her thighs down at one point just to breathe. And when she came? She did it like a woman who knew exactly what her body was for—loud, unashamed, spine-arched to God. She didn’t cover her mouth. Didn’t tremble quiet like girls often did. Delphine shouted, hand twisted in his curls, back bowed. She flooded his mouth, and he drank.
Now he couldn’t stop tasting her.
Couldn’t stop remembering how her thighs trembled, how she praised him afterward like he was a man worth praising. How she turned right around and made Stack go next—“I ain’t done with y’all.” And that was just it—she took them. Not because she was desperate. Not because she was drunk. But because she wanted to. Because she could. And Smoke let her. Stack let her.
He shifted in the bed.
His dick stirred again.
He wasn’t hard—yet. But it was there. That twitch. That heat. That ghost of her mouth still clinging to his skin.
He rubbed a hand down his face, groaned into his palm.
Delphine…Delphine…Delphine…
She was down the hall right now. Probably asleep. Maybe naked under those soft, monogrammed sheets. Maybe glowing still—warm with the aftershocks of sin and satisfaction. Maybe still wet from their mouths.
Smoke squeezed his eyes shut.
He’d kissed women before—a few women here and there. Tasted lust off their lips in alleyways and moonlit fields, let them climb him like a ladder to heaven. But nothing in his life had ever turned his bones to water like what Delphine did to him tonight.
Not just her mouth. Not just her thighs.
Her eyes.
The way she looked at him afterward. Smirking. Proud. Knowing.
Like she saw everything. Like she knew he was trying to keep himself together and was loving the fact that he couldn’t.
That woman had years on him.
And she wore every one of them like silk and ash. Like slow burn molasses. Like something he wasn’t meant to touch but did anyway—and now couldn’t scrub off.
He exhaled slow.
Somewhere in the house, a floorboard creaked.
His eyes shot to the door. But nothing followed.
No footsteps. No whisper. No soft laugh trailing down the hallway.
Still, the sound of her voice rang in his ears:
“Y’all ain’t never had no grown woman take her time with you, huh?”
He hadn’t. Not like that.
He’d had quick head in the back of juke joints. Rough handjobs in alleyways. Soft thighs in creaky beds. But this? This was worship. This was something holy and filthy all at once. Like she was correcting all the little mistakes younger girls made. Like she was making him feel something, not just bust something.
He ran a hand across his chest, then lower.
His palm brushed his abdomen. Hot. Sensitive. He was sore. Raw. Like her name had been stitched into the muscles.
Stack hadn’t said a damn word when they parted. Just grinned, shook his head, and closed his door like a man too full to speak. Smoke knew that look. Knew his brother felt it too.
The way her mouth worked both of them like she was the one choosing. Like they were the ones auditioning for her.
He turned his head, looked out the window again.
Moonlight spilled in, pale and forgiving.
Smoke inhaled deep.
He could still smell her perfume in his beard.
Could still feel her tongue on his shaft.
The warmth of her palm beneath his balls.
The way she sucked him from root to tip like she meant to undo him.
And she did. She did.
He wasn’t the same man now that he’d been before she knelt between them.
And God help him…
He wanted to do it again.
The ceiling fan above Elias “Stack” Moore ticked soft and slow, slinging lazy air across his bare chest.
But he wasn’t asleep.
Couldn’t be.
His hands were behind his head. His legs stretched wide across the bed. His dick? Still soft, but twitching now and then like it remembered the trouble it had just been in.
He exhaled through his nose, real slow.
What the fuck just happened?
Delphine Langston.
That woman just did something criminal.
He’d been with women. Grown ones too. The ones who whisper filth while they bounce. The ones who like to be watched while they suck. The ones who put on a show just for him.
But Delphine? That wasn’t no performance. That was execution.
She came in like a storm and left them wrecked.
He still felt the way her tongue curled around the head of his dick. The way she sucked him like she was starved—and grateful. Not grateful for him, no. Grateful for the taste. For the way he jerked and hissed and whispered, “Goddamn, baby…who taught you that?”
And she just laughed. Kept going. Didn’t blink.
Stack bit his lip now just remembering it. Remembering the wet pop when she pulled off him with a smirk. That nasty little lick she did up the shaft, slow as a sin, while her eyes burned holes into his soul. Like she could see how many times he’d jerked off alone. Like she could smell it on him.
“Both y’all taste like trouble,” she said. And then she licked her lips and said, “Good thing I like trouble.”
Lord.
Stack had erupted so hard, he felt it in his chest. His thighs shook. His vision blurred. And when he opened his eyes, she was already turning around—already crawling onto the bed like they didn’t just give her half their souls.
That’s when she told Smoke to eat.
Stack had watched. Breathless. Stroking himself slow as he watched his brother vanish between her thighs.
And Delphine…Lord.
She spread wide for it. Rolled her hips like worship. Grabbed the chair and hollered so loud the windows might’ve wept. She called his brother “baby.” Pulled at his curls. Rode his face with purpose.
And then—she looked at Stack.
Right at him.
“Don’t think I forgot about you,” she said.
His dick jumped.
She beckoned him over while Smoke was still on his knees, face shining like he’d been baptized in her. And Stack? He went. Dropped to his knees beside his twin like it was Sunday school and he was ready to repent.
But it wasn’t repentance he gave her.
It was devotion.
Her pussy was hot. Soaked. Sweet like brown sugar and just a little tang of brandy and sweat. He tasted her deeper. Slower. He moaned into her, loud, messy, deliberate. He spread her wider. Took his time. He wanted her shaking. Crying. Squirting. Screaming.
And she gave him all of it.
He still had scratches on his shoulders from where she grabbed him. Still had the taste of her slick on the back of his throat. Still had her voice ringing in his ears:
“Goddamn, Elias—don’t stop. Don’t stop. That’s it. Right there. Baby, yes—right there.”
He groaned now, remembering it.
Hand slid down his stomach.
He was already half-hard again.
His body didn’t know what to do. It wanted her back.
Wanted that mouth.
That grip.
That grown-woman sex energy that made him feel like a boy on his first time. He’d laughed, smug and cocky, when she first pulled them close—talkin’ that slick talk, purring about how they ain’t never had it like this.
But she wasn’t lying.
She meant that.
And Stack? He was humbled. He was blown. And deep down?
He was hooked.
He liked her age. Liked the way her tits hung heavy and natural. Liked the curve of her waist, the fullness of her hips, the confident way she gripped the back of his head like she owned him.
She didn’t ask for permission.
She gave instructions.
She praised. She panted. She came twice—maybe three times. And when they were all breathless and spent, she just smiled. Got up and walked down the hall with her robe open, ass on display like she knew they were watching.
Stack had to close his eyes just to keep from following her.
And now here he was.
Naked. Dick twitching. Mouth dry. Neck still sticky from sweat and perfume and Delphine’s thighs.
He chuckled to himself, low.
“Shit…”
He glanced toward the door.
Thought about going to her room. Real quiet. Just to see. But he didn’t. Because something told him she’d come back.
She’d want it again. And next time?
He was gonna make her beg.
The first thing Delphine noticed was the light.
It slipped through her open shutters like a kiss, warming her thighs beneath the sheets. The room still smelled faintly of brandy, sweat, and sex—not her own, but theirs. The Moore boys. Sleeping in her guest rooms like two worn-out wolves. Spent. Sated. Stretched out naked in the aftermath of her mouth.
Delphine smiled to herself.
A slow, sleepy thing that curled at the corners like honeyed smoke. She rolled over onto her back, arms stretched above her head, letting the silk of her sheet slide down just enough to expose one breast to the sun. She didn’t cover it. Didn’t hide. The nipple pebbled from the air, but she just grinned and let it.
After a long yawn, she sat up and swung her legs over the edge of the bed. Barefoot. Soft feet touched hardwood. Her robe was waiting—champagne-colored silk, too thin, too short, too wrong. She slid it on like she was slipping into sin. Left it untied for now. Let it hang open just enough to tease the tops of her thighs and the gentle curve of her belly. The sash fluttered behind her as she pinned up her hair—messy, tousled, purposeful. A few curls left dangling, one just barely brushing the edge of her jaw.
After brushing her teeth and rinsing her face, she smeared on some lipstick. Not bright red. Something softer. Rosy. Like bitten fruit.
Then she went about her day.
As if nothing happened.
As if she hadn’t bent them both open last night with just her tongue and a few well-timed moans. As if they hadn’t taken turns between her legs while she coached them like a choir. As if she hadn’t come hard on each of their faces and laughed in between.
No, this morning she was sweet Delphine.
Wife of August Langston. Lady of the house.
She opened the windows. Wide.
Let the fresh Delta air pour through her home. The long white curtains danced, brushing her thighs as she passed. She hummed as she walked—a soft hymn, sweet and clean, like she hadn’t nearly choked on dick hours before.
A small bird landed on the kitchen sill. A brown thrasher. Her favorite.
“Well look at you,” she cooed.
She plucked a piece of biscuit from a tin on the counter—one from yesterday—and crumbled it in her palm. Opened the screen slow and let the bird take a peck. Her smile widened.
“Woke up hungry too, huh?”
She shut the screen with a gentle click and moved on. Humming louder now.
She didn’t rush. She swayed.
With each step, the silk of her robe slid over her bare nipples, caught between her thighs, kissed the heat of her already aroused cunt. She liked it like that. Liked how the morning air slid up between her legs when she bent over.
Which she did.
A lot.
She bent slow to sweep the veranda. Bent at the waist, letting her ass peek from beneath the robe as the sun rose behind her. Let her breasts sway freely, hair spilling to one side. She swept like a woman possessed, hips rocking gently with each stroke of the broom.
Then she moved back inside to cook. The kitchen smelled like butter and sassafras as she set out everything she’d need. Grits. Bacon. Biscuits. Eggs. Molasses. Fresh churned butter. A slice of peach pie she thought about frying up in the skillet with cinnamon and cream.
“Mm,” she purred, running a finger through a bowl of syrupy fruit.
She licked her fingertip. Sucked it, slow.
Eyes fluttered shut.
“Mmm…mmph. Whew laaawd,” she whispered, fanning herself with a folded napkin as she leaned back against the counter. Her fingers fluttered against the base of her throat, then slid down…just briefly. Just to her collarbone.
She drew lazy shapes over her chest.
Rolled her shoulders.
Let the robe slip off one side and didn’t bother fixing it.
She moved to the skillet, stirring thick grits with a wooden spoon. Slowly. Sensually. She bent just slightly at the hips as she stirred—just enough to make her ass shimmy. If anyone was watching, they’d think she was doing it on purpose.
They’d be right.
She leaned in to check the oven, pulled it open, and let the heat blast her thighs. She didn’t flinch. Just stood there, legs parted, letting the warmth stroke the bare lips of her pussy. Her folds were already slick from memory alone. She could still feel Stack’s tongue, Smoke’s lips, the way their moans vibrated against her core.
She arched her back and sighed. Whispered a soft, sinful “Whew…”
And then she got back to stirring.
Like nothing ever happened.
She made fresh-squeezed juice, licking the sweet citrus from her knuckles. She powdered her décolletage, humming a dirty blues tune she tried to cover with a hymn. She fan-flipped her hair in the mirror with a smirk that would melt wax. All while two young men slept in her house—naked, drained, dreaming of her mouth.
And as for Miss Delphine?
She had plans, but for now, she let them rest. Because she knew boys like that always wake up hungry.
The smell hit him first.
Stack stirred, blinked once, then again—eyes adjusting to the haze of sunlight creeping through the slatted blinds. His room was warm. Too warm. Sheets tangled around one leg, his bare chest slick with sweat and sleep. But the scent…
Butter. Bacon. Sweet peaches and sausage. Something thick and milky on the stove. And beneath it—her. Delphine. The ghost of her still lingered on his lips.
He shifted.
His dick was hard again. Just from the smell of her breakfast and the way his memory played tricks on his body. A grown woman had sucked his soul out less than twelve hours ago and was now cooking for him like nothing happened. Like she hadn’t squirted on his tongue and walked away whistling.
He ran a hand down his face and groaned.
“Fuck.”
He slid from the bed slowly, naked as the day he was born. His clothes were still crumpled on the floor, but he didn’t bother with all of them. Just stepped into his slacks—no drawers—and let them hang low on his hips. No shirt. Barefoot. He scratched absently at his jaw as he walked toward the door.
That’s when he heard it.
The soft click of the hallway bathroom door opening. He peeked out and saw Smoke, stepping into the hall.
His twin had a towel over his shoulder, another in his hand, dabbing at his face. His slacks were on, hung just as low, but his chest was still damp from the wash-up. The sharp V of his hips glistened. His curls were wet and messy. His eyes, though half-lidded, were watchful. Alert. Just like Stack’s.
They made eye contact. Didn’t speak at first.
Just nodded, slow.
A quiet understanding between brothers.
Then Smoke glanced down the hallway, where the scent of bacon rode thick through the house.
“She cookin’,” he murmured.
Stack smirked, lazy and knowing, “That’s what it smell like.”
Smoke stepped aside, “Bathroom’s free.”
Stack padded across the hall, brushing shoulders with him as he passed, “Appreciate it.”
The bathroom was still steamy from Smoke’s rinse. Stack grabbed the basin, cupped his hands, and splashed his face. The cold water shocked him just enough to bring him fully into his body. He reached for the small tin jar on the shelf—some kind of tooth powder Delphine must’ve kept. There was a little brush laid beside it. Horsehair. Fancy.
He dipped the brush, wet it, and started to scrub his teeth.
Smoke lingered outside the door.
“You sleep?” Stack asked, voice muffled.
“Barely.”
Stack spat. Wiped his mouth, “Me neither.”
They were quiet for a moment.
Then Smoke’s voice again, lower this time:
“She got some kinda hold, huh?”
Stack chuckled, shaking his head as he rubbed his jaw with a towel, “Man. I ain’t never in my life…”
He trailed off, lost in the memory.
The slurp. The suction. The heat. The eyes.
“She put somethin’ in that pussy,” Stack said, voice rough, “She gotta be cursed or touched or…some kinda honey magic.”
Smoke didn’t laugh. Just muttered, “Something.”
They both stood in silence again, staring into different corners of the same thought. Then Stack stepped out the bathroom, leaning in the doorway with the towel still around his neck.
“She act like last night ain’t even happen,” he said, squinting toward the stairs, “Got birds singin’ outside, Windows open. Smell like a juke joint breakfast after revival.”
Smoke nodded, jaw flexing.
“She dangerous.”
Stack smirked, “That the part you like?”
Smoke didn’t answer.
He didn’t need to.
They both turned slightly toward the stairwell at the end of the hall. The scent was stronger now. Butter and spice and something baked.
But underneath it all?
Her.
She was down there—bare-legged and barefoot, probably humming again, hips swaying with every stir of her spoon. That silk robe barely hiding the wicked she wore like perfume.
Stack let out a slow breath.
“You ready?”
Smoke nodded, “Let’s eat.”
The stairs creaked beneath their bare feet.
Smoke led the way, still drying the back of his neck with the towel, slacks slung low, chest bare and clean. Stack trailed behind—equally shirtless, belt loose, that sleepy-lusty look in his eyes. Neither of them spoke as they descended. They didn’t have to. The scent of grits and sweet cream, frying bacon, and hot peaches hit them like a punch to the chest. But it was her they smelled underneath it all.
Still fresh. Still warm. Still haunting.
And then they saw her.
Delphine.
Standing at the stove like some kind of housewife fantasy sent straight from hell. Silk robe—champagne-colored and criminally short—barely covering the round of her ass. Her legs bare and golden. Her hair pinned up in a messy twist, a few curls falling at the nape of her neck. One bare shoulder peeking out. Nipples just barely visible beneath the thin silk. Lipstick soft, fresh, and bitten. Feet bare. Ankles delicate. Hips rocking slow with every stir of the grits.
And she was humming. A hymn. Sweet and pure. Like her throat hadn’t been full of two dicks and heavy jewels the night before.
Smoke froze halfway into the kitchen.
Stack bit his bottom lip.
Delphine glanced over her shoulder with that same soft, sugary smile. As if they were just neighbors dropping in. As if she hadn’t ridden both their tongues and made them beg.
“Well good mornin’, boys,” she purred, “Y’all sleep alright?”
Neither answered at first.
Stack was the first to recover. He stepped forward, leaned against the doorframe with one shoulder, arms crossed over his chest, watching her every move.
“Somethin’ sure smells good,” he drawled.
Delphine didn’t look at him right away. Just kept stirring—hips swaying side to side, robe shifting dangerously.
“Mm. I figured y’all might be hungry this mornin’. Put a little extra butter in the grits. Bacon’s thick-cut. Biscuits just came out the oven. Got some peach preserves too…little sticky, but sweet.”
She glanced back, her smile laced with venomous innocence.
Smoke cleared his throat, “That for us?”
Delphine turned, slow, “Course it is. Y’all guests, ain’t ya?”
She walked to the table, hips rolling like tidewater. Set down the plates—two of them—heavy and full. Eggs piled soft and golden. Grits rich and steaming. Bacon curled and perfect. She slid each plate down in front of them like offerings at an altar.
Then—without a word—she climbed up onto the table between them.
Leg crossed.
Hip poked out.
Silk robe riding high on her thigh.
Neither man moved. They just stared. Still. Silenced.
She reached behind her and grabbed a small porcelain bowl she’d placed earlier—filled with fresh sliced fruit. Grapes, peaches, bits of plum. Cold and glistening.
Delphine plucked a piece of peach first.
Turned to Smoke.
“Open, baby,” she whispered.
He didn’t hesitate.
She slid the peach slice past his lips, slow.
Watched him chew. Watched his jaw flex. Watched his eyes darken like storm clouds rolling in.
Then she turned to Stack.
Plucked a grape. Raised it to his mouth.
He leaned in, smirking just slightly, and sucked it off her fingers with a low hum. Let his lips linger on her fingertip just a beat too long.
Delphine didn’t flinch.
She just laughed under her breath and reached for another fruit. Then began to speak, all business.
“Now,” she said, soft and proper, “August left y’all a little list of things he was hopin’ to get done ‘round the property today.”
She fed Smoke again. A plum this time.
He licked the juice from the corner of his mouth.
Delphine continued, “Shed doors out back need fixin’. Hinges loose and one of ‘em don’t close all the way. If y’all don’t mind takin’ a look?”
Stack nodded slowly, lips parted.
She fed him another grape.
“Mmhmm,” he said, chewing slow, “We got it.”
“Good,” she purred, “Kitchen cupboard near the sink’s comin’ off the hinge too. I was gonna wait for August to do it, but…I got two strong men right here.”
She smiled between them.
Smoke’s jaw tensed. Stack shifted in his seat.
She knew what she was doing.
“And the fence near the chicken coop?” she went on, plucking another piece of peach, “One of them posts done leaned in like it’s drunk. Might could use a reset.”
She didn’t offer the fruit this time. She licked it herself.
Slow. Tip of her tongue curling around the syrupy edge before she bit down.
“Oh, and if y’all hear any strange noises near the barn… don’t pay it no mind. Just possums gettin’ bold.”
She fanned herself with a napkin, tilted her head back, neck exposed, robe falling deeper into sin.
“Whew laaawd…it’s gettin’ warm already.”
Stack let out a low whistle, “You sure you want us to go outside? We could stay here. Fix a few things in the kitchen first.”
Delphine raised a brow, mock scandalized.
“Now, Mr. Moore, are you flirtin’ with a married woman before breakfast is even finished?”
Stack grinned, “Didn’t seem to bother you none last night.”
Delphine didn’t blink.
She just leaned in close, her voice velvet, “Well baby, that was last night.”
Then she popped another grape into her mouth and chewed, slow. The juice dripped down her thumb. She licked it—tight suction, eyes closed.
When she looked back at them, she smiled.
“Y’all better eat. Don’t want your food gettin’ cold.”
The sun had climbed higher now, burning lazy through the thick Mississippi air. It glazed the house and yard in that golden haze, made sweat bead up along the spines of working men, and turned every movement slow—slower than sin.
Smoke was out by the fence, shirtless, slacks clinging low to his hips, hammer in one hand, nail balanced in the other. His forearms flexed with each strike. Jaw clenched. Back damp. Stack was kneeling near the shed, elbow-deep in rusted hinges and fresh curses. A cigarette hung unlit from his lips. Sweat rolled down his temple.
That’s when they heard her screen door creak.
Delphine.
She floated down the porch steps barefoot, a sweating pitcher of lemonade in one hand and two cold glasses pinched elegantly in the other. She moved like she had all the time in the world, like she wasn’t about to ruin the men she was walking toward. Her dress was gauze-thin, the color of cream soaked in sunlight. It clung to her body in all the right places—and all the wrong ones. The breeze caught the hem, lifted it just enough to show the sway of bare thighs. No drawers. No bra. Her nipples pressed firm against the fabric, hard from heat and intent.
She was humming.
Low and lazy. Something that might’ve been a hymn… or a slow drag blues tune. When she reached them, she stopped in the middle—between fence and shed—and looked them both over with the kind of smile that made men sell their souls.
“Whew,” she breathed, fanning her collarbone with the edge of her hand, “Y’all workin’ so hard…made me feel like bringin’ out somethin’ cold.”
Stack looked up from his crouch, jaw ticking. Smoke set the hammer down, slow.
Delphine set the glasses on a nearby bench and poured. The lemonade slid thick and slow, catching light. Ice clinked. The pitcher hissed with sweat. She poured Stack’s first. Just a little too slow. Just enough to let the sugar drip down her fingers.
“Oh…” she said sweetly, “’Scuse me.”
She lifted her hand to her mouth and sucked the sugar off two fingers, slow and deliberate. Her tongue curled around the tips, lips closing tight with a slick little pop. Smoke watched, expression unreadable—but his chest was rising faster.
Delphine turned to him next.
“Yours comin’ up, baby.”
She leaned forward to pour his glass—and leaned too far. Her breasts hung heavy beneath the gauze, swaying with every tilt of her wrist. He could see the soft outline of her nipple through the fabric. Could smell her now—fresh lemon, honey sweat, and something darker. Something still lingering from last night.
“Oops…”
She let the pitcher drip just a touch. The lemonade spilled over the rim, ran down the side of the glass, and over her hand. She licked that, too.
Stack stood up slowly, eyes dragging down the line of her body like a man looking for sin on a Sunday, “You tryin’ to kill us, woman?”
Delphine just laughed—sweet, light, dangerous.
Then, without warning, she walked behind him.
Stack didn’t move.
She pulled a wooden chair from beside the bench and straddled it backward, her sundress parting just slightly at the center. Her bare thighs kissed the sides of the seat. The curve of her ass pressed to the top rail. She folded her arms on the backrest, resting her chin on them. Watching him work.
“Don’t mind me,” she said, voice all syrup and smirk, “Just keepin’ y’all company.”
Stack muttered something low and filthy under his breath.
Smoke turned away, jaw flexing. Tried to focus. Picked the hammer back up.
Delphine just sat there, humming again. Her thighs glowed in the light. Her lips glistened from sugar. Every time they stole a glance—she was looking already.
Then she was in the garden.
Like the water run hadn’t already wrecked them both. Like the juice she sucked from her fingers didn’t still sit heavy on their tongues. Like she hadn’t already straddled a chair behind Stack, lips curled in a lazy grin, watching the sweat roll down his back like it was her favorite show.
But now?
Now she was barefoot in the garden. Bent low, hips high, arms deep in the soil like she was being blessed by it. The same gauzy sundress clung damp to her skin—splotched with water, pinched by breeze, and painted with light. It barely covered her. Didn’t try to. The lace trim danced around her thighs as she moved, but offered no real modesty. Every time she bent forward, the back lifted.
Stack could see everything.
Smoke saw it too. He was across the yard, fixing the fence post August had asked about, but his eyes had drifted again. He was trying to work. Really trying. But all he could think about was the sweet curve of her ass, the way her dress split open like a ripe fig, the sun turning every bead of sweat into glitter on her thighs.
“Damn shame,” Stack muttered, his hammer resting against the shed.
She didn’t look up. Not at first.
She just kept pulling weeds and pretending she didn’t know they were watching.
But she knew.
Her back arched deeper. She shifted her stance—left leg planted, right one out, open just slightly. Her fingers dug into the earth, but her lips parted like she was remembering their mouths.
Then came the sound, That soft, low moan.
Not loud.
But enough.
“Mmm…”
A sweet, sensual hum—like she’d found the softest dirt in the Delta. Or maybe like she was grinding on memory. Either way, it knocked the air right out of Smoke’s chest. Stack leaned on the side of the shed, chewing a toothpick now to keep his mouth busy. His pants were tight. Real tight. And he hated how easily she did this to him.
“You see this shit?” he asked toward Smoke without taking his eyes off her.
Smoke grunted, jaw locked. Didn’t respond.
Delphine finally looked up. Only then.
Hands dirty, smile wicked.
“Oh,” she said, pretending surprise, “Y’all still workin’? I thought maybe y’all packed it in, the way everything got so…quiet.”
She stood slowly, wiping her hands on her thighs. Purposefully smearing the dirt higher, The dress clung worse now. Between the heat and the work, it was practically glued to her skin. She fanned herself with her hand and looked toward the house.
“I oughta rinse off before I start ya’ll lunch,” she said, voice innocent as a dove, “Might wash out here. Ain’t nothin’ wrong with a little sun on the skin.”
She turned—slow—and walked back toward the house.
Stack watched the sway of her ass, the outline of everything beneath that thin cotton. He looked toward Smoke again, voice rough:
“We gon’ die here.”
Smoke didn’t disagree.
By late afternoon, the Delta heat was heavy enough to press a man to prayer. Cicadas hummed loud in the trees. The air hung thick with honeysuckle and sawdust. Smoke was still at the fence post, forearms flexing with each strike, shirt long abandoned, chest slick and gleaming. Stack had moved closer to the side of the house, now fixing the warped kitchen shutter—just below the open window Delphine had leaned out of earlier to hum and tease and ruin.
Neither of them saw her come out the back door.
But they heard the creak.
And when they turned, she was already at the wash basin—bent low, lace hem hiked, thighs parted just so.
Delphine.
Barefoot. Bare-legged. Damp curls pinned up high but falling loose around her neck. That same white cotton slip, thin as moonlight, sticking to the small of her back and the curve of her ass like it had been painted there.
She crouched down next to a tin bowl filled with cool water from the pump. She dipped her hands in first—fingers delicate, movements slow—then cupped her palms, lifted, and poured the water down over her chest
The fabric turned see-through instantly.
It clung to her nipples, hard and proud, the pink of her areolas clearly visible beneath the wet cotton. The water ran between her breasts, down her sternum, and disappeared beneath the soft swell of her belly.
Stack froze mid-step, one hand braced against the wood siding.
Smoke dropped a nail.
Delphine didn’t look at them. Not yet.
She cupped another handful of water and poured it behind her neck. Arched her back. Let out a quiet, breathy “mmm…” as it slid down her spine. The slip clung tighter with every drop, now fully pasted to her backside, leaving almost nothing to the imagination. Then she sat back on her heels—legs open, knees pressed wide, lace trim bunched at the crease of her thighs.
Water dripped between them. Slowly.
The breeze licked her bare folds. She didn’t close her legs.
She took a small cloth—threadbare and soft—and began dabbing the insides of her thighs, not to dry… but to tease. Her fingers moved slow, deliberate, pressing the cloth between her legs and holding it there. Her mouth parted.
She whispered something to herself.
Neither man could hear it, but the look on her face?
That said enough.
Her eyes fluttered shut. Her lips curved. She rubbed the cloth in a soft, circular motion—once, then again. A third time. And then she let it drop back into the basin like it burned her.
Only then did she look toward them.
Eyes lazy. Lidded. Hungry.
“Oh,” she purred, “Y’all losing focus? Didn’t mean to distract.”
Stack’s jaw was clenched. Hard. One hand gripped the windowsill, knuckles white. Smoke stood behind the fence post like it was the only thing holding him upright.
Delphine smiled, soft and slow.
“Hot day,” she said, almost a whisper, “Needed a little cool-down. Hope y’all don’t mind.”
She reached for the basin again—tipped it forward—and let the water pour down the front of her dress in one last long stream, soaking her completely. It splashed her thighs, clung to her mound, dripped from the place they both dreamed about.
She gasped at the cold.
Pressed one hand to her chest.
Arched, just slightly.
Then stood. Slipped her fingers beneath the hem of the dress and wrung out the fabric between her legs. The sound was obscene. Wet. Sloppy. She turned, hips glistening, thighs slick, and walked back toward the house—bare ass bouncing beneath cotton so soaked it was transparent.
Stack stared so hard he forgot to blink.
Smoke muttered something under his breath that sounded like a prayer. Or a curse.
And both men?
Rock hard. Breathless.
Ruined.
The screen door shut behind her with a soft click. Delphine was gone from sight now, but the image lingered—wet thighs, lace clinging to her cunt, that smirk like she knew exactly what she’d done to them. And she did. Stack stood near the porch steps, breathing hard. His chest rose and fell like he’d just fought somebody. His jaw twitched. One hand balled at his side, the other flexed like it didn’t know what to grab—his dick or a damn rope to pull him back from the edge.
“She crazy,” he muttered, “She fuckin’ crazy.”
He turned toward the steps.
Started moving.
But Smoke’s voice came sharp behind him.
“Stack.”
He didn’t stop.
“Stack,” Smoke said again—louder, firmer.
Stack froze at the base of the steps, fists clenched. He turned back, slow. Sweat slid down the line of his neck. Smoke stood a few yards away, shirt still off, chest heaving, his mouth tight with restraint. He didn’t walk closer. Just held his ground.
“Don’t,” he said, “Don’t go in there.”
Stack’s eyes narrowed, “You gonna try and stop me?”
Smoke didn’t blink, “You don’t need to go in there hot like that.”
Stack laughed—low and bitter. Ran his tongue across the inside of his cheek, looked off like he was trying to find the words. Then his eyes locked back on his brother.
“She got me fucked up, ‘Lijah,” he said, voice rough, “Out here playin’ like that. Dress all see-through. Water runnin’ between her legs like she know what she doin’. Like she want me to see it.”
He took a step closer to the porch.
“I’ma tear her ass up.”
Smoke’s jaw flexed. His hand twitched by his side. Stack pointed back toward the house, voice lower now—gritted.
“You see how she wrung that damn dress out right between her legs? You see that shit?”
Smoke didn’t answer.
Stack stepped forward again, this time slower. More deliberate.
“She want it. I ain’t stupid. That woman up there actin’ like she cookin’ biscuits and hangin’ laundry but she’s beggin’ for it without sayin’ a word. And I ain’t gon’ let her play me like a boy.”
Another step.
“I’ma tear her up, Smoke. I mean that,” he balled his fist, “Best believe I’m gon get her.”
Smoke’s voice came like gravel.
“You do it angry, she gon’ flip it on you.”
Stack paused. Eyes locked. Breathing ragged.
“I ain’t angry.”
A beat.
“I’m needy.”
The tension between them was tight enough to choke.
Stack’s chest was still rising heavy, jaw set like stone. Smoke hadn’t moved, but his eyes were sharp—watchful. The sun pressed down on their skin, slick with sweat, dust stuck to their forearms, and Delphine’s ghost still dancing behind their eyes.
Then the screen door creaked open again.
Delphine stepped out.
Same robe as before.
Champagne-colored. Thin. Wrong.
It clung to her like it belonged there, cinched lazy at the waist, just barely holding the heat of her body behind satin. Her thighs were glowing. Breasts soft and high beneath the fabric. Hair still pinned up, though a few curls had fallen loose. Lipstick still fresh, like she’d only just touched it up. She stood in the doorway, hands on her hips, grinning like she hadn’t just pushed both men to the brink of madness.
“Lunch is ready,” she called out.
Her voice was light. Sweet. Wholesome.
Her eyes weren’t.
She looked between them, slow. Let her gaze linger. One on Stack. One on Smoke. That curve of a smile never faltered.
“And don’t you two filthy things dare sit at my table with them hands. Go on and wash.”
Then she turned and disappeared inside, bare feet tapping soft across the kitchen floor.
Smoke exhaled first. Stack shook his head like he’d been snapped out of a spell.
“Woman act like she don’t even know what she done,” he muttered, heading toward the steps.
Smoke followed behind, still silent, still unreadable.
They washed up at the spout out back, dried their hands on a towel that smelled like lemon and lavender, then stepped up onto the veranda—both plates in hand. Lunch was hearty: smothered pork chops, stewed okra, cornbread soaked with honey, and tea cold enough to draw sweat on the glass.
They ate standing up.
Neither man said much.
Then—
the sound of a car. Gravel crunching. An engine slowing.
Both turned.
A battered old Chevrolet pickup was rolling up the dirt drive, tires spitting dust. Inside, a man—late fifties maybe. Skin dark and tanned by years of sun, wearing a straw hat and a crooked grin. The back of his truck was stacked with lumber. He parked and stepped out slow, wiping his hands on a rag. Looked around the property. Spat once. Then his eyes caught on something—or someone.
Delphine.
She’d just stepped out onto the path again.
Still in that robe.
Still barefoot.
Still glowing with whatever that was only she knew how to carry.
The man’s mouth dropped a little.
Delphine didn’t flinch.
She walked toward him, hips swaying in that slow rhythm that had already hollowed two younger men out. She didn’t speed up. Didn’t act surprised. Just nodded once in greeting.
“Mornin’, Mr. Granger,” she said sweetly, “Right on time.”
The man adjusted his hat, eyes never leaving her body, “Got that lumber your husband asked for.”
“Mmm. Yes. I was wonderin’ if you could stack it near the side of the barn. That corner under the awning—he wants to keep it dry.”
Her hand rose to fix the tie on her robe. But she did it absentmindedly. Tugged it just a little tighter. One side slipped, exposing the curve of her breast before she adjusted again. Not rushed. Not flustered. Unbothered.
Mr. Granger swallowed hard.
From the veranda, Smoke and Stack both watched.
Smoke’s brow ticked.
Stack chewed slower, jaw flexing.
Delphine turned slightly to point at the spot—one hand lifting to gesture, the other brushing her hair back from her neck. Her whole silhouette gleamed in the sunlight. The robe clung. The swell of her hip pressed through the fabric.
Mr. Granger stared.
Asked something. Probably dumb.
Delphine laughed. A light, honeyed laugh. Like she didn’t notice his gaze crawling all over her like heat on glass.
“She playin’ too damn much,” Stack muttered, licking honey from his thumb.
Smoke said nothing. Just kept chewing. Kept watching.
But his hand gripped the edge of the veranda railing.
Hard.
The screen door creaked behind him. Stack stepped inside, the cool air of the kitchen brushing over his sweat-damp skin. His bare chest still glistened from the sun, pants slung low, boots leaving a faint trail of dust on the clean wooden floor.
Delphine was by the sink.
Still in that robe.
Still barefoot.
Still the most dangerous thing in the room.
Her back was to him—shoulders relaxed, hips easy, humming low under her breath as she ran water over a glass bowl. She was rinsing peaches. Casual. Calm. Like she hadn’t spent the day pulling them apart with every moan, sway, and glance.
Stack’s jaw flexed.
He took his time walking in. Didn’t announce himself. Just leaned against the doorframe, arms crossed, eyes dragging slow down the length of her body.
“You always like this?” he asked finally.
Delphine didn’t turn.
“Like what, baby?”
His tongue pressed to the inside of his cheek.
“Walkin’ ‘round damn near naked. Moanin’ into open windows. Splashin’ your pussy in front of folks like it’s just another pot to rinse.”
That made her smile.
She turned then—slow and soft—still drying her hands on a towel.
“You mad about the peaches, Elias?” she asked sweetly, “Or the pussy?”
His nostrils flared.
Delphine walked past him without waiting for an answer, swaying toward the table to grab a fresh napkin. Her robe shifted with every step, that satin whisper of a hem barely brushing the backs of her thighs. She bent—just slightly—to pick something up off the chair cushion.
Stack’s eyes dropped instantly.
“You enjoy torturin’ men?” he asked, voice lower now.
Delphine stood upright again, turning back toward him with that calm, unbothered expression that made him ache, “Torture’s such a harsh word,” she said, folding the napkin delicately, “I just like seein’ what a man’s made of.”
Stack laughed under his breath. Stepped off the wall. Closed the distance slow, one heavy boot at a time.
“Keep playin’ like that, Delphine…” he murmured, “I’ma show you exactly what I’m made of.”
She tilted her head, “Mmm. Promise?”
He stopped just in front of her—close enough to feel her breath. His eyes dropped to her mouth. His voice dropped too.
“You don’t know what you doin’. You think you runnin’ the show, but all you doin’ is wakin’ somethin’ up that ain’t gon’ let you sleep.”
Delphine didn’t move.
Didn’t blink.
Didn’t retreat.
Instead, she took a slow step forward—closer than close now—until the silk of her robe brushed his stomach. She looked up at him with that same lazy, dangerous smile.
“Maybe I like wakin’ things up.”
Stack’s breath caught.
She reached past him—to grab a spoon off the counter—but let her chest press against him in the process. Just for a second. Just enough. Her nipple grazed his skin through the robe.
Stack clenched his jaw, hard.
“You tryin’ to get fucked in this kitchen?” he asked, voice tight.
Delphine turned around—back to him again—and stirred something in a bowl like he hadn’t just threatened to bend her over the damn counter.
“You tryin’ to lose control in front of your brother?” she replied, light as sugar, “’Cause that’s what I see.”
Stack’s lips parted. His hands twitched at his sides.
She glanced over her shoulder, coy.
“Go on and breathe, baby. You run hot, don’t you?”
He stepped forward, fast. One hand caught the edge of the counter beside her. His voice was a rasp.
“Don’t play with me.”
Delphine didn’t even flinch. She just dipped her finger into the batter—slowly—then licked it clean.
Her lips smacked.
“I’m not playin’,” she said softly. “I’m just…preppin’ the oven.”
She walked past him again.
This time, her eyes lingered.
And he didn’t follow.
Not yet.
Stack didn’t move. Just stood with his arms crossed, chest still heaving, pupils still blown wide. That heat was still there—beneath his skin, in his jaw, his clenched fists. Delphine’s scent, her sway, her smirk… all of it had left him twitching like a fuse about to light.
And then the screen door creaked.
Smoke entered.
Quiet.
Heavy-footed. Bare-chested. Tension walking. He closed the door behind him with a slow click and looked between them—first at Stack, who gave him a sharp nod, and then at Delphine.
She was already looking.
That same lazy, dangerous smile curling her lips like the steam rising off the gumbo pot on the stove. But there was something new behind her eyes now.
Challenge.
She gave Stack one last glance—just a flick of the eyes, a smirk of a smirk—and then turned with a slow, dragging sway toward the dining room.
Every step was intentional.
Like the floor itself bowed for her.
She pulled out a chair at the head of the table, slow and graceful, turned it toward herself—and looked at Smoke.
“Sit down, baby.”
Her voice was soft. Low. Like a secret between lovers.
Smoke didn’t speak. He obeyed.
He stepped forward, silent and slow, those dark eyes never leaving her. His jaw was tense, his chest rising steady, but his body moved like it had no question. No hesitation. He lowered himself into the chair, spreading his legs just slightly, hands resting on his thighs.
Delphine stepped between them.
And then—she straddled him.
Slid down onto his lap like honey pouring slow, one thigh at a time wrapping around his hips. The robe hiked. Her skin touched his. No panties. Just warm, wet heat resting soft against the front of his slacks.
Smoke sucked in a slow breath through his nose.
Delphine leaned forward—one hand resting on his chest, the other brushing over his thick hair. Her lips just inches from his own. Her voice? Velvet sin.
“You agree with your brother?” she asked sweetly.
She kissed his jaw.
“Hmm?”
She dragged her lips across his cheek, down to his neck. Her hips rolled once against him, soft and slow, “Think I been misbehavin’?” Her hand trailed lower, brushing across the hard line beneath his waistband, “You think I been a bad girl?” she whispered.
And then—
She leaned in close, her lips brushing his ear.
“You think I been a little ol’ whore, Elijah?”
The word came sugar-slick. Southern-slow. Like she’d said it before. Like she liked saying it.
She pulled back just enough to look into his eyes.
Smoke stared up at her. His hands hadn’t moved.
His voice came low.
Gravel.
Controlled fire.
“…Yeah.”
Delphine’s eyes fluttered. Just slightly.
“Think I been a lil’ nasty bitch?”
Smoke’s lips curved.
“You been walkin’ ‘round this house like a lil’ backwoods pussy-slickin’ Jezebel,” he said, each word unhurried, unmerciful.
Delphine’s thighs clenched around him.
He went on.
“Moanin’ through open windows. Drippin’ water down your slit like you ain’t had two grown men starin’ at you ready to fuck the soul out your body.”
Her mouth parted.
Her breath hitched.
“And now you sittin’ on my lap, askin’ questions you already know the answer to.”
A pause.
Smoke tilted his head up, eyes sharp, jaw set.
“Yeah, baby. You been a nasty lil’ thing.”
Delphine let out a quiet moan in the back of her throat. Stack watched it all from the kitchen—arms still crossed, dick still hard, rage and arousal warring in his chest. Watching her straddle his brother. Watching Smoke speak filth into her ear like he wasn’t the quiet one.
Delphine turned just slightly, eyes flicking to Stack again.
She licked her lips.
Whispered to Smoke—but loud enough to be heard.
“You wanna see how nasty I can get?”
Delphine rocked her hips slow.
Real slow.
Her slick heat rubbed along the hard shape of Smoke beneath her, separated only by the rough fabric of his slacks. Each grind was drawn out—measured, like a sermon dragged on for the purpose of temptation.
Smoke didn’t speak. Didn’t move.
His hands were still on his thighs. Still.
But his jaw was tight. His nostrils flared with every pass of her soaked pussy over him.
Delphine moaned low against his neck, her arms sliding around his shoulders, fingers curling in the damp curls at his nape. She wasn’t rushing. She was savoring. Her lips brushed his ear as she whispered between breathy gasps:
“August says I oughta go away…”
Another roll of her hips. Slow and wicked.
“Says I’m too hungry. Too filthy. Says I need a room in a house far from men…”
Her voice trembled, but not from sadness—from pleasure.
Her lips grazed Smoke’s temple, her thighs tightening around his waist.
“He said no woman should need dick like I do.”
She ground against him again—harder this time. A whimper slipped from her lips. She let it happen. Let it echo in the room.
“Said it’s unnatural.”
Smoke swallowed. Hard.
Delphine’s hand slid down his chest, fingers spreading over his sternum, nails dragging lightly across his skin.
“Do you agree?” she whispered, “You think I’m indecent?”
Neither man answered.
Not a word.
But the heat in Smoke’s eyes, the way his chest rose beneath her, the twitch in his thigh muscle beneath her leg—it told her everything.
Still, she wanted more.
Her fingers tightened in his curls. Fisted. She yanked his head back just enough to expose his throat.
“What’s your favorite thing about my body?” she asked, voice hoarse now. Dangerous.
Her other hand slipped between them.
She untied the sash of her robe.
Let it fall open like petals in the sun.
Breasts bared. Nipples hard. Skin glowing and soft and mine, mine, mine. She was breathing hard now. But her eyes never left his.
“Hmm?” she purred, “You like my titties? My mouth? The way my pussy soaks your lap like I’m beggin’ for you?”
Smoke’s lips parted, just slightly.
Delphine leaned closer. Her breast pressed to his chest. Her hips rolled again—slower, filthier.
“You like the way I fuck?” she whispered, “Like a married woman who ain’t been touched right in years?”
She dragged his lower lip between her teeth. Not biting—just holding.
Then she released it and moaned against his cheek.
“You gon’ let me sit on your face, baby?”
Smoke’s hands moved.
Finally.
They gripped her thighs like claiming, like possession had just started.
Stack made a noise from across the room.
Like a growl swallowed down too late.
Delphine’s head turned, just enough to look at him—still seated. Still watching. Still raging and rock hard.
She smiled.
And ground down harder.
Smoke’s hands were still on her thighs. Tense. Trembling. Fighting against the instinct to flip her, tear that robe off, and ruin her right there on the chair. But before he could act—Delphine lifted.
Lifted slow.
Lifted wet.
His slacks glistened where her soaked heat had marked him. His dick strained hard, thick and angry against the fabric.
She kissed the side of his jaw one last time and whispered, “Don’t move yet.”
Then she turned.
Graceful.
Hips leading like gospel rhythm.
Her robe had fallen open fully now—slipping from her shoulders, draped behind her like scandal. She walked toward the center of the kitchen with a sway that belonged in dreams and baptisms gone wrong.
Stack watched her move like she was the rapture itself.
She stopped. Turned. Looked at him.
“C’mere,” she said.
Her voice wasn’t loud.
But it landed.
Stack didn’t budge at first. He stood tall. Arms still crossed. Head cocked slightly like he needed clarification.
Delphine raised a brow, chin tilted. That syrupy smirk rising.
“I said come here, baby.”
Still, Stack hesitated. He licked his lips, jaw tight.
“You ain’t gon’ boss me around like I’m one of them boys beggin’ in the juke line,” he muttered.
Delphine’s smile widened.
“You already beggin’. You just too proud to know it.”
Then, like the filthiest fairy tale ever whispered, she lifted her leg—slow, smooth, deliberate—and hiked it onto the edge of the kitchen counter next to the steaming pot of gumbo.
The robe slid further off her body, baring her entirely.
Her pussy was glistening. Open. Dripping.
She looked down at herself, then back at Stack.
“Wanna make sure I got a good clean earlier,” she said sweetly, “That cloth felt real nice, but I’m wonderin’ if I missed a spot…”
Stack twitched.
His fists clenched at his sides.
Smoke shifted behind them in the chair—silent, barely breathing, still throbbing in his pants. Delphine dragged two fingers across her inner thigh, slow as vanilla bean paste.
“Come inspect me, baby,” she purred, “Real close. On your knees.”
Stack stared at her for a long beat.
Then he dropped.
Slow.
Knees hit the floor.
He crawled the last few inches like a man walking into hell, and grabbed hold of her hips, his face just inches from her slick, swollen folds.
He didn’t touch yet.
Just stared. Breathing heavy. Jaw ticking.
“F-FFuck,” he whispered.
Delphine looked down at him, the queen of all things indecent.
“You see somethin’ that needs cleanin’?”
Stack looked up—eyes blazing.
“You a filthy-ass bitch,” he muttered.
Delphine laughed.
Loud. Free.
The sound filled the kitchen like wind through satin curtains.
“Damn right I am,” she said, “That’s what August hates the most. Says I fuck like a stray. Says my body got a mind of its own.”
Stack groaned. Pressed his forehead to her thigh.
Delphine grabbed a fistful of his hair and guided his face just barely closer.
She whispered, “Tell me again what I am.”
Stack’s breath hit her skin.
“You a goddamn whore,” he rasped, “Drippin’ like this with your husband gone? Flashin’ your pussy like it’s the fuckin’ evening show?”
She gasped, soft and high.
Laughed again. Moaned right after.
“Mm. Yes, baby. Keep goin’.”
Smoke sat watching it all.
Still.
Ruined.
Waiting his turn.
The smell of her was dizzying. Warm, sweet, musky like molasses soaked through cotton drawers—except she wasn’t wearing any. Just bare, wet pussy lips glistening in the light over the stove. One thigh was hiked up on the counter next to the gumbo, and Stack was crouched on the floor like a sinner at the altar, hands braced on her hips, breath hot against her skin.
Delphine.
Robe open, one hand braced against the wall, the other wrapped around the handle of a kitchen drawer like it might float away if she didn’t hold it down.
“Slow,” she warned him, her voice syrupy but firm, fingers slipping into his hair as he leaned forward too fast, “Uh uh. This ain’t no race, lover.”
Stack paused. His mouth was damn near trembling from how bad he wanted to taste her.
He groaned low, lips brushing the top of her thigh, “You gon’ kill me.”
Delphine smiled, her nails scratching lightly across his scalp, “Then die slow.”
She guided him in, hand firm behind his head. Her thighs parted more. He started at her crease, tongue dragging up the slick heat of her pussy, tasting every bit of her teasing and all of her filth. She gasped. That pretty mouth of hers parted, eyes fluttering back.
“That’s it,” she cooed, hips starting to rock, “Lick me like you mean it. Like you want me to cum on your face.”
Stack moaned into her. He licked slow, then again, then circled her clit with the tip of his tongue, lazy and careful like he was tasting a peach for ripeness. Delphine rolled her hips into his face and let out a low, broken moan that tightened his pecker in his pants.
“Yesss…there you go, baby…”
Stack wrapped his arms around her thighs and buried himself deeper.
She was soft and wet and filthy, and he wanted all of it. He started moving faster, sucking her clit into his mouth with just enough pressure to make her cry out. Then—he slid two fingers inside her, slow and deep.
“Stack—ohhh, fuck…”
Her head dropped back. Mouth open. Her leg trembled. Her robe had fallen further. One breast was fully exposed, nipple hard and bouncing gently with each thrust of his fingers.
Stack didn’t stop. Didn’t come up for air.
Her hand twisted in his curls, pulling him tighter, grinding her hips right into his mouth.
“That’s it. Just like that. God, you learn quick…”
Stack flicked his tongue faster, groaning into her wetness, soaking his mouth, his chin, even the top of his chest. He could barely breathe. Didn’t want to. Wanted her to drown him in it.
She was moaning louder now.
One hand on the counter. One hand on his head.
Her voice rose—pure, Southern, filthy heat.
“You want it, baby? You want me to cum all over that pretty face?”
He nodded while eating. Sucked harder.
“I need it,” he panted against her skin, “Say my name when you do.”
Delphine’s body seized up.
Her thighs clenched around his head. Her breath caught.
Then she broke.
“Elias—fuck—Elias, don’t stop, don’t—don’t you stop—!”
Her pussy pulsed around his fingers. Her body shuddered against his mouth. She came like she was built to, wild and loud, hips jerking forward, voice cracking with pleasure.
He kept licking.
Slower now, sweetly, gently.
Kept his tongue on her clit while she trembled, while she whimpered his name, while her legs nearly gave out.
She exhaled hard. Laughed once. Breathless.
“Mmm…God, I could keep you down there forever.”
Stack finally pulled back, his face shining with her.
He looked up, lips swollen, eyes dark.
“Let me,” he said, “Please.”
Stack was still on his knees, breathless and shining. Delphine’s thigh slipped from the counter, shaky but sure, and she leaned forward—hands in his hair—and pulled him up by the mouth.
Their lips crashed together.
Filthy. Deep. Wet.
Her taste was still all over his chin, and she kissed him like she wanted to taste herself again. Her tongue swept through his mouth, curling against his. Her hands gripped the sides of his face as she moaned into him, hips grinding against his thigh. Stack groaned and kissed her back hard, his hands roaming, greedy.
Then—
Smoke stood.
The chair scraped back, soft but final.
Delphine didn’t break the kiss right away. But she smiled against Stack’s mouth.
“I knew you’d come,” she whispered.
She turned, robe still hanging loose, body bare and slick, and looked at him—Elijah.
He stood a few steps away, fists clenched, chest rising fast. His dick was rock hard and tenting the front of his pants, and his eyes were wild with restraint.
But underneath?
He was nervous.
She saw it.
And she softened.
“C’mere, baby,” she said, breath still ragged.
Smoke hesitated.
Delphine stepped closer, slowly, until they were chest to chest. Her hand lifted—gentle, tender—and cradled his cheek.
“You don’t have to rush. You ain’t gotta be perfect. Just feel.”
She took his hand and led him to the edge of the table. She hopped up, legs open, thighs glistening.
She slid her fingers between her folds and parted herself, shameless and glowing.
“Start here,” she whispered, voice sweet but dripping, “Slow…lick me like you tastein’ honey off your knuckles.”
Smoke dropped to his knees.
His breath hitched.
He leaned in, face flushed, eyes locked on her glistening heat. He inhaled—
And groaned.
Her scent was sweet, earthy, thick with heat and arousal. It punched him in the gut, made his mouth water, made his hands tremble as they gripped her thighs. His tongue touched her—tentative, a soft flick.
She gasped.
“Mm…there you go.”
He did it again. Longer this time.
Delphine let her head fall back slightly, one hand sliding through his curls.
“Don’t stop now,” she breathed, hips starting to rock, “Just like that, baby…yes…don’t you dare stop.”
Smoke’s tongue grew bolder—stroking, circling, tasting. He latched onto her clit with a gentle suck that made her cry out. Her thighs tensed around his head.
“Fuck—Elijah…”
Her voice was shaking now.
She was squirmin’ under his tongue, moanin’ like she was breakin’, gripping his curls, breath catching.
And Smoke?
He moaned into her—overwhelmed by her taste, by the slick glide of her heat on his lips, the wet sounds, the way she writhed under his mouth.
“Right there, right there, baby—oh, you learnin’ fast…”
He sucked again—deeper, longer, slower. She jerked.
Then—
She came.
Hard.
With a cry that echoed through the kitchen.
Her body bucked, thighs locked around his head, her voice breaking.
“Fuck, Smoke—don’t—don’t you—stop—don’t—”
But he didn’t.
He kept licking.
Slower. Deeper. Worshipful.
Because something had changed.
Smoke was shaking.
But he stayed between her thighs.
Longer than needed.
Tongue soft now. Gentle licks that dragged across her, making her twitch and tremble and whimper.
He didn’t want to stop.
Not ever.
He’d found something he hadn’t known he needed.
Her taste. Her sound. Her shaking. Her surrender.
He was addicted now.
Smoke didn’t come up. Didn’t pull away.
His tongue was steady now—focused, gentle but unrelenting. He licked her like a man who had found a new religion, like every soft gasp that left her lips fed something inside him. Delphine’s head was tipped back. Her curls shook with every tremble. Her thighs, once strong around his head, were starting to quiver.
Her mouth was open—but no words came. She couldn’t speak. Could barely breathe. Her body was fluttering, caught somewhere between ecstasy and prayer. Smoke’s tongue dragged up her slit again, slower this time. His lips latched back around her clit with a kind of worship.
And she jerked.
A choked noise left her throat. Her hand flew to his head, fingers twisting into his tight curls.
“Elijah,” she gasped, “Wait—baby…”
He moaned into her.
Didn’t pause.
Didn’t hear the warning for what it was.
Delphine gasped again, this time sharper—panicked with pleasure.
“I’m—oh—sugar, I’m gon’—”
She bit her lip.
Voice dropped to a whisper, ashamed but trembling with it, “Lawd, I’m ‘bout to gush—”
She tried to pull back.
But Smoke gripped her hips tighter and dragged her in.
And then—
She broke.
Delphine cried out, legs kicking, eyes flying wide as her orgasm spilled over, slick and sudden and shocking, a warm flood against Smoke’s mouth.
She squirted.
Hard.
Her thighs clamped. Her voice cracked.
“Oh my God—”
Smoke flinched. Eyes wide. The shock of it hit him—wet and messy and violent in its sweetness.
But he didn’t stop.
Not for a second.
He groaned against her, licking through it, tasting her release like it was something sacred. His hips rutted against the floor. He didn’t even realize he was doing it.
He was drunk now. Gone.
Delphine collapsed back against the table, one arm over her eyes, chest rising and falling like she’d just run through a storm. Her robe had slipped entirely off one shoulder. One breast rose and fell, glistening with sweat.
Her body twitched.
Her hand was still in his hair—but it wasn’t guiding anymore. It was holding on.
Smoke finally pulled back. Slowly.
His lips were shiny. His jaw was slack.
And his eyes?
Worship.
He looked up at her like he was seeing her for the first time. Delphine peeked down at him—eyes dazed, lips parted, chest still heaving.
She opened her mouth to speak.
But nothing came.
She just laughed once. Breathless.
Shook her head.
And Smoke?
He licked his lips slow.
And whispered—
“Do it again.”
Delphine was still catching her breath. Her body limp, her robe hanging half-off, her thighs twitching from aftershocks. But her hand? It didn’t let go of Smoke’s hair.
She tugged.
Soft at first. Then firmer.
“Elijah,” she whispered.
He looked up.
His mouth was slick, lips swollen, chin shining with her. His eyes were dark and dazed, like he was floating somewhere between worship and want.
“C’mere.”
He rose slow.
She pulled him up from his knees, hand still curled in his curls, her other palm resting flat over his pounding chest. When he was standing fully between her spread thighs, she leaned in.
Their foreheads touched. Her breath hit his mouth.
Then she kissed him.
Filthy. Deep. Slow.
She moaned into his mouth as she tasted herself on his tongue. Licked it clean from his lips. Sucked his bottom lip between hers and let her body roll against his like she hadn’t just squirted all over his face moments ago. Her hands roamed his chest. His arms. Slid up around his neck. When she finally pulled back, her eyes were half-lidded, lips wet.
“You did so good, baby,” she breathed, voice thick and honey-drenched, “So fuckin’ good.”
Smoke was silent.
But his hands were gripping the edge of the table behind her like if he didn’t, he might lose control. Delphine leaned in again, kissed the corner of his mouth. Her voice brushed his cheek:
“You want more, don’t you?”
He nodded.
Swallowed hard.
Delphine smiled—soft and sinful.
“Good. ‘Cause I ain’t finished with either of you.”
Delphine was still perched on the table, legs spread, body glowing with sweat and aftershocks. Her robe hung open, forgotten, her breasts rising and falling with each breath. Her lips were swollen, slick with kisses. Her thighs were wet with her own pleasure. Stack was already stepping forward—eyes wild, chest heaving, dick straining hard in his pants.
But he didn’t just take her.
Not this time.
He slid one arm beneath her thighs, the other across her back—and lifted her.
“Mm,” Delphine purred, arms looping around his neck, “You finally gon’ carry me to bed like I deserve?”
Stack smirked, “Ain’t carryin’ you nowhere you ain’t earned, sweetheart.”
She giggled breathless. Her head fell back, curls tumbling. Then Smoke came up behind them, silent, steady—grounding them both. His hands slipped beneath her open robe, one brushing the soft skin of her belly, the other cupping her breast.
He kissed her neck.
Soft. Deep.
“Mmm, Elijah…” she gasped.
Smoke’s mouth trailed to her ear. His voice was low.
“We ain’t done with you.”
“Good,” she whispered.
Stack grunted, “Shit—she like bein’ manhandled. I can feel her soakin’ my damn arm.”
Delphine moaned and bit her bottom lip. They carried her like something precious and wicked, up the old hallway, feet bare on the floorboards, the heat of their bodies pressing around hers. She kissed Stack’s throat on the way there. Reached back and tugged Smoke’s curls just to make him groan. And when they reached her room—warm, dim, sheets still messy from a restless morning—Stack laid her down right in the center of the bed. Delphine stretched out like a gift. Arms over her head. Robe open. Thighs still slick and glistening. Her mouth curled into that sinful smile.
She looked between them, voice soft, but dripping with promise:
“Well…which one of y’all wanna sit on my tongue first?”
The room was hot with tension—thick, humid, pulsing with everything unsaid. Her robe slipped off her shoulders, soft and satin, pooling around her arms as she stretched them overhead and smiled up at the two men undressing before her. Skin glowing, thighs slick, her breasts rose and fell with every slow breath.
“Go ‘head,” she purred, eyes locked on Smoke, “Take it off for me, baby.”
Smoke peeled off what was left of his clothes, slow and deliberate. Slacks fell. Shirt gone. His dick stood thick and heavy, glistening with need, the head flushed dark. He was already twitching. Stack stripped beside him, less controlled. He was already half-wild—thick and ready, hunger in his eyes, jaw tight with restraint that wouldn’t last long. Delphine looked between them like she was admiring two parts of a dream.
“Goddamn,” she whispered, licking her lips, “I’m ‘bout to be fed real good.”
She sat up slowly, dragging her palms down her own stomach, then opened her thighs. Dripping.
“Smoke…” she said, voice sweet and hoarse, “lemme taste you, baby. I been thinkin’ about it all day.”
Smoke stepped forward to the edge of the bed. Delphine rose to her knees in front of him—naked, glowing, mouth already parted. One hand reached for the base of his dick, wrapping slow. The other traced the line of his stomach, nails dragging lightly as she looked up at him.
“You nervous again?” she whispered.
Smoke didn’t answer—he just grunted, dick jumping in her grip.
She smiled.
“Good. Keep feelin’ everything.”
Then she leaned in and pressed her lips to the tip—just a kiss at first. Then a soft lick, tongue swirling around the head, catching the taste of him like she was savoring molasses from a spoon.
Smoke hissed.
She moaned against him, lips curling, “You taste so damn good…”
Then she opened wide and sank down.
Slow. Deep. Her throat flexed as she took him, inch by inch, eyes never leaving his. One hand gripped his base, stroking. The other cupped his balls gently, massaging. Her moans vibrated against his shaft.
Below her?
Stack had crawled between her thighs.
He grabbed her hips and pulled her down the bed until her knees bent at the edge, until her pussy met his mouth again like it belonged there. She moaned hard around Smoke’s fat dick, hips jerking as Stack devoured her, tongue slow at first, then faster, more eager. More starved.
“Fuck…” Smoke whispered, hands curling in her hair. “Delphine…”
She pulled off with a wet gasp, a thick strand of spit trailing from her lips to his dick.
“You like that, sugar?” she panted, stroking him slow, eyes hazy with need, “Don’t you dare cum yet. I ain’t done playin’.”
Then she took him again—deeper.
Throat swallowing him whole, her nose almost brushing his stomach. She hummed as she bobbed her head, twisting her wrist just right. Drool ran down her chin. She wiped it with the back of her hand and grinned up at him like a woman possessed.
He shoved two fingers inside her as he licked her clit, tongue flicking, lips sealed. Delphine’s thighs shook, her moans muffled by Smoke’s dick.
She came up for air just long enough to whimper:
“That’s it—oh fuck, Elias—right there—yes, yes…”
She came.
Smoke groaned and threw his head back. His hand slid from her hair to her shoulder, gentle but shaking. Delphine popped off his dick again, licking him slow from base to tip.
“Look what y’all done to me…” she breathed, her chin soaked, her thighs trembling.
She spit in her hand, stroked him twice more, then kissed the tip like a promise.
“You ready to give Stack a turn?” she whispered against Smoke’s dick, looking up through thick lashes.
Smoke only moaned, hips twitching.
Delphine grinned.
Then she turned her head, looked down her body, and said, “C’mere, baby. Lemme clean your face with my tongue.”
Delphine was trembling from her climax, lips swollen, chin glazed, thighs still twitching where Stack had just feasted. He stood and they leaned in, tongues first, clashing hungrily. Delphine licked her juices from his chin with a whimper. She kissed Stack slow and filthy, tasting herself on his tongue. Her hand was still wrapped around Smoke’s dick, pumping him lazy, savoring how hard he stayed even after eating her.
“Your turn, sugar,” she purred, voice husky and electric, “Come get this blessing.”
Stack didn’t need telling twice.
He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, chest heaving. His dick was thick, veins bulging, glistening with pre-cum. He stared down at her like a man starved. Delphine turned on her knees, slow and graceful, and crawled toward him.
“Lie back,” she whispered, tongue flicking out to wet her lips.
He obeyed. Laid back on the bed like he was about to be baptized in sin. Delphine straddled his legs, her bare ass on his thighs, and licked her palm before wrapping it around the base of his dick. She looked up, face glowing, curls sticking to her cheeks.
“You been patient all day,” she crooned, stroking him slow, “I’mma take care of you.”
Then she leaned down and sucked him in.
Warm. Wet. Expert.
Her mouth sealed around his shaft, slow bobbing strokes that went deeper each time. Tongue swirling. One hand massaging his balls, the other gripping his thigh for leverage.
Stack’s head fell back with a growl, “Fuck, Delphine…”
Her moans vibrated around him.
Above her, Smoke moved back between her thighs.
He couldn’t stay away.
He dropped to his knees on the mattress, hands spreading her cheeks as he dipped his face back into the heat of her. Tongue slow at first—then deeper, hungrier. He groaned against her folds, burying his mouth in her like she was water in the desert.
Delphine arched, still sucking Stack’s dick like it gave her life.
She pulled off just long enough to pant, “God, y’all gonna ruin me…”
Then she dove back down—gagging herself on Stack, spit coating his shaft, mouth sloppy and eager. Her eyes locked on his, watching him twitch every time she swallowed him deep.
Stack tangled his fingers in her curls, “Shit—just like that, baby…suck that dick…”
Smoke groaned into her pussy, sucking her clit slow while sliding a finger inside. Her hips rolled. Her moans spilled out around Stack’s dick. She was completely wrecked between them—used, loved, worshipped—and loving every second.a
Delphine popped her lips off of Stack and climbed off of the bed with a sultry laugh, Smoke groaning when her slit left his tongue. Stack’s jaw flexed as he stared from his dick twitching to her movements. She lowered herself to her knees slow—like something sacred and unholy all at once. Her silk robe slid off her shoulders, pooling at her wrists. Hair shaken loose, cascading wild around her flushed face, sweat already gathering at the hollows of her throat. The mirror in front of her was fogged at the edges, but she didn’t look away. Not once.
She watched herself.
Watched her fingers pinch her nipples until they ached. Watched her lips part with a gasp as her hips rocked forward on instinct. Then she said it—voice low and thick like syrup, but with command stitched through the center.
“Y’all come here. Come suck these titties like you hungry.”
Smoke didn’t speak—just moved, quiet as a storm about to break.
Stack chuckled under his breath, a filthy little “Damn…” before obeying. They dropped to their knees on either side of her, and without hesitation—each took a breast into his mouth. Not gentle. Not rushed. But deep, wet, possessive. Smoke’s hand slid around her waist, pulling her to him. His mouth was hot on her left tit, tongue curling, lips tugging until she whimpered. Stack palmed the other, thumb teasing her nipple before his mouth closed over it — licking slow, then fast, like he couldn’t decide if he wanted to worship or ruin.
“Fuck,” she whispered, eyes still locked on the mirror. Her lips were red now. Her chest flushed.
She had one big dick in each hand, stroking them in rhythm—rougher on Stack, slower on Smoke.
Their groans vibrated against her skin.
“That’s it, babies,” she cooed, “Suckle ‘em like I’m feedin’ you from Heaven.”
They didn’t stop. Didn’t pull back.
Smoke’s hands slid down her back, gripping her hips, anchoring her.
Stack moaned against her chest and pulled back just enough to say, “Goddamn, you taste like honey and heat.”
She laughed—breathless and mean—and jerked both dicks harder.
“’Cause I am heat. Now don’t stop till I say so.”
Smoke growled low in his throat. Stack bit down just enough to make her gasp.
And in the mirror—they looked like something wicked.
Two men starved. One woman fed.
Their mouths never left her chest.
Delphine’s head tilted back, lashes fluttering as the pleasure rolled through her in waves. Stack was sucking harder now, greedier, making obscene noises as his tongue circled her aching nipple. Smoke was slower, lips gentler, but he didn’t let up—he groaned low with each suck, like the taste of her alone was putting him in pain. She clenched her thighs together, panting, arms braced behind her as she thrust her chest toward them. Her hands never stopped moving —fists stroking their dicks, fingers teasing their tips with practiced cruelty.
“Mmm, I’m so fuckin’ nasty,” she moaned, “What if August sees us? What if he walk through that door right now and sees two young men—two strong, fine young men—on their knees suckin’ on his wife’s titties like this?”
Stack groaned hard, biting her nipple just enough to make her cry out, “Goddamn.”
“He’d see I’m just a filthy woman,” she went on, breath hitching, “Just a dick-drunk housewife with her robe open and her nipples in younger mouths. He’d cry. Or stroke his little dick and cry.”
Stack pulled back just long enough to sneer.
“Fuck August. He don’t run shit no more.”
His voice was sharp, possessive. Almost jealous.
Smoke didn’t stop suckin’. He pulled her closer, wrapped his arm tighter around her waist, and looked up at her through his lashes while his lips tugged harder—hungrier. Then he spoke, voice deep and quiet like always, but raw:
“Ain’t his house no more. Ain’t his wife neither.”
Delphine broke.
A moan and a laugh tangled in her throat. Her head dropped forward, curls clinging to her sweaty chest.
“Ohhhh, I love when y’all talk like that,” she purred, “Love how disrespectful you are. Ain’t no fear in your mouths—just me. You taste me and forget your fuckin’ names.”
Smoke’s dick twitched in her hand. Stack cursed under his breath.
“I hope he sees,” she said, eyes darting toward the mirror, “I want him to walk in. I want him to see how I give it up when I’m finally touched right.”
Delphine’s grip tightened on their shafts, then released them with a slow stroke. Her nipples were slick with spit, flushed and swollen from their mouths. She licked her lips, panting—that feral gleam in her eyes now glowing full. She looked down at them—both still kneeling, breathless, hard as sin. Then she leaned back, spread her thighs wide, and sat on her heels like a queen on a throne made of fire.
“Show me your tongues.”
They hesitated for half a second—not in defiance, but from shock. That tone. That command.
“Now.”
Stack smirked first, always ready for a show. He stuck his tongue out slow and wide, wiggling it for effect. Smoke followed, more reluctant—tongue curling out thick and pink, breath hot from his nose.
She moaned right then.
“Mmm. That’s what I thought. And look at that…Elijah’s got the tongue of a sinner and the eyes of a killer. Perfect combination.” She grabbed him by the chin, tugging his face close to the slick heat between her thighs. Her inner thighs were trembling. She was already soaked—glistening for him, dripping against the backs of her calves.
“You go first, baby,” she whispered, “But don’t get cocky. I’ll tell you how I want it.”
Smoke’s breath hitched. His hands slid beneath her thighs, locking her open, and then—he dived in. No hesitation now. His mouth met her pussy with a groan so deep it shook her to her core.
“Yessss,” she hissed, “Just like that, baby. Slow licks first. Top to bottom. Let me feel all that tongue.”
He obeyed. Long, heavy swipes from clit to entrance, slow enough to make her gasp.
“Mmm, now circle it. Yeah—‘round and ‘round that swollen clit. Just tongue. Like you tryin’ to paint me with it.”
Smoke groaned again, deeper. The sound of him eating was wet, rhythmic, needy.
“Goddamn, Elijah…you better keep that rhythm. Don’t stop till I tell you. You do not come up ‘less you feel me gushin’ on your chin. You understand?”
He hummed against her in response—vibrating her whole body. She shivered.
“Good boy.”
Stack’s hand gripped his dick tight, watching. His other hand slid to her breast, tugging a nipple as he leaned forward, whispering into her neck.
“I’m next, sugar. Gonna make you cry into that mirror when it’s my turn.”
Delphine whimpered and laughed at once, hips grinding into Elijah’s mouth.
“One at a time,” she panted. “Y’all gone share this pussy—but I want him to learn first.
Smoke licked deeper, lips wrapping around her clit now, sucking soft then firm—tongue flattening and curling in exactly the ways she demanded. His fingers tightened around her thighs. His whole face buried in her like it was the only way to breathe.
And her voice? Still coaching. Still filthy.
“Mm, yeah…just like that, baby. Lick that clit like you missed her. Like she fed you and left you starving for more.”
Delphine’s legs were trembling, spread wide and soaked with Elijah’s devotion. He was still on his knees between her thighs, lips slick, chin wet, breathing heavy like he’d run a mile in heat. Her fingers threaded into his curls and pulled his face up, slowly. His mouth glistened with her. His lips were red and swollen. His eyes?
Dark. Wild. Possessive.
“Mmm. You did good, baby,” she purred, voice hoarse with satisfaction, “Damn good. But you know what?”
She turned her head, locked eyes with the other one— the cocky one, the grinning devil with the dimple and the twitching cock in hand.
“I think your brother think he can do better.”
Stack smirked so wide it was damn near vulgar. He dropped to his knees with that slick charm still oozing off him.
“You damn right I can. I know I can.”
Elijah didn’t move—just slid back on his heels and watched. His chest rose and fell hard, arms resting on his knees, lips still wet. Delphine spread her thighs even wider, leaned back on her elbows, and arched.
“Aight then. It’s a contest. Let’s see which one of y’all makes Mama squirt first.”
Stack moaned under his breath.
“Shit.”
“Make it messy,” she warned, “I wanna drip down the back of your throat. I want it on your chin, on the floor.”
That grin disappeared.
Stack dove in.
But unlike Elijah—who started slow—Stack went wild from the jump. He sucked her clit into his mouth like he was trying to take it with him. Tongue flicking fast. Fast. Then slow. Then fast again. His rhythm was chaotic but intentional—cocky, unpredictable.
“Mmm!!” Delphine cried out, hands flying to his head. “Goddamn, Elias!”
Smoke cursed behind her. Watching his brother tear into her like he owned her.
“He tryna show out,” Smoke muttered, jaw tight.
Stack moaned against her and shook his head while sucking—tongue and lips fluttering around her clit, hands spreading her wider, thumbs pressing into the creases of her thighs like he needed to anchor her to the earth.
“Yesss…oh fuck yes—THERE baby—stay right there—”
She was unraveling. Quick.
“Oh, I feel it—feel it comin’—you want it? Huh? Wanna drown in it, Elias?”
He nodded into her pussy. Groaned again.
She arched hard—stomach tight, thighs twitching. She locked her legs around his neck and rode.
“OHHH FUCK— THERE IT GO, BABY. TAKE IT. TAKE ALL THAT CREAM, NASTY BOY.”
Stack didn’t stop. Didn’t breathe. He took it—all of it— face dripping, tongue still working even as she squirted, crying out, body convulsing.
She collapsed back, chest heaving, body shaking like a tuning fork.
“Mmm-mm-mm,” she gasped, “Shit…We might have to call it a tie.”
But then she sat up. Face flushed, lips slick, sweat beading on her neck.
“Nah. You know what?”
She looked down at both of them—wrecked and still hard, kneeling at her feet like two beasts waiting for their next command.
She licked her lips.
“Y’all gon’ have to fuck me at the same time to really settle this.”
Imagine: Pearline is Stack’s wife. She finds out the hard way when her husband continues his adulterous behavior.
Pearline Moore ONE-SHOT
Warnings: Smut. Angst, LOTS of dirty talk.
There is a humid, subtropical climate afoot in The South. Everyone takes shelter, and those with homes on raised beams above the waters that flow from the Mississippi River are the more fortunate. The rich, agricultural soil of The Delta is muddy and automobiles have a hard time getting through. A characteristic of alluvial deposition in deep water, where the river actively builds new land through sediments.
Shops close downtown, church’s postponed their congregations, and the plantation fields are overgrown and empty of sharecroppers picking cotton. The heavy showers beat down on rustic, tin roofs and bounced off the edges of iron tubs. Farm life make aggravated noises, stomping and shifting in their designated stalls surrounded by haystacks and various tools.
The weather didn’t keep Pearline Jacqueline Moore away from a local pharmacy owned by a Black Pharmacist named Robert Browning Jr.
Pearline wore her favorite riding boots, a trench coat, and a cloak hat over her moisturized curls with the help of Annie Minerva Turnbo Malone’s Poro Products. Her lush skin glistened from sweat and water as she hurried through downtown from her parked automobile. Pearline shoved past the doors to the pharmacy, the tiny bell above dinging softly, alerting Dr. Browning Jr. as he busied himself within a back room that he used as a storage unit.
She brushed her boots off on a mat as best as she could to keep mud from tracking the floor. Pearline removed her cloak hat, twisting it in her hands nervously, not realizing that she was ringing it out onto the floor. Her riding boots squeaked as she walked further into the pharmacy.
It was a bustling community hub with a strong focus on soda fountains and sundries. While they sold medicines, they also served as social gathering places, particularly during Prohibition, with soda fountains becoming popular. Pharmacists were not just dispensing medications but also providing advice and even counter-prescribing.
Pearline grabbed a basket and loaded it with random items, trying to appear less suspicious on why she was really there. She slipped past a newspaper rack and peeked at the headline on the front in bold, onyx print.
“Mrs. Moore? What you doing out in this awful weather?”
Pearline snapped her eyes towards the front counter.
Dr. Browning Jr. removed his reading glasses and stood dapper in a brown and beige suit with a maroon bow tie. He got rid of his suit jacket and replaced it with an apron, sleeves rolled up past his elbows revealing skin the color of pepper corn. He had a full goatee with a mustache that curled at the tips, sprinkled with gray hair and the hair on his head was close cut. He was a little over fifty years old and married to a stunning black woman from Alabama.
“Evening, Dr. Browning. My pantry is looking a little low. And I…I need some Arsenic to help with these pests hanging around my garden.”
Dr. Browning Jr. accepted Pearline’s basket and began ringing her up at his cash register. Pearline shifted her weight, anxious eyes looking around as if she were being watched.
“Would you like a vial of the poison or an entire bottle?”
“…I’m sorry?” Pearline inquired, seemingly lost as a nervous smile graced her heart–shaped lips.
“I’d suggest a bottle if the pest problem is serious. It’s quite pricy though, Mrs. Moore.”
“Oh! Oh…I think I should go ahead and buy the bottle. You never know, I may need it again.”
Pearline rushed to open her change purse, digging inside to grab a crisp twenty dollar bill. Dr. Browning Jr disappeared within his supply room for all but two minutes. He returned with a bottle of Arsenic, placing it within a box before gently covering it with a paper bag.
“That’ll be eighteen dollars.”
Pearline’s heart raced.
Pearline shifted her gaze towards the door, making sure no one was behind her.
“Mrs. Moore?—”
“Sorry,” she handed him the twenty dollars, “Keep the change. Thank you, Dr. Browning.”
Pearline accepted her bag, carrying it hugged to her slim–thick frame as she backed away.
“You need some help? I’m surprised Stack let you out in this mess.”
The mention of her husband’s name gave her pause.
It also filled her with rage.
“He’s a busy man, Dr. Browning. You know that. I won’t keep you. Have a good rest of your night.”
“You do the same, Mrs. Moore.”
Pearline entered her home, quickly shrugging off her coat to hang on a rack and she took a seat on a wine red chesterfield ottoman within the front foyer of her home to remove her boots. The rain had turned to drizzle by the time she returned home. Pearline wore one of many silky slips, a scandalous choice for wear in public, but she was on a mission.
Pearline lived in one of few luxury homes in The Delta with her husband, Elias ‘Stack’ Moore. It was surrounded by rolling hills and they had their own greenhouse where Pearline enjoyed spending time sipping herbal tea and tending to her botanical garden. Stack had it built for her as an anniversary gift because he knew how much it meant to her. Reminding her of days spent with her grandmother. A Botanist and Holistic Nurse.
Pearline entered her kitchen and sat her grocery bag down on her dining table. She scanned the mess she’d created hours before, old photos cut into pieces, scattered along the floor. Her husband’s dress shirt resting over a dining chair with lipstick stains on the collar. A gut wrenching reminder of what Stack had put her through.
Pearline was every man’s dream girl. She’s beautiful, can sing, built like a brick house, and smart. She’d turned down many boys, all except Elias Moore. He was a little older than her by nine years, but when he set his eyes on her, he made it his business to court her. Stack was a man that moved with a carefree personality. He joked and smiled and charmed everyone in his path. Deep dimples and a smooth tongue.
The opposite of his stoic, quiet, observant brother. Elijah ‘Smoke’ Moore was known for bringing the smoke; the smoldering heat. You didn’t want to get to close for comfort and cross him. Smoke had no problems laying you out with a gun or his fists. You’d think he was made of railroad steel and cast iron.
Pearline was drawn to Stack’s playful energy and the amount of passion and chemistry they shared was like no other. Pearline didn’t care that she was falling head over T-straps for a criminal, Stack made her feel special. He bought her the lifestyle she’d always dreamed of. That made women envious, especially when he married her before leaving to Chicago. They had a beautiful barn wedding where all of The Delta attended.
But, Pearline had to learn the hard way that her husband was a rolling stone. He couldn’t keep his married dick to himself. Whispers of women he bedded while vowed to Pearline sparked heated arguments and lies that rolled off his slick tongue and past his plump lips. One woman living in Little Rock, Arkansas had him by the balls.
Mary.
And her lipstick is what stained her husband’s shirt.
Pearline grew tired of crying. Tired of sleepless nights and waiting for him to return home. Tired of the manipulation and the constant drama filtering back to her. Her so–called girlfriend’s side eyed her. Her mother chastised her for being weak and not going after her man like a proper wife should.
She thought about what it would be like to make him hurt. There was no man in town that she could even think to fuck as a get back. Elias ‘Stack’ Moore and his twin are practically gods within The Delta. Sleeping with some random man would only make her look like the fool. She wanted to kick him off his high horse. And her anger drove her to buy some poison.
And bake it into a chocolate pie.
It’s a luscious chocolate custard resting on a flaky, almost salty crust, topped with a springy meringue. For Pearline, it’s la pièce de résistance and whether times are good or times are bad, it’s always welcome and appropriate.
Stack loved her chocolate pie. She made it for him once a week. If she didn’t stop him, he’d sit and eat the entire thing for himself. At first, she thought to poison his moonshine, but that would only contaminate the entire batch since he prepared it in barrels with Smoke.
Pearline put away her groceries and then she grabbed the poison, setting to work on the chocolate pie.
Ingredients for the pie:
4 tablespoons cocoa or 1 1/2 squares baking chocolate
3/4 cups sugar
5 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 egg yolks, lightly beaten
1 1/2 cups whole milk
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
1 tablespoon of butter
Ingredients for the meringue:
2 egg whites
1/8 teaspoon kosher salt
4 tablespoons sugar
And a splash—maybe a cup of Arsenic.
As she moved about the kitchen, the smell of rain and grass brought in by the humid wind through her open kitchen windows, an apron secure around her petite waist, Pearline hummed to calm her nerves down and stop herself from crying.
She hummed a song she’d written.
Poison was seen as a discreet way to eliminate someone, with arsenic being a particularly popular choice due to its tastelessness and ability to mimic natural illness.
No one would be able to suspect. It could be something as simple as bad moonshine.
And Stack drank a lot of it. He was well on his way to becoming the next Delta Slim.
Smoke couldn’t stop his brother, that would make him a hypocrite. He had his own addiction to smoking.
Flour painted her cheek and chocolate splattered her apron. Pearline wiped sweat from her forehead as she stared down at the pie. She placed it on a towel before washing her hands to prepare dinner.
She couldn’t believe she was going to kill her husband.
Pearline dressed in a gold silk burlesque flapper cocoon dress with batwing sleeves and a deep plunge in the front. It glided across her skin and molded into the shape of her frame as she walked, the long train dragging along behind her elegantly. Her curly hair was styled in an updo with tendrils framing her oval face. She plucked away unruly hairs from her thick brows to keep them neat and smoothed coca lip balm on her lips.
Chandelier earrings in, skin the color of espresso, she heard the front door open from her place at her vanity. She listened, making out distant laughter and the familiar sound of her husband’s voice. He wasn’t alone. Pearline took meditating breaths to calm herself. She’d already done the deed. It was only a matter of time before he cut himself a slice.
Revenge. Sweet revenge. A desire for freedom. Divorce wasn’t even an option. She wouldn’t get a penny. He needed to die and she would collect all his money and move up north. Maybe New York. Sing in the Cotton Club. Make a new life for herself.
Pearline spritzed perfume on her skin, activating the squeeze bulb, opening with dewy gardenia, its floral heart blooming with African neroli before settling into the intoxicating depth of a merlot wine accord. The essence of magnetic beauty and luminous grace.
One final look at her reflection, Pearline made her way down to the kitchen. In the living room, helping themselves to bourbon from a drink cart, were Smoke and Stack. Stack poured from a decanter, filling Smoke’s glass tumbler full. He did the same for himself. They whispered, smoke puffing on a cigarette as he nodded his head in response to Stack’s scheming words.
Smoke drew his eyes towards the stairs, eyes that took in the sight of Pearline. She looked down at him, meeting his intense gaze, looking away to focus on her husband who not once stopped to acknowledge her. It took for Smoke to nudge his little brother for Stack to finally pay attention.
That cut deep. Pearline flicked her gaze away to her feet covered in kitten heels. She released a shutter.
“Baby…”
Stack left Smoke’s side to approach Pearline. She gave him a practiced smile before opening her arms to hug him. Stack buried his face against her neck, inhaling her perfume while his hands rubbed and groped her.
“Mmm, you smelling good. Looking good too,” Stack leaned back to admire her, “Beautiful, baby,” Stack kissed her hands, “I missed ya’.”
“Missed you,” Pearline bat her lashes at him and tucked her chin with a coy smile, “You hungry?”
“I sure am. Is it aight if Smoke stay for dinner?”
Pearline drew her attention to Smoke. He perched himself against the fire place, lighting the end of his cigarette, orange flame vibrant. He looked at her with this expression that Pearline couldn’t quite understand. He was always unreadable.
“Only if it’s okay with you, sis–in–law,” Smoke spoke with a rasp.
“Of course.”
Pearline hadn’t expected an extra guest. Now, she had to figure out how to get the pie out of the way. Smoke could sense things. He’s observant. He can probably tell Pearline was being sneaky and devious. Seeing as he possesses those exact qualities. She inwardly panicked, wanting to escape from Stack’s hold to dump the pie in the garbage.
“Saw that chocolate pie in there, was about to dip my finger in it but Smoke stopped me before I could…”
Sweat trickled down her temple. She looked between both twins, smiling as best as she could and laughing in a flirty way she’d always had. Stack kissed Pearline’s lips, humming softly as he smiled.
“I got the finest woman in all the fuckin’ world.” He boisterously said, flashing his golds, “Let’s go eat us some food!”
“I’ll set the table, ya’ll go on and drink. I’ll call to supper when it’s ready…”
Pearline turned to walk away, hips switching. She couldn’t control the fact that she had a dump truck. Stack popped her on the underside of her behind, the motion causing her deep brown cakes to jiggle around. Her breath hitched and she swatted Stack’s hand away with a roll of her eyes.
She gave Smoke a sideways glance, heat rising over her face as he watched the two of them.
Pearline entered the kitchen and practically sprinted over to the pie. She exhaled with relief, glad to find it untouched. Pearline lifted the pie and hesitantly tossed it into the trash. She paced for a minute, trying her best to come up with a lie.
She choked on her words slightly as she spoke.
“I–I gotta make a new pie!”
Stack entered the kitchen with his brows pinched together.
“What? Why?”
He searched the kitchen for the pie before walking over to the trash. He lifted the lid, peering inside. The pie was on its side and sliding out of the dish.
“It–uh–it was covered in flies. I saw a couple flies on it.”
Her eyes fell on the open window.
“Must of gotten in through the window,” Pearline released a nervous laugh, “No worries, Stack, won’t take me long.”
“Damn…”
Smoke leaned against the entryway to the kitchen. He removed the cigarette from between his lips, eyes dancing back and forth between Pearline and Stack. His eyes fell to the cupboard beneath the sink, squinting slightly.
“I was looking forward to it, Pearlie. You sure you wanna make another?” Stack asked with a disappointed look.
“Won’t take me long. Promise.”
Stack sucked his teeth.
“Aight, baby…me and Smoke gone be in there listening to some tunes while we talk business. Holla when you finished.”
Stack pecked Pearline on the cheek before leaving the kitchen.
Smoke lingered.
“Errythang aight, Pearlie?” Smoke asked with a hushed tone.
“Yes. Why you askin’?” Pearline replied, eyes darting away from his.
Smoke’s eyes roamed the kitchen before focusing back on Pearline with a penetrating stare, “Listen, Stack—”
“Don’t.”
Pearline held up a shaky finger. She shut her eyes to hold back tears.
“Smoke!”
“Be there a minute, nigga. Be patient!” Smoke shouted back.
He gave Pearline one final look before leaving her alone.
She should have never thrown that pie away.
Hearing his laughter enraged her.
Knowing that he was fucking his octoroon whore inflated her anger.
What the fuck that bitch got on Pearline? What she got over her?
Privilege
Freedom
Fare skin
Loose hair
The beauty standard of America
And Stack craved it. Even though he’d fucked around with other black women, the minute Mary crossed paths with him after she returned to The Delta to bury her mom, Stack wanted that old thing back.
Pearline baked a new pie, silently crying.
But the chaos in the kitchen with her constant stomping and slamming of things had Stack’s attention.
Pearline set the table, almost breaking their fine China.
Stack took longs strides, oxfords loud as he walked.
“The fuck goin’ on, Pearlie?”
He snatched his toothpick from his mouth, glaring at her.
“Diner’s ready!”
Pearline snatched her apron off and tossed it onto the counter aggressively. Smoke trailed in behind his brother, eyes wide and unblinking. He tracked Pearline’s footsteps, jaw clenching.
“I can see the table is set,” Stack swept his concerned eyes over the plates of food, “But why you slamming shit? Got something you wanna say?”
Pearline whirled around, a look of surprise and confusion etched into her pretty face.
“ME?” She inquired with a loud tone.
“Yeah, YOU.”
“Wow…After all the shit you been putting me through. And you askin’ ME if I got something to say?!”
Smoke raised his hands to diffuse the situation.
“Let’s just eat now, aight? Save this shit for later.”
Pearline pinched the bridge of her nose. Stack sat down at the dining table. Pearline almost shivered when Smoke lightly grasped her arm to get her attention. She held his gaze, fighting hard not to break down.
“Come eat, Pearlie…”
“I’m not hungry.”
Stack’s fork and knife clattered to the table. He chewed the rest of his smothered pork chop down before turned his attention to his wife.
“Whatever it is, just say it, woman. I ain’t been messin’ around!”
“Yes you HAVEEEEEEEEEE!!!!!!!!!!!”
Smoke and Stack stared at her.
“Liar…fucking lying ass…piece of shit…”
Pearline opened her pantry and snatched up the shirt with lipstick stains. She marched over, balled it up, and threw it at Stack. He caught it, opening the shirt and when he noticed the lipstick stains, he froze.
“CARE TO TELL ME WHY THE FUCK YOU GOT LIPSTICK ON YOUR SHIRT?! A SHIRT I DISCOVERED WHILE TAKING IN DRY CLEANING?! A SHIRT YOU TRIED TO HIDE FROM ME?! YOU CHEATING BASTARD!”
Smoke fought to keep Pearline back. Stack stared off into space, no words, no more lies. What could he say to get himself out of this?
Pearline shouted between cries of heartbreak, “HOW COULD YOU? AFTER EVERYTHING? WHY DO YOU KEEP GOING BACK TO HER?! WHY, STACK?!”
Pearline snatched a butcher knife from the counter and launched it at Stack. He quickly pushed away from the table, the knife whizzing past his cheek and lodging in the wall. His chest rose and feel with rapid breaths. Smoke grabbed her up by her upper arms to keep her still.
“You crazy?! Tryna kill me?! That shit could’ve been in my head!!!!” Stack yelled, spit flying.
“PEARLIE! ENOUGH!” Smoke boomed.
“Get off me, Smoke!”
“You throwing knives, the hell, Pearlie?!” Smoke shook her to stop her from writhing.
“LET GO OF ME!”
Pearline slapped Smoke. Slapped him across his handsome face. He clutched his cheek that stung from her strikes.
“STOP PROTECTING HIM! HE’S A GROWN ASS MAN! YOU KNOW WHAT HE DOES AND YOU JUST LET HIM DO IT! FUCK YOU. BOTH OF YOU!”
Stack stood, tossing the shirt over his unfinished meal. He was ashamed to even look her in the eye.
“BE A MAN AND FACE ME, ELIAS! OWN IT!” Pearline laid into him with venom, “DO YOU LOVE HER?!”
“Pearlie—”
Pearline grabbed the chocolate pie and catapulted it, watching it hit Stack in the chest. He rocked back on his heels, arms outstretched, his eyes bugged out and his lips curled into a menacing pout.
“ANSWER ME, DAMMIT!!!!!!”
Pearline tried to catch her breath. Stack looked at her with wavering eyes. He titled his head down at his oxfords.
“I…Pearline…”
She gasped.
“You do…”
Smoke shut his eyes.
Stack gave her a cowardly look.
“You can’t even be a man and say it. You’re such a coward, Elias. Why did you marry me? To trap me? To have a notch on your belt? Afraid I’d find a man that really loves me? Your cracker slut is married to a cracker man In Arkansas and yet you can’t stay away from her and be loyal to me?”
Pearline clutched her chest as if she were going into cardiac distress.
“Am I not beautiful? What did I do to deserve this—”
“I have urges, baby. I’m sorry—I know it ain’t the apology ya’ want, but I…can’t control myself. I hate that I keep hurting ya’.”
“No,” Pearline shook her head as tears fell, “you ain’t sorry. You sorry you got caught.”
Pearline folded her arms over her chest. She exhaled, wiping tears away with her fingers.
She sniffled, “And the sad part is…I love you.”
She locked eyes with him. Smoke didn’t pull his attention away from her face for a second.
The grandfather clock on the wall within the living room ticked and ticked.
“I want both of ya’ll to leave.”
“Pearlie—”
“Fuck you, Elias. You don’t get to be sweet and charming. I want you to leave. NOW. Before I grab that knife from the wall, and cut your fucking dick off and feed it to you instead of this food I made!!!!!!”
Stack’s mouth was agape.
Smoke stepped aside.
Pearline made as if she were going to leave but instead she jumped on Stack, beating her fists on his back. Stack tried to grab her arms while shielding himself from being struck in the face.
“PEARLINE!”
Smoke picked her up and sat her on the counter.
“Get your shit, Stack. GO. We leaving.” Smoke ordered.
“Let her blow steam. I deserve it.” Stack said.
“Oh, so now you want her to kick your ass? She wanna kill you, nigga! Unless you wanna be scraps for pigs, I suggest you get your shit and leave!”
Stack looked from the dining table, to his wife, parting his lips to speak. Instead, he walked away, climbing the stairs to pack a luggage.
Smoke looked at Pearline, “If I let you go. Will you stay here while he gettin’ his shit?”
Pearline nodded her head slow.
Smoke released her arms and stepped back. He lit a cigarette and didn’t take his eyes off of Pearline.
“I’m real sorry, Pearlie. I know that don’t mean shit to you comin’ from me…but you don’t deserve this shit. You too good of a woman. Always been. I tried to get him to come home to you…I did…he can’t control himself with that bitch and…I hate to see ya’ hurting.”
“Smoke,” Pearline was exhausted, “You could have told me. You could have come to me. I need to be alone. Just leave. Please leave.”
She hung her head and started bawling. Her cries broke Smoke. Deep, sorrowful, body shaking. Her tears leaked to her dress. Smoke wanted to comfort her. He tried to touch her and Pearline flinched.
Stack’s footsteps caused Smoke to back off. He locked eyes with his little brother, glaring at him. Stack turned away, luggage in his hands.
Smoke allowed his eyes to sweep over her. He didn’t care if she fought him off. He didn’t care if she slapped him.
Smoke positioned himself in front of her, grabbed her face, and planted a kiss to her forehead.
That made her cry harder.
Word spread like famine.
And Pearline refused to feed into the nosy crowd.
She walked around town with her head held high and hips swaying seductively. No matter how hurt she felt, she looked ravishing.
Pearline entered The Chow’s negro store, picking up oranges and lemons, checking to see if they were a good batch before buying them. Bo Chow walked out from a room with a notepad and a pen behind his ear. Little Lisa took care of the line. Pearline helped herself to a jar of strawberry jam.
“Is! She’s expecting.” Bo said with a side smile, glossy black hair falling over his forehead handsomely.
“Oh! My! Congratulations, Bo!”
Pearline beamed.
“I’m hoping for a boy this time.” Bo said.
“Just be glad for a healthy bundle of joy.” Pearline said.
She stood in line behind four people until it was her time to be helped. After paying for her items, she waved goodbye to Bo and Lisa before leaving the store.
The rain had finally stopped and in its place was that humid, Mississippi air. The sun shone down brightly, heating Pearline’s skin. She found her car and got in, heading back home.
Driving back, Pearline pulled up to her home, finding a truck she recognized immediately. Pearline stared at the truck, eyes fluttering with resentment. It’s been damn near two weeks.
Pearline couldn’t deny that she missed her husband, but at the price of her own happiness? Why should she have to put up with his constant disregard for her feelings?
It won’t last, Mary is just a phase.
She hated that she had that voice in her head.
After another minute, Pearline exited her car and with her groceries she walked up to her home. Pearline didn’t pay the truck any mind, expecting Stack to shout her name from the window and beg for forgiveness.
Instead, she caught a whiff of tobacco.
Pearline turned, eyes falling on Elijah ‘Smoke’ Moore with his back against the truck. He stomped out his cigarette. He clasped his hands in front of him and over his crotch. He stared at her beyond the brim of his blue hat. Smoke pushed off his truck, one hand clutching onto the opening of his tweed suit jacket as he approached her with methodical eyes and careful steps.
A breeze picked up, ruffling the bottom of her fitted, purple, floral–printed lapel dress. She wore white T–straps on her feet, and a hat with lace gloves to match the colors in her dress. Pearls decorated her ears.
“How you be?” Smoke finally spoke.
“…I’m okay.”
Smoke stood at the bottom of the steps, staring up at Pearline.
“Stack stayin’ wit me. He not there right now.” Smoke revealed.
Pearline tilted her head, eyes searching for the inevitable truth, “He’s with her?”
Smoke rubbed his hands together, eyes roaming the ground.
“She came knockin’. He answered.”
Pearline stood still and watched Smoke.
“Say sum’, Pearlie.”
Pearline exhaled.
“I want a divorce.”
Smoke frowned slightly.
“I’m tired, Smoke. I deserve better.”
Pearline turned away from Smoke to open her door. She sat her groceries down at her feet. Smoke climbed the steps, picking up the bag. Pearline didn’t say a word. The door swung open and Smoke followed her inside. He walked past the front foyer and disappeared into the kitchen.
Pearline sat her purse down and removed her gloves and hat.
She walked into her kitchen and her footsteps slowed down when she caught Smoke putting away her food.
“Smoke, I can handle it.”
“No, no, no, now…you have a seat.”
Smoke pointed to a dining chair. Pearline took a seat, crossing her ankles modestly and folded her hands within her lap all ladylike. Her back was straight, body screaming confidently, but her eyes told a different tale. She was sad. Lonely. Torn.
Smoke opened her icebox to pour her a glass of lemonade. He then grabbed a napkin, walking over to her and placing it on the table. He removed his hat and sat it on the table. Pearline didn’t say a word as she grabbed the glass, helping herself.
“Why you come checkin’ up on me?”
Pearline searched Smoke’s eyes.
“…Because ya’ mean a lot to me.” Smoke replied.
Pearline scuffed, “Sure I do, Smoke. Poor old Pearline.”
Pearline stood, smoothing out her dress as she walked towards her pantry, grabbing a bottle of wine.
“I need something stronger…”
She drank from the bottle. Smoke watched her with a single brow raised. They sat in silence, Smoke with a cigarette and Pearline with her almost empty bottle of wine. She grew warm and relaxed, tipsy and just as sad and angry as before.
“I wonder if Stack thought of her every time he made love to me…”
He blew smoke from his nose.
“Don’t wonder. Stop thinking about it.”
Pearline rolled her eyes at Smoke.
“Serious…”
Pearline sucked on her bottom lip to stop it from quivering.
“Smoke, am I not good enough? I’ve done things for this man…to please him…make him happy.”
Smoke glanced at her sideways while reclined back in the dining chair, legs wide.
“What things?”
Pearline laughed bitterly, “Doesn’t matter. And it’s personal.”
“You said the shit.” Smoke replied defensively.
“I’m just talkin’. Okay? Venting.”
“And I’m here to listen. Aight?”
Pearline stared at him intently.
“…sexual things…”
Smoke hummed, “Okay…” He made a gesture for her to proceed, “And?”
“…Settled here for seven years. Dealt with all the bullshit. Rubbed his feet and massaged his shoulders. Put my dreams aside to help him fulfill his. Gave him every hole to use…”
Smoke twisted his lips as he listened.
“I thought it made him happy. I guess not.”
Smoke studies his cigarette, the wheels in his head turning.
He licked his lips, “Can I tell ya’ a secret?”
Pearline looked at Smoke curiously.
“You? Opening up?” Pearline teased.
“It’s about you. So I don’t see why not.”
Pearline shifted to face him, hip jutted out enticingly. She propped her elbow onto the table, resting her chin against her palm.
“Well?” She uttered.
“I ain’t want Stack to marry you.”
A pregnant pause.
“…what? Smoke? You serious?”
Pearline didn’t know how to interpret what Smoke revealed. She drew her thick brows together, intrigued by what he said. And the feeling of butterflies.
“Why the hell not?” Pearline questioned.
Smoke struggled to answer her question. He puffed on his cigarette, smoke billowing from between his thick lips. His hand shook slightly until he flexed his chest to gain control of his muscles. He finally met her gaze, never looking away as he parted his lips to speak.
“Cause you should’ve been mine.”
Pearline was paralyzed with shock. She couldn’t believe Elijah’s words. All this time? He’d wanted her too? No way.
“Smoke–Smoke I–I–you’ve always felt like this?”
Smoke gave her a sideways look with unwavering eyes.
“I have. Still do.”
Pearline almost dropped her wine bottle.
She shot up from her seat.
“Go, Smoke.”
Smoke rose to his feet.
“You don’t feel the same?”
Pearline couldn’t believe his words.
“NO!” She shouted with a disbelieving expression.
“I don’t believe ya’, Pearlie. The way ya’ look at me…the way ya’ always looked at me.”
“Stop…”
Pearline brushed past Smoke, climbing the stairs to her room. Her vision blurred with tears. She could hear his footsteps behind her.
“Pearlie…”
Smoke moved around her swiftly, blocking her path.
“I love you—”
“HOW DARE YOU?!”
Pearline shoved at his chest, no use because he was too solid and strong to move. Smoke watched her fire herself out before locking her wrists in his firm grip. He leaned in, eyes boring into hers like he was staring into her soul.
“Go on and beat away, Pearlie. I mean what I say. I’m in love wit’ ya. And you deserve to be happy. I care about my brother, but I ain’t gonna keep fighting this feeling. And ain’t no way I’m a let you sit up here thinkin’ you ain’t the prize.”
Pearline blinked up at Smoke. He stroked her cheek with his thumb. Softly. Delicately. Reassuringly.
“…You bastard. How dare you take advantage?”
Smoke cocked his head.
“I’m pouring my heart out, and you say that?”
Pearline slaps Smoke. Hard.
“GET. OUT.”
Smoke growled, top lip snarled.
“You gon’ stop hitting me.” He warned.
“You deserve it.” She sassed.
Smoke toward over Pearline. She jumped slightly.
“So, you don’t feel the same?” Smoke’s husky voice challenged her.
“No.” Pearline replied, looking down his body with a slow sigh.
Smoke stood firm. Pearline peered up at him.
“…I’ll leave. But I’m still keepin’ my eye on you.”
Smoke gave her a once over before making his way down the stairs. Pearline’s chest heaved up and down with a shaky exhale.
Some nights later, Pearline got dressed to perform a new song she’d written titled Pale Pale Moon. She spent majority of the day emptying the closets and drawers of Stack’s things, part of her wanting to burn them but deciding it wasn’t worth it. Instead, drove down to a local thrift store and dropped the bags off without a backward glance.
He’d taken the things that meant more to him. His money. His jewelry. Leaving behind the one person he vowed never to leave. She’d done enough crying herself to sleep. And yet she couldn’t get Smoke out of her head. His confession.
Pearline deep down admired Smoke beyond him being her brother–in–law. She’d always known him to respect women and he always treated Pearline kindly. He would listen to her speak about things he didn’t understand, like how to grow certain flowers. He always took up for her, checked in on her, and stared at her with What Pearline now understood as deep affection.
She was seen with Smoke.
That’s all she ever wanted.
“Stop talking to her like that, Stack for I beat ya’ ass.”
“You ever need anything, don’t hesitate to ask, Pearlie.”
“You just as important to me, Pearlie.”
Everything he’d ever said to her. Every hug, every smile, every look. All of it was much more. Much deeper.
Messenger’s gave her a standing ovation.
Delta Slim and his band played to the words of Pale Pale Moon.
Pearline felt alive. Her lush skin so smooth like the sultry blues music.
She needed a distraction from Smoke.
But his words the other day…
He told her that he was in love with her. Told her to her face and with no shame.
Pearline was dropped off by a friend to her home since she’d been drinking. She waved goodbye before entering, shutting and locking the door behind her. Pearline braced herself against the wall, removing her shoes. She walked the length of her front foyer and the sound of a lighter flickering caused her to grab a vase, ready to lunge it at whoever broke into her home.
Vase raised above her head, she turned the corner.
“Who’s there—”
Standing tall and wearing a soft blue shirt rolled up his arms and black slacks, was Smoke.
“You broke into my house?”
Smoke dug into his pocket, swinging a key ring in front of her face.
“Put that shit down before you break it.” Smoke ordered.
“Why should I? You show up unannounced.”
Smoke took it upon himself to take it from her. Pearline didn’t fuss. Smoke placed it back where she’d gotten it from.
“You performed at Messenger’s?”
Pearline’s eyes swept over his body. She drew her shoulders back, strutting past him, removing the silk scarf draped over the front of her neck and down her back. Smoke caught it before it hit the floor. He folded it neatly and placed it on the coffee table, patting it with his fingertips. Pearline gazed at him.
“You look lovely, Pearlie.”
“What do you want, Smoke?” Pearline asked with an exasperated look.
“The truth.”
“It’s late. You can see yourself out…”
Pearline crossed her arms and poked her hip out.
Smoke motioned towards the kitchen with his head, “What that arsenic for?”
Pearline’s arms dropped.
“Mhm,” He puffed on his cigarette, “You tried to poison my brother with that pie.”
Pearline exhaled, “I did. No use in lying. Maybe you shouldn’t have stopped him from sampling it.” Pearline replied with her voice laced with unshed tears, “Don’t matter, I ain’t gonna poison him.”
“Cause of me.”
“So? I chickened out, Smoke.”
“Why you keeping it?” Smoke probed with narrow eyes.
“Doesn’t matter.”
“Pearlie…” Smoke clenched his jaw, “I care about ya’…And I need to know if ya’ feeling the same.”
Pearline bounced her foot.
“You won’t stop unless I tell you…”
Pearline locked eyes with Smoke.
“Smoke..I…I should have picked you. Then I know I’d be treated better.”
A single tear fell.
“You can still chose me—”
“It’s too late for that. Won’t do us any favors acting on those feelings, now would it?”
Smoke disagreed.
“It’ll do us more than just a favor, baby…”
Pearline nibbled on her bottom lip.
Smoke strolled up on Pearline. Her breath hitched, eyes closing when his body pressed against hers. He placed a hand on the nape of her neck, tilting her head. Smoke leaned in, closing the distance between them. Pearline parted her lips ever so slightly, giving Smoke and entry. His fluffy lips touched hers with uncertainty. Pearline snaked her hands up his chest and secured her arms around his shoulders.
Smoke intensified the kiss. Soft pecks turned into open–mouthed movements. Pearline’s skin tingled with desire. Smoke’s chest bloomed with passion. He’d longed to taste her. He regretted not making a move on Pearline when he should have. His little brother had always been the smooth talker, the lady magnet.
The sound of lips smacking and soft breaths.
The feel of his rough hands gliding over her hips to grab ass.
Pearline pulling him in closer with her hands clutching onto his shirt.
They kissed their way towards the stairs. Smoke broke away from her lips to pick Pearline up. She wrapped her legs around him, diving in for more. Their tongues battled for dominance as Smoke climbed up the stairs. They stumbled, knocked against walls, and snatched off each other’s clothes all the way to her room.
“I need you,” Pearline whispered longingly.
“I’m here…I’m right here…”
Pearline wiggled out of Smoke’s arms and she dropped to her knees in a flash. He snatched off his shirt and watched her pull his belt from the loops. She tossed it to the floor and with her eyes on his, Pearline opened his zipper and unbuttoned his pants.
“Let me pleasure you, Elijah.”
“Go on, bring him out.” Smoke commanded.
Pearline did just that. She hummed sensuously. It was heavy in her hand and warm to the touch. She jerked him a little, watching the way he licked his lips down at her. Pearline wrapped her lips around his head and started sucking with no hands.
“Ahhh, fuck…”
Pearline gathered spit on her tongue as she sucked. Smoke watched like he was staring down at a circus act. Pearline was doing tricks he ain’t never experienced in his thirty plus years on earth. She made spit bubbles and slurped it back up. Her tongue curled around his shaft like a slick tentacle. She would pop her lips off and spit on it. Over and over. Getting down right disgusting like some street walker.
“This how you do it, Pearlie? FUCK.”
She attacked his balls with gusto. Moaning and whimpering with a mouth full of his nuts and big dick. Smoke couldn’t believe his eyes. He guessed the saying pretty girls love sucking dick that his little brother always said was true. He had a woman at home that did it like this? Ain’t no other woman come close to Pearline.
“Pearlie…don’t stop…”
She inhaled his dick and stroked him with two hands. Bawdy blues and all. Smoke weaved his fingers through her soft curls and controlled her movements. He fed her mouth some dick since she worked so hard to make him cum. His eyes turned puppyish and he dragged his bottom lip between his teeth.,
“I’m a cum so fucking hard!”
Pearline did a disappearing act with his dick. Smoke almost saw heaven. He grunted deep with his release. Not a single drop wasted.
He stared at her as she licked him clean. He backed away, slapping his tip on her wet tongue.
“So nasty wit’ it. You suck me like I’m ya’ man.”
“I’m passionate about giving, Smoke. It’s my favorite job,” Pearline licked her lips, eyes staring at his dick like it was made of the purest gold, “Especially when it’s nice and big like this. One thing about me,” Pearline stroked him and tongue kissed his tip between words, “I was known for being the best dick sucker. I’m not ashamed to admit…when you’re good at something,” Pearline ran her tongue from base to tip, “you keep going…and going…”
“Dayum…”
She was sucking on him again. Smoke stroked her face, caressed her hair, told her how pretty she looked, and moaned her name.
“You nice and thick in my mouth again, Elijah. Wanna give me what I’m workin’ so hard for?” She teased.
“Pearline! Ahhhh…”
She gulped his cum down again, giggling at his face.
“Get up.”
Smoke didn’t wait for Pearline to do it, he picked her up himself. Smoke spun her around and let his hands explore her naked body. Toned and thick at the same time. He watched her ass recoil beneath his palm, chocolate ass bouncing like jello.
“All this body…I’d handle ya’ ass erryday.” Smoke talked slickly.
“How would you handle me, Papa?”
That papa drove him crazy.
“I’d bend ya’ over…stick my tongue in ya’ pucker and ya’ cat…make ya’ suck my dick outta my sleep…after a hard day,” Smoke whacked her on the butt, “Then I’d make nasty, messy, love to ya’ baby…all over this fuckin’ house…”
Smoke picked Pearline up and placed her on the bed. She crawled away from him and he followed like a predator to his prey, nibbling on her flesh with his teeth, licking the soles of her feet. She got on all fours and dipped her back like a feline. Smoke put his face in it, suffocating himself on purpose. Pearline moved her hips, riding his face.
“Smoke…” she moaned, “Just like that…eat Stack’s pussy…”
“This ain’t his no more…”
Pearline whimpered.
“It’s yours?”
“All mines, baby. All this twangy pussy…”
“Shiiittttt…”
Smoke resurfaced, growling. He put his face in it again and growled some more. Pearline arched her back and cried out when Smoke jabbed her entrance with a pointed tongue.
“I can’t see you…I need to see how you doin’ that, Papa…”
Smoke couldn’t agree more. He flipped Pearline over and she opened up so wide her hips ached.
“Can’t get no wider than that, baby…so eager…”
“Feast on me, Papa…let me watch…” Pearline begged.
Jagged, labored, and sharp breaths escaped her mouth. Smoke’s handsome face and those juicy lips munched on Pearline’s pussy with gluttony, exactly what she wanted to see from her position on her back. His eyes are low like he was high off of her tangy taste and his lips and tongue moved in sync with each other. Pearline tightened her vaginal muscles around his fingers that were seated deep in her pussy and just like that, she leaked on his tongue. As long as his tongue, lips, and fingers stay on her she’ll give him what he wanted.
“Your pussy is so pretty and tight, baby…” Smoke takes two fingers to gently stroke her cum covered inner lips with an enthralling and spellbinding expression on his face, bottom lip all pouty, and golds on display, “I’ll take care of ya’ Pearlie…anything ya’ need…ya’ pussy ate up…fucked real good…spoiled…loved on the proper way…I’m there…”
Pearline held her legs up like Smoke instructed. She begged for him to eat her pussy. Smoke wanted to taste that twat, taste the mixture of salty sweetness. The way Pearline moved like a feline on stage, captivating the audience, hips gyrating and ass moving in a slow motion, smoke wanted to dig his tongue in it and sample it. He wanted her to do all that on his tongue and his dick.
“I think these inches about right for ya’, huh?” His onyx eyes flicker up to gaze at her. The way his irises looked, she can feel his eagerness to fuck the shit out of her instantaneously. No words needed, just his eyes doing the talking. Pearline nodded her head slowly before chewing on her bottom lip.
“Smoke,” Pearline started pushing her pussy against his tongue, humping as Smoke wiggled it and sucked away, “Fuck! Fuckfuckfuck!”
Her musk crowded his nose and grew stronger the more she creamed.
“That’s right…feed me this good pussy…”
“As tasty as you are…mmm,” Smoke showed her just how delicious she is, “Don’t you worry, Pearlie, I’ll give you what you deserve…”
“I…I–I deserve it…” Pearline struggled to form words between moans.
She stilled her hips so he could suck her up. Pearline gasped, hands shaking and unsure if she wanted to grab his head or the sheets.
“Uhhhhhhhhhhhhhh—”
Smoke’s rattling breaths fanned her pussy. He licked his lips and stared at the beautiful flower before his eyes with an intoxicating gaze. He covered her inner thighs with soft kisses, listening to her calm breaths. He stared up the valley of her glistening body.
“I need you on top, Pearlie…”
Smoke gets up to sit on the end of the bed, helping Pearline climb on top of him. His large hand is on the back of her head, pushing her face towards his so he could make her taste his lips. Smoke smirked as he kissed her, slipping his skillful tongue into her mouth so she could taste that sweet pussy all over his taste buds. All you could hear was the slurping of lips and heavy breathing.
Pearline fumbled with his pants, his lips fighting to keep kissing her and each time she pulled on the fabric his fat dick would jump and brush against her pussy lips. Finally, skin-to-skin contact. Smoke’s muscular thighs, heavy balls, and that thick dick. Pearline didn’t even wait, as soon as his pants were pushed past his dick she squatted over him while his toned hips pushes his dick up to meet her.
“Elijah…” Pearline grabbed onto his shoulders.
All she can feel is solid, throbbing, long girth entering her from beneath. Her inner lips all the way to her clit pulsates with need. Smoke continued to pump her pussy at a slow pace with his hand reaching up to grip her throat. Pearline’s eyes are focused between her legs and she watched with awe at the seductive motion of his hips burying his dick deeper and deeper...his abdominal muscles crunched and the more noise her pussy made, Smoke’s thrust deepened.
She was staring back and forth from his dick to his face with a delusional expression—still in disbelief about how much dick this man possesses. Identical to his brother. Pearline is still in shock that she was fucking her brother–in–law. She let out a gasp and her head goes back so far Smoke had to cradle it. The closer Smoke pulls her body towards him, her erect nipples brush his lips. He opens his mouth wide, his long, thick tongue showing both stiff peaks some attention before gently sucking it.
He had her slim waist in a firm position as he rocked her up and down his dick. It was a sensual dance.
“Why you fuckin’ me like you love me?” Pearline whispered.
“Cause I do love ya’…”
“We shouldn’t be doing this…” Pearline whined.
It was too late for that.
“I’m ‘bout to tear that ass up,” Smoke warned her with a forceful, guttural voice. He picked Pearline up by her waist and turned her around, “Spread your fucking thighs...c’mon, baby, open that pussy up I need that shit so bad...yessss...got this pussy driving me crazy, Pearlie...this wet ass pussy...make love to this pussy all fucking day, baby…”
“Oh, my goodness!”
"Pussy getting wetter with papa’s fat dick up in it?”
Pearline moaned in response. This was the most vocal Smoke had ever been. He couldn’t wait to have her.
"Pearlie…fuck…" Smoke moaned, "darling...I swear to God,...do you know how I’d kill to be up in this? Huh? Make you mines...I’m stroking it…all this wet pussy wrapped around my fucking dick...alla ‘dis ass? dassit baby...fuck on daddy like that…”
Pearline couldn’t help herself as she leaned over, ass high while she rode Smoke’s dick in reverse cowgirl. She looked back at him, curls in her face and heart racing from the workout she was giving her pussy. She could feel Smoke’s fingers graze her ass cheeks before they were on lower lips. Pearline’s peach fuzz tickled his thumbs as he spread heropen so that he could watch the way his dick pushed past her swollen vulva, producing more cream.
“Damn, Pearlie…it’s like ya’ pussy been wanting this dick…you’re so wet…”
“Unh, yes—”
“Ohhh, you work it like that, huh? That’s how you riding this daddy dick?” Smoke groaned and it made your clit twitch.
“You makin’ this dick hella sloppy,” Smoke said and she heard the obstacle in his voice to hold his nut off. Pearline was working the tip of his dick now, all that beautiful dark skin and the muscles in her back mesmerizing him.
“Elijah…” Pearline moans, but it’s so low with how loud her pussy is.
Smoke was in a trance watching her ass bounce and clap against his crotch each time she came down on his dick. The cotton candy pink center in contrast with her deep brown skin made him salivate.
“Ooh—”
“Papa hittin’ that spot? Yeah? Here, lemme hit it for ya’ some more.. ooh, baby, ya’ takin' it…there ya’ go…hmmmm, pussy is yankin’ me...here some more dick for, ya’…”
Pearline looked back and saw the intensity in his eyes and then she could feel his dick in her stomach. Her face felt tight and hot and the heat from Smoke’s body had her shimmery skin sweating. Pearline felt tears pricking her eyes and her mouth fell open, drooling with lust. This shit was too good.
“Ima cum on this dick, Papa!”
“Gon’ head that’s what the fuck I want,” Smoke said menacingly, “Where the fuck is it?!”
“Ohhhhhhh, Shit—”
“Bounce on that dick…just like that…bring that ass down on me, girl...ahhhh, fuck…you do it so nasty on this wood, girl...so fucking nasty. Been wanting me to fuck ya’ tail up…you like fucking the other twin, baby?”
“Yes! Yes! Yes!”
Pearline’s ass flopped down in Smoke’s lap, her walls like a tight capsule squashing his dick for dear life.
“Fuck, Pearlie…”
Smoke stood with his dick still buried inside of her and turned her around with her back arched, knees on the bed, and feet hanging over the edge. His eyes swept over her body as he spread her cheeks apart. Pearline glanced back, eyes lowering between his legs. Thick. Veins pulsing. She reached behind to spread her creamy folds for him. Their eyes met and he purposely sank into her agonizingly slow.
“I love the way you moan when I push all this daddy dick deep inside of you…” Smoke pulled out, doing it again, “Like ya’ singing the blues to me…”
“It makes my pussy feel so full, Papa...I love the way you fuck me...it feels so good, baby, don’t stop stroking me…”
“You love knowing you fuckin’ Smoke, huh?”
Pearline’s warm, wet, tight pussy gripped his dick and when she reached back to grab for his balls, she couldn’t believe how heavy they were. If he keeps going at a slow pace like this, making her pussy cream and sound like this, Smoke gon’ erupt and make a large mess all in his sister–in–law’s pussy.
His hands were slapping her ass around to let her know she made his dick feel good with the loving he was giving her. It was deep and his words were nasty but his strokes were patient and savoring—like he wanted to stay in her married pussy as long as he could and make her moan as much as her voice box can produce.
His thick dick is slow and torturous sliding in and out her, pussy lips snug around the head of his dick every time he enters her. Smoke would slide all the way in, her pussy making all kinds of noises, then he would pull all the way out. Pearline knew why he was doing this—sliding in and pulling out. He loved the way his wide tip pushed past her walls. He loved the warmth and her juices making his dick all sticky.
He was taking his time, learning the hole his brother fucked, the pussy his little brother neglected. Smoke could only imagine slippery and sticky Pearline could make his dick. She was creaming and oozing out with each stroke and it’s all over his dick and balls.
“You like it messy, yeah?” Pearline asked with a gasp in between.
“Arch that fuckin’ back.” That was his response.
“Like this, Papa?” She whispered as she pointed that plump ass further in the air, shaking it a little for him, “I want you to hit the bottom of this wet pussy...hold it there and feel me squeeze that dick…”
“Pearlie…”
“You like it messy, make your pussy cum—”
Smoke grunted.
“This shit mines? I thought you said we ain’t suppose to be doin’ this here?”
Pearline whimpered when he pushed deep enough for her to feel pressure. He was playing with her. She loved it.
“We ain’t…it’s wrong…”
Smoke hooked his hand around the front of her neck and he peered down at her with a mug on his face.
“I shouldn’t be fuckin’ my pussy? Thought ya’ wanted this dick?”
Smoke gave her two forceful strokes as a reminder. Pearline’s eyes crossed. He did it again, watching her face contort in the vanity mirror across from them.
“Talk to me, baby. Want it?”
“Yes, yes, please, give it to me…”
His punishing strokes hit Pearline out of nowhere, knocking the wind out of her chest and tearing her guts up.
She continued her shit-talking while her ass clapped back on him, “Yes, Elijah, fuck this pussy, take it, I’m a cum all over that dick...fat dick making me cum right now...oh my God…that big dick making me cum right now…uhhhhhhhhhhh…”
She was cut off from Smoke’s hand on the back of her neck, pushing her face down into the mattress.
“This fuckin’ pussy...I’ll get ya’ knocked up, baby. I swear I will.”
Her lips parted and she started drooling on the bed.
“I know you feel these nuts banging that clit...that’s what I’m talkin ‘bout.”
“SMOKE!”
“Yeah? Yeah, baby?” Smoke teased.
He was beating her walls out.
“Don't you ever think you ain’t special...look at all this…you ain't playing with no lil’ boy…you know what a beast can do to ya’ sexy ass…”
Smoke was reminding her that this is what she’ll be getting tonight, the next morning, the day after that…
Smoke pulled out and rubbed her clit back and forth with his dick, and all she could remember before seeing stars was pushing out a fountain from her pussy—wetting up the sheets, the hardwood, and Smoke. He kept going, his dick rubbing her swollen clit back and forth.
“This pussy is too fat and juicy...wet pussy dripping...making a fucking mess on this dick...keep it up and I’m sucking on ya’ pussy again.”
“Please…I wanna feel your lips again, Papa.”
Smoke groaned.
He got down behind Pearline and ate to his hearts desire. She reached around and grabbed his head. Smoke massaged her ass while french kissing her pussy from the back. Loud, smacking of the lips.
“You think you can steal this pussy from your brother every night?” Pearline dirty talked.
Smoke’s tongue worked harder. When he was finished, Pearline turned over onto her back, thighs spread and knees to her chest with her fingers pushing her puffy folds back to show him where he needed to nut.
“Clean Big Papa dick off first,” Smoke is knelt on the bed near her face. All she can see hovering above her is the underside of his dick and his balls. Pearline extended her neck, mouth wide and tongue flicking before grabbing him by the balls. Mouth engulfing him, Smoke swipes two fingers over his tongue before bringing them to her clit while she sucked.
“Get that motherfucker nice and wet too, baby…”
Her lips pop off his dick, “Drain that dick in me, Papa.”
“Shit, get ya’ pregnant? Pearlie don’t say sum shit that’ll get ya’ in trouble…let my dick go.”
Pearline’s lips left Smoke’s tip. She looked up at him with glossy eyes.
“I wanna cum like this,” Pearline spread her thighs so far that her feet touched the bed on either side of her. Smoke walked around and between her legs, his erection in hand, jerking downward to open his slit and show her his tasty pre-cum.
“Damn...my dick...shit so stiff I could bust from the sight of ya’ pretty ass,” Smoke was back inside of her, “ima always have ya’...ya’ love me, girl?”
The gruff tone mixed with his words has her breath uneven and her heartbeat a little faster.
“...Wha?” Pearline was astounded. He was still sexing her missionary, her body moving back and forth against the bed in time with his strokes.
“I said...do ya’ love me?” His jaw clenched tightly and his eyes were serious.
“...Yesss…” Pearline turns her head away because now she can’t look at him as her tears begin to cloud her vision. Smoke wasn’t having that. He grabs her chin, forcing her to look at him. His brows are furrowed and his lips are parted.
“I love ya’. I love you and I ain’t letting ya’ go...I want ya’ to remember that and take every fucking word I’m saying seriously, Pearlie.”
Smoke’s lip had curled up and his eyes were so intense that she could literally feel them burning into hers.
“Do ya’ understand me, girl? I fucking love you...”
Pearline weeped. Smoke’s tongue found its way to her nipples and he starts sucking each one softly. His patience. It didn’t matter how long it took for him to finally have her, he made that his mission. Her happiness means the world to him. She had moments of insecurity but his reassurance makes her realize it doesn’t matter. He dreams of all the ways he can take care of her, how he would treat her better and love her better. She’d wake up happy knowing she was properly taken care of. She’d feel more at home with him than she ever felt with Stack. And she believed him.
Smoke buries his face against her neck and with his hands wrapped around her shoulders to keep her still and his hips pistoning in and out, Pearline can feel him pushing all the love that he could deep inside of her.
She locked her ankles around him and shut her eyes tight to stop her tears. He was licking, sucking, and biting all over her neck. Pearline continuously gasps in his ear with each deep thrust of his. Her hand is on his firm ass and she start forcing his hips down even more.
“Dig fucking deeper,” She whispers to him.
“Dayum...dayum,” He groaned in her ear, “Pearlie…I wanna cum inside of ya’!”
“Yes!”
“I’m about to bust this shit wide open—”
Her mouth went wide with ecstasy and Smoke’s hand was on the back of her head to watch her face while he forced himself deep inside, stopping at the precise moment he heard her try to utter a sound before doing it all over again and making her eyes roll. Smoke kissed and nibbled along her jaw. Her pussy didn’t make no sense to him.
Pearline felt the same about his dick. He was really stretching her out and the way his biceps trembled she knew he was about to cum heavy and hard. Pearline widened her legs for him some more. Smoke brought her ankles up to rest on his shoulders and he lifted to his hands, dropping dick off in her.
“It’s right here for you...cum in your pussy, Papa...this your pussy,...this your pussy, Papa...this your pussy—”
“Take my cum...take all my cum up in this pussy...ahhh...shit...I got more for ya’...that’s it...goddamn this pussy won’t let me go...keep cumming—”
Pearline could feel the sensation of his cum filling her pussy up and that’s when her own orgasm extended from the bottom of her pussy all the way up to the surface and made her spasm beneath him. It was fucking, but with so much affection for each other. Smoke eases out of her and even with him not there she still felt stretched out and aching. Smoke is on his back next to her, his dick still rigid. Pearline turns to the side, one leg coming up to rest on top of his while her feet rubbed against his inner thigh. She looked up to see Smoke staring at her—just studying her face.
“I love you.”
Pearline’s shyness took over. The intensity in his eyes. She knew he meant it.
“You really love me?” Pearline asks with a shaky and sweet voice.
“Real shit, baby...real shit.”
She beamed and hid her face. Smoke chuckled.
“I can’t believe we just had sex.”
“We made love, Pearlie.” Smoke corrected.
The harsh reality of what just happened loomed over her.
“…What does this mean?” Pearline asked with a small voice.
“It means whatever ya’ want it to mean…but just know, I can make ya’ happy, Pearlie. Let me love ya’.”
Pearline sits up.
“Smoke…if Stack finds out—”
“So what?”
“You came in me! What if I get pregnant? We ain’t had sex in months! He would know!”
“Pearlie…”
Smoke stilled her. Pearline locked eyes with him. Smoke tried to find the words to say.
“What is it, Smoke?”
He was crestfallen.
“Pearlie…Stack…Stack been seeing Mary more…cause he thinking of how to get her away from Arkansas without her husband finding out she pregnant.”
Pearline cocked her head back. A fresh wave of tears swam in her eyes.
“W-what? What you sayin’? She pregnant with his baby? Smoke? No…no, no, no, no—”
Smoke wrapped his arms around Pearline.
“You knew all this time?!—”
“She just found out. She came to tell him. Pearlie…”
Smoke lifted her into his lap. He allowed her to cry, stroking her back and kissing her hair. She cried for a while, shaking against him. Smoke stared down at her, his thumb caressing her cheek.
“Pearlie?”
“…I should have killed him.”
Pearline sat up in Smoke’s lap. She had this far away look in her eyes.
“Stack a grown man. I can’t keep blaming you for his faults, Smoke. You’ve done enough to protect him and look after him. He never knew how to watch his own back without you being there…”
Smoke dropped his eyes. Pearline finally looked at him. She tilted his chin up, her eyes flicking from his face to his chest.
“Why didn’t you steal me from him? Why did you let him take me away from you?” Pearline contested with a knot in her throat.
“…why did ya’ have to fall in love wit’ him instead of me?” Smoke brazens.
Pearline held his gaze, even as tears streamed from her eyes.