The curvy girl arched her back like a feral cat and craned her long neck to see the bedside alarm clock over his right shoulder. "It's one in the morning," she said, her bronze skin glistening in the moonlight like the surface of a calm mountain lake. She dipped her head to take his semi-hard cock back into her mouth, but was halted by the tightening grip on her hair.
"I gots to go you crazy bitch," he said as he wiggled his 5-foot-8 frame out from under her sultry body. "You know I can't be seen north of 189th street after dark," he reminded her as he pulled up his boxers and mostly pulled up his saggy jeans.
"You'll be fine, Silver," she said as she hugged her naked self to his chest, her fingers tracing the six inch scar just below his left pec, the source of his colorful nickname. Ebron was dubbed Silver, short for Silver Dollar, by his fellow gang members after the lucky coin his father left him deflected the bullet which surely would have taken his young life.
"Not if your cousin or his boys catch me up here," he said as he pulled the red tank over his fro and pulled on his faded denim jacket. He pulled Bianca to him and kissed her deeply, then leaned and kissed the rose colored nipple which stood proudly from her large chest like the eraser of a brand new pencil.
"I can try to reason with Hector," she offered, as she patted the pocket of the jacket which held the lucky coin. Her other hand slid down his back and fully tucked in the red bandanna that draped from his back pocket, "but it's best to be safe." She pressed the soft pillows of her full lips to his and kissed him good-bye before he ducked out the bedroom window and scrambled down the rickety fire escape.
MLK Boulevard provided the most direct route back to his turf but he'd have to pass The Ace of Spades, where Hector and the Latin Kings were sure to be dealing. So he took off toward Roosevelt drive which was mostly burnt out tenements and homeless.
"Why won't that bitch hang at my crib?" Silver thought to himself as he traveled through the grey shadows of the neighborhood, happy that the city was none too quick to replace street lights in this section of town. "Almost there," he whispered to himself as he rounded the corner and saw the bright green Lotto sign above the stairway to the subway.