Astoria, New York
11:02am
"Mama," Ebony shook her mother's bare shoulder. The skin was slick with moisture. Janet jumped awake as if she'd been hit instead of gently shaken. Her dilated eyes darted around the car and settled on her daughter. "We're here." Janet slowly nodded her understanding and licked her chapped, greyed lips.
Ebony reached into her purse with slightly shaken hands and found her Chapstick. She pulled off the cap and leaned across the car to put some on her mother's lips. Once finished, she offered a meek smile and Ebony returned it with one of her own. Ebony grabbed her mother's hand and ran her thumb over the smooth burn scars that started at her thumb and ran up her forearm.
This was the second rehabilitation check-in for her mother within the last year. The eighth trip in the last four years. She couldn't keep track of how many times it had been total. Each time was more grim than the one before. Probably because they both had one more trip's worth of proof that it was all for nothing.
But Ebony couldn't give up on her. She would do anything to give her mother a second chance at life. Even if it meant working three jobs for six months that each paid their own versions of nothing. She put her art, her passions and dreams on hold and got together the money.
Her mother's head had ended up back against the window of the car. She was shivering in her sleep yet dripping hot sweat. The beginnings of withdrawal were creeping up on her and Ebony had to check her in soon before she turned into something uncontrollable.
"Ma," Ebony swallowed. "Last night you told me something about daddy. Something about him and Bel..." She trailed off as she fought to decipher her mother's twisted words. Ebony replayed the eerie scene over and over again until she couldn't stomach it anymore. Her mother never uttered a word about her father that Ebony could untangle but for the first time, she had. And Ebony couldn't believe she couldn't remember what she said. "Please tell me what you said." She begged. Her mother groaned and moaned her incoherence and Ebony could feel her tears piercing her eyes.
She would probably never know.
Ebony rubbed her hands down the front of her mother's straight backs. Ebony usually did the style before she went in for rehab.
"Okay, Janet." The nurse sighed. She walked over and grabbed the handles of her mother's wheelchair. Ebony bent down to place a kiss on her mother's cheek. Her lips stopped against her ear.
"This is the last time. I feel it." She proclaimed, hoping it meant as much to her mother as it did her to hear the words aloud. Her mother seemed unfazed and continued alternating between consciousness and sleep. Her mother and her things were wheeled down the hall. They reached a door that required a badge and then they were out of sight.
Ebony flicked at her tear and turned on her heel.
Bronx, New York
8:30pm
"I hate this damned city." Silas grumbled as Gael slammed the breaks for the hundredth time. His driver looked into the rearview mirror to smirk at him through the reflection. His toffee brown eyes gleamed against skin set three shades darker. His eyes creased and showed signs that the bottom half of his face was smiling. Silas wasn't as amused and decided to turn his attention to his suitcase of guns instead of the jagged drive. His fingers glided over the selection of sub-machine guns he and his men had to choose from.
None of them could compare to his reliable pistol.
But this wasn't Texas. He didn't have the gift of distance on his side. Men were everywhere and nowhere all at once. The automatic and successive shots of the machine guns were best in this setting. He ran his hand over it once more, trying to imagine it hot from use.
"Fucking beautiful, ain't she?" Jedediah said from beside him. He leaned up from the third row of seats in the SUV and looked Silas in the eye with a wide, giddy grin on his face. Silas' eyes rolled at the excitement. His hitman was thirsty to shed blood and he finally had his chance.
"Listen to me," Silas called for everyone's attention. Armando, who sat in the passenger's seat beside Gael turned back to him. Everyone's silence coaxed him on. He gazed out the window as he spoke. "We aren't home. Act accordingly."
Everyone knew what that meant.
The car came to a slow at a project housing development. People stood outside, conversing, smoking and drinking under the overhead lights. Women sashayed by sitting men, capturing their eyes for just a second and then they'd go back to what they were doing. Gael pulled around the back of the building where they had a key to enter. It was less conspicuous to go around the back but there was a risk if someone saw them. Going through the back door meant you didn't want to be seen. Which always meant you had bad intentions upon arrival.
He sent a text from his throw-away cell. He looked to the building and saw the nearby security camera turn away from the entrance they needed to go through. They put on their gloves and sat their face masks in standby position.
"
Vamos
." Silas almost whispered. Gael, Jedediah and Armando both jumped out of the car with purpose. They strolled past the uninterested camera, used the doctored door pass and walked into the utility closet of the housing complex. Gael opened the door that led to the lobby with a crack and then threw it open the rest of the way when it was clear.
Silas followed up the steps, bypassing the leftover fast food containers, dirt and roaches flooding the stairwell. They reached the second floor and knocked on the door he'd given the Sureños to operate out of.
Blaring rap music poured out of the door's frame even with it shut. Silas' irritation grew after the third second of waiting. He tried to be diplomatic and make a statement by knocking in the first place. It was a short lived effort.
"
Hágale—Go,"
Gael took the key out of his pocket and opened the door.
There had to be at least ten people inside. Silas could feel his men tense at the sight of so many soon-to-be enemies. Probably all with fully loaded guns in the back of their pants.
The smell of weed was a layer of smoke in the air that altered their sight immediately. He stepped to the forefront of his men. When he did, Leonardo appeared from the back bedroom and a smile spread across his profile. His skin was glossed in a youngness that couldn't be faked. He had to be no older than twenty two.