Headlined by New York Times bestseller Carl Weber, three authors bring listeners tales of power, greed, and ambition set in some of the country's roughest neighborhoods.
"Sibling Rivalry" by Carl Weber: They say the parent's sins always fall into the children's laps. Twins Kayden and Jayden Vincent have walked in their father's kingpin shadow as two princes fighting for the same throne since they were children. Now, finally at the age where the transition is inevitable, it seems as if the twins are going head-to-head when it comes to everything around them. What they don't know is that the crown they are fighting for comes with its own burdens—like a past the kingpin forgot to tell them about. It's a past that, if not dealt with, will leave both men without an empire to inherit.
"Love Seldom, Trust Never" by Ty Marshall: While attending his estranged father's funeral, East is approached by the legendary Ricardo Wheeler, who offers him the opportunity of a lifetime. Wheeler takes the young man under his wing, but when Wheeler's son and heir-in-waiting becomes jealous, his excessive ambition and quest for power lead to betrayal. A treacherous war is set in motion that will force the powerful legend to choose between his two sons. Anything built on a lie will eventually crumble. When no one and nothing are what they seem, who can you trust?
"The Bag Is In" by Marlon P.S. White: Slow grinding for years, Greedy and GiGi are ready to step up their game, with a thirst to be Detroit's king and queen of the trap. The struggle is real, but the payoff will be major. After cashing out their middleman up front, the couple's hood dream tragically turns into a nightmare. The middleman is popped, and the infamous Mexican pipeline is broken. Greedy and GiGi devise a seemingly flawless plan to not only recoup their invested cash, but to link up with one of the most notorious cartels across the border. What seems like sunshine quickly turns to rain, however, and chaos erupts.
Release date:
July 31, 2018
Publisher:
Urban Books
Print pages:
288
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Her voice cracked, and she was the only one who heard how much she meant the words she’d spoken. Faye Jackson’s heart was frozen over as she sat watching the only person who cared about her in the whole world as she lay still in a hospital bed, dependent on a breathing machine. It was the hardest thing she’d ever done in life, and Faye could feel her mental deteriorating right along with her heart. She grabbed the woman’s warm hand and put it to her lips.
“Please don’t leave me, Mama,” Faye whispered. “Not like this. I haven’t been alone in so long. You’ve always been here since the beginning.”
Hot tears streamed down her face as her words fell on deaf ears. It had been a week, and it was becoming evident to Faye that her mother, Chrishelle, wasn’t waking up anytime soon. She had no idea what had happened the night her mom was placed in the hospital. All she knew was what the detectives told her. That someone brutally attacked her, mugged her, and left her brain dead to the world. It just didn’t make any sense to Faye because her mom didn’t have any enemies. She was in her late forties, but she was healthy as an ox and sweet as she could be. Everyone in Bed-Stuy loved her, and she was definitely the heart of the apartment complex that they lived in. Faye kissed Chrishelle’s hand again wishing that she could hear her voice one last time.
“Who would do this to you, Mama? You have never done nothing to nobody.”
The silent tears turned into sobs, and soon, Faye’s vision was so blurry that she couldn’t see anything in the hospital room anymore. She’d quit her job at the bank the day before because her heart was so heavy. Being around people when she felt so detached from everything around her just wasn’t a good mix. All she wanted to do was be by her mother’s side while she still could.
“Excuse me, uh, Miss Jackson?”
Faye wiped her puffy eyes and looked up to see the tall, bald-headed detective that had been working her mother’s case. He was light skinned with brown eyes and a thin mustache. Detective Winthrop was his name, and supposedly, he was working his hardest trying to figure out who had harmed Chrishelle.
“Detective,” Faye’s voice sounded exhausted when she acknowledged the newcomer.
“Can I come in, or is this a bad time?”
“No time right now is a good time,” Faye said, tucking her long curls behind her ears and sniffling. “But, yes, you can come in.”
Detective Winthrop entered the room and took a seat in a chair that faced Faye on the opposite side of the room. He wore a dark tan suit with a pair of Stacy Adams, and in his hands, he held a folder. He watched Faye gently place her mother’s hand back on the bed before straightening up and focusing her attention on him. It was apparent that she’d been crying, and the tip of her nose was a bright red.
“First, I want to apologize for the delay in the case, but I want you to know that we are trying our best to uncover what happened to your mother and how she got that bruise on the back on her head.”
“Trying your best? It has been five days, and the only information you have is the same information you had when it first happened.”
“Once again, Miss Jackson, I apologize. These things aren’t like the detective shows you watch on TV. In real life, these things take a little more time.”
“I understand that.” Faye glared her light brown eyes in his direction. “But each day you come to me it’s the same thing. You telling me you’re sorry and me feeling empty all over again. Didn’t you say she was found outside of a nightclub? Don’t you find it odd that a woman her age would be outside of a club for the twenty-somethings? Have you talked to the owner of that place to see if you can get access to their security footage?”
“Miss Jackson—”
“Miss Jackson, my ass! Now I know what they think is going to happen by assigning you to her case. They think that because you’re a black man I am going to just trust you and believe you will have our best interests at heart. Huh, brotha? Well, you’re wrong. I don’t trust you, or any of the rest of you slimy motherfuckas. My mother ain’t shit but a black casualty to you, and you are just waiting for her to die so she can become another cold case. Coming from where I come from, I see this shit all the time. So don’t come in here with your empty-ass apologies. I bet there ain’t even shit in that folder, huh? You just brought it as a prop to make me think you’ve done something.”
Detective Winthrop’s light face had slowly turned red while Faye was talking, but she didn’t care. He could get up and leave the way he came in for all she cared. Each time he came to her, she held on to a little hope that maybe he had some news about what had gone down, and each time she was disappointed in a major way. She didn’t know why she had even allowed him to come and do the same that day. Probably because she still had hope. She just wanted to understand why, out of all of the people in the world, why her mom? The detective cleared his throat and stood back to his feet.
“As I said before, we are working our best, and hopefully, the next time we speak, I will have a breakthrough in the case.”
“Whatever,” Faye turned her full pink lips up. “This case ain’t gon’ get you a meal with the mayor, so I doubt you are working that hard. Unlike me, you’re probably still getting a full night’s rest. Good-bye, Detective.”
Detective Winthrop looked like he wanted to say something more; instead, he gave Faye a head nod and walked out of the room. She wished that he hadn’t even come to waste her time. Checking the clock on the wall of the room, she saw that the time was nearing six p.m. She reached toward her duffle bag of clothes beside her chair and grabbed the blanket that was neatly folded on top of it. She’d brought it from home. It was the one that was always at the end of her mom’s bed. The one they always curled up in when they watched movies and drank hot cocoa on the cold New York nights. Before she could get comfortable, there was another knock on the hospital door. When she looked up, she saw her mom’s physician, Doctor Boswick, standing in the doorway.
“Hey, Doctor,” Faye greeted the average height, redheaded Caucasian man. He entered the room and began to check Chrishelle’s vitals. “Is there something wrong?”
She didn’t like the way his brow was scrunched up or the concerned expression on his face. He had a chart in his hands, and he looked from it, to Chrishelle, and then back to Faye. Finally, he sighed deeply and looked directly into Faye’s eyes.
“We have tried everything that we can for your mother, Faye. However, whatever she was hit with has caused so much damage that the only way for her to wake up is if she is going to do it herself.”
“And what are those chances?”
Doctor Boswick’s mouth became a thin line, and his expression turned grave.
“Doctor Boswick, what are the chances that my mother will wake up on her own?”
“For the past week, she has had no brain waves. She has not even been able to breathe on her own. If it was not for her being connected to that machine, she would have died days ago. I’m sorry to say that I think it may be in the family’s best interest to pull the plug.”
“So that’s it? You’re just going to give up on her? It’s that easy?”
“This type of thing is never easy, Miss Jackson. We never give up on any patients that are showing signs of getting better. And, well, your mother has not gone in the direction we would have hoped for. The damage is just too grave. We can continue to wait, but that can become very expensive to the family.”
“So, what . . .” Faye felt her chest tighten and her jaw clench. Talking right then felt almost impossible. She took a breath and tried again. “So, what now? You need me to sign off on some papers that says it’s OK to take her off of life support?”
“Yes,” Doctor Boswick said bluntly. “However, unfortunately, per policy and law, we would need someone who is related to the patient by blood to do so. And being as that you are adopted, we have contacted the next of kin to come and do so.”
“W-what?” Faye’s eyes widened. “Who did you call? I’m all the family she has!”
“Wrong!”
Faye heard the voice and instantly cut her eyes at the doctor before turning them to the doorway. In entered a woman in her early thirties, and Faye knew her all too well. She had a red wig on her head and was dressed head to toe as if she’d just stepped off of the red carpet. Her face was beat to the gods, and she didn’t look to be a day older than twenty-five. Carmen Jackson was Chrishelle’s biological daughter. The biological daughter who had run off years back after emptying all of her mother’s accounts. She was the reason that Chrishelle and Faye had been stuck living in their run-down apartment in Bed-Stuy for longer than they had ever intended. Chrishelle had two accounts in her name, one for herself and one for Faye.
Faye had been working since she was fifteen and had given every penny to her mother to put up for safekeeping. By the time she was twenty-two, she’d saved up $25,000. She was going to use it to get herself and her mother out of the hood. Put a down payment on a house in a nice neighborhood and use the rest to go back to college.
Somehow, Carmen found out about the money and stole Chrishelle’s ID since they looked so much alike. People often mistook the two of them as twins. So gaining access to the money, she cleaned out the account and even took the $500 Chrishelle had in her own savings account and left town. No one had seen or heard from her in three years . . . well, until then. She couldn’t believe the doctor had contacted her of all people.
“What is she doing here?” Faye sneered and jumped to her feet.
She felt rage enter her heart and prepared to pounce. Carmen saw that, and at first, looked alarmed. But when she realized that the doctor was between them, she began to chuckle.
“Well, hello to you too, sis. Always a pleasure.”
“To who? Not me,” Faye turned back to the doctor. “You can’t be serious right now. Her? This woman stole everything from us. She is not to be trusted.”
“Oh please! Are you still mad about that chump change?”
“You stole $25,000 from us!” Faye tried to jump past Doctor Boswick to get at her, but he caught her just in time.
“Ladies! Now is not the time!”
“You’re the one who called her! She is not good to this family, and my mother would not be happy that she is here right now! Why would you not tell me that you were going to call her?”
“We needed a blood relative and—”
“I’m blood.” Carmen put her arms up in a voilà fashion. “Whether you like it or not, foster child. And the longer you keep her in here clinging to life, the more I’m going to have to pay in the long run.”
“You owe it to her! I am not going to sit here and let you kill her!”
“You have no choice.”
“What are you doing, Carmen?” Faye asked, her voice desperate. “Do you think that there is insurance money in it for you? Because she made me the sole beneficiary right after you took everything from us.”
“All the more reason to pull the plug,” Carmen glared at her mother. “Serves her right for loving a random more than she did her own daughter. Say your final good-byes, Regret. That woman is taking her last breath at midnight.”
Without another word, Carmen turned around, whipping her thirty-two inch extensions in the air, and stormed out of the room. When she was gone, Doctor Boswick shot Faye an apologetic look before he too exited the room. Faye was defeated. She took a few steps back as the world around her began spinning.
“No no no!” She shook her head and clutched her chest. “Please, God, no. Please, no!”
She knew Carmen meant to make good on her word, and it felt like the world was falling apart around her. It felt like five nights ago when she’d first gotten the call saying that her mother was in the hospital. Her body had gone into shock, and she couldn’t even cry. Instead, she grabbed the blanket that she’d dropped to the floor and went to her mother’s bedside. She climbed on the bed since there was more than enough space, and curled up next to Chrishelle, placing the blanket over them. Like always. Except, that would be the last always.
“Jayden! Oh my God, baby! Why are you doing this to meeee?”
He listened to her call out as he pounded into her with his eight inches of thickness. He was completely naked, and his muscular, caramel-colored chest was wet from sweat. The two of them had been going at it for an hour, and, he had to admit, Treasure had some treasure between her legs. He had wanted her for so long, and when the chance finally arose for him to get at her, he did. She was a five foot five brown-skinned goddess. Her ass was fatter than a mug, and it looked even bigger when he gripped her small waist. His dick wanted to come badly as he watched her breasts bounce and brush against the bed under her, but he held it. He wanted to bring her to her fifth orgasm so he could see her body quiver on his shaft one last time.
“Shut up, bitch, and arch your back,” his gruff voice commanded.
“OK, daddy,” Treasure moaned and tooted her ass up even higher for him. “Baby, you’ve never talked to me like that before. I love it. Call me a bitch again.”
“You dirty bitch,” he told her, smacking her left cheek so hard that it rippled. “You’re a nasty-ass bitch.”
He thrust deep inside of her womanhood three more times, and that did the trick for them both. Right on command, Treasure’s screams turned to shrieks, and he felt her juices spilling down his legs. He grunted and threw his head back as he released his seed in her love canal. He should have pulled out and come on the soft, cream-colored comforter, but her pussy was so warm that pulling out was not an option. When he pulled out, all he wanted to do was fall on the bed next to her, but he had to get out of there.
“Where are you going so soon? It’s only nine o’clock,” Treasure pouted. “I wasn’t good to you this time?”
“Nah,” he chuckled to himself. “You were good. Great, actually. I just got some shit I need to handle, ma. That’s all.”
Treasure smacked her lips and rolled her eyes at him as he got dressed. After he put on his Ralph Lauren T-shirt, he threw a tan hoodie over it before pulling his jeans on. He was moving fast and checking the clock on the wall. He’d definitely stayed longer than what he had wanted, but shorty was fine, could cook, and had good conversation. The smile on his handsome face never went away, and Treasure tossed a pillow his way.
“What’s so funny?”
“Nothing,” he said, shaking his head. “I was just thinking that I understand why Jayden made you his bitch.”
The confused look on her face was interrupted by a door opening and closing in the distance. He heard the front door of Treasure’s two-bedroom apartment lock and cursed silently in his head. He let out a big sigh, already knowing what was about to happen.
“Treasure!” a deep baritone voice called. “Baby girl, I got something for you!”
Before either of them could do anything, the newcomer stepped into the master bedroom with a look that said he wanted to murder everyone written on his face. Treasure’s eyes widened, and her brow furrowed. Her eyes moved back and forth between the men, and when they fell on the small mole on the right cheek of the man she’d just slept with, she gasped. She gasped and put her hand over her heart as she scooted as far back on the bed as possible.
“K-K-Kayden?”
“In the flesh,” he said and winked at her.
“No,” she shook her head. “No. Why? I can’t believe you would do something like this!”
“Like what? Fuck my brother’s bitch?” Kayden laughed. “Trust me when I say you’re not the first one twin and I have shared. Tell her how we used to tag team hoes back in the day, bro.”
He looked at the face of the angry man who had just entered the room, and he might have been looking in a mirror. The only thing that set him apart from his brother was the mole on his face; other than that, the two men were identical. Kayden shrugged his shoulders and shook his head. Truth be told, his plan had been to dive into Treasure and dive right back out without his brother ever knowing he was there. It looked like his plans had changed, now, and he gave Jayden a sheepish grin.
“My bad, Jay. You know we have the same taste in women.”
Jayden’s eyes were a blazing circle of fire. He looked at Treasure, who had tears streaming down her face, and then back at Kayden.
“Yo, man, what the fuck is wrong with you? You just got back in the city, and you’re already on bullshit. With my bitch?”
He was completely messed up in the head. He and Treasure had been dealing with each other tough for eight months, and he really thought she would be the one to get him out of the game. Now he knew he would never be able to look at her the same. He glared at her, not because he blamed her for what had just happened, but because he was not ready to say good-bye. Without thinking twice about it, he swung and connected a powerful blow to Kayden’s jaw. His brother fell back and clutched his face as if afraid it was going to disconnect from his head. Treasure shrieked and clutched onto the sheets even tighter.
“Jayden, I didn’t know,” Treasure’s voice was wavy. She sucked in air and looked at her man with fear in her eyes. “Please don’t leave me. Please. I’m so sorry.”
“Shut up!” Jayden yelled, looking her way in disgust. “You gon’ fuck this nigga in the crib I put you up in?”
“How was I supposed to know that your sick-ass brother would do something like this?” Treasure threw her robe around her naked body and jumped from the bed. Her sobs were loud and her entire body was shaking. “Jayden, I love you. I would never do anything to cross you, baby. Please believe me!”
She tried to reach out and grab him, but he pulled away from her and stepped back. He didn’t want her to touch him. He could still smell the scent of her sweet pussy in the air, and he couldn’t take the thought of Kayden experiencing the bliss between her legs. He turned to his brother, who still had a smirk on his face. Jayden wanted nothing more than to knock it away from his lips, so that’s what he did. His right hook came so fast that Kayden didn’t have time to duck.
It was a powerful blow, and it knocked Kayden back, but not off of his feet. The next one did, though. Jayden was so mad that all he saw was red. He could have killed his brother at that second, but he felt a pull in his mental that stopped him. He blinked his eyes and saw his brother laid out on the floor with a bloody nose and a fat lip.
“You gon’ put your hands on me over a bitch, bro?” Kayden asked, holding his hands like a cup under his leaking nose.
“She wasn’t just a bitch to me,” Jayden said, looking back at Treasure’s tearful face, and then shook his head. “She is now, though. You can have her.”
With that, Jayden snatched up the bag that he’d dropped at the bedroom door entrance and left the way he came.
Two weeks had passed since her mother was taken off of life support. Since then, the funeral had been held, and Faye had said her final good-byes. Of course, Carmen did not help pay or show up for any of it. Faye figured she left town once she found out that there was really no life insurance money for her. Either that, or she realized that the next time she saw Faye, there would be nobody to save her from the ass whooping she had coming her way.
It turned out that Chrishelle had a $200,000 life insurance policy, all of which went to Faye. Two hundred thousand of which $50,000 of it went toward funeral and hospital costs. So now, there she was, $150,000 richer sitting in the bedroom of an empty home. Not empty in terms of furniture, because the apartment was fully furnished, but empty in a sense that there were once two people that lived there. Now there was only one.
Faye sighed from the center of her queen-sized bed. She wore a pair of shorts and a tank top over her smooth caramel skin. Her hair was pulled back into a ponytail, and she looked at the big boxes that were against the wall of her bedroom. She’d bought them days before, but still had yet to pop them open and start packing. She knew she needed to get out of that apartment, but she was not ready to say good-bye. It was the only home she’d known since she was ten years old. Getting up from the bed, she decided it was time to enter her mother’s room for the first time since it all had happened.
She walked down the hall and couldn’t understand how the wooden floor was cold under her feet when the heat was on. When she made it to her mother’s closed bedroom door, she took a deep breath before she opened it. She took one step inside, flicking on the light, and instantly got a whiff of Chrishelle’s scent. Vanilla and Sweet Pea, her favorites. The bed was neatly made, and there was an outfit laid out on the bed. The day that she was attacked, Chrishelle must have had plans for later in the evening. The tears tried to come up, but Faye willed them away. She had to be strong; it’s what her mother would have wanted. She found herself walking around the room, running her hands softly on all of her mom’s belongings. She already knew that she would never give anything away. She already had a storage unit ready and waiting to receive all of it. All she had to do was pack it all up. She took a seat on the edge of the bed and picked up the dress that was laid out there. She wanted to press it against her nose and inhale deeply, but before she did that, the parchment that had been under the dress caught her eye.
“What’s this?” she said aloud, picking up the piece of paper on the top of the stack.
When Faye saw what it was, she let the dress go and focused all of her attention on the paper in her hands. It was her birth certificate, her original birth certificate. She’d never seen it before, and Chrishelle kept it tucked away. That, along with everything else from Faye’s early past.
“Regret You Vincent.” She read her birth name out loud and clenched her teeth.
She never knew her parents, but she knew that they must have hated her. They wanted her to know how much of a mistake she was, so they gave her a name that would remind her every day. Before Chrishelle came into her life, she was in an orphanage. Although she was a pretty girl, she had grown up with a bad attitude. But that was to be expected since life, so far, had not been nice to her. She was mean, rude, and a bully to everyone that she encountered. A few families tried to house her, but they always brought her back within a month. It got to the point where she truly believed that she was unlovable. That was, until she met Chrishelle. She remembered that day like it was yesterday.
“Regret! Get upstairs and make your bed this instant!”
Regret rolled her eyes to the back of her head when she heard Sister Louise’s voice. She’d literally just gotten out of her last class of the day and was looking forward to being alone. She hated everything about that place. She couldn’t even call St. Peter’s a home. It was an orphanage. A place for kids who had nowhere to go. The moment she stepped foot out of the classroom, Sister Louise had been waiting for her. The other girls snickered as they walked past and shot Regret funny looks.
“She’s always in trouble!” Regret heard one of the girls whisper.
“No wonder her parents named her Regret. She can’t do anything right. Not even make her bed!”
Regret was boiling. It felt like every second the sisters got to ridicule her in front of others, they took it. She let out a small groan and took heavy steps toward the staircase down the hall. Sister Louise tried to grab her arm as she walked, but Regret snatched it away.
“Don’t touch me,” she glared at the older, chocolate-skinned woman. “I know the way to my room.”
“I know you do,” Sister Louise said, adjusting her robes before cutting her eyes down at Regret. “I am simply making sure you are headed in that direction!”
“OK, well, you don’t have to touch me to do it!” Regret snapped again as she walked. “I don’t even know why you want me to make my bed now when the day is over. I’m about to go lie in it as soon as I get upstairs. I want to change out of this ugly uniform. Who chose the colors blue and yellow anyway?”
“Oh no, you aren’t!” Sister Louise said as she walked beside Regret. “Tonight is Craft, and Sister Aria told me that you weren’t at your last knitting lesson.”
“I’m only ten years old!” Regret said in an exasperated voice. “I don’t want to sit under an old lady knitting for hours!”
“Your attitude is toxic,” Sister Louise said when they finally reached the stairwell. “Don’t you see that’s why none of the other children have taken to you? Don’t you see that the way you behave is the reason why these parents keep bringing you back? You have been chosen four times—four! There are children here who have not been chosen once. You are too young and too pretty to have so much anger in your heart, Regret. Nobody here is trying to hurt you.”
“Then why do you always choose to chastise me when we are in front of people?”
“I chastise you the moment I see you after you have done something irresponsible,” Sister Louise snapped, but when she stared down into Regret’s face, she realized that, although her mouth was smart, she was still talking to a child. She could see in Regret’s face that she was unsettled. Sister Louise sighed and softened her tone. “Honestly, Regret, if I had my choice, I would never chastise you at all. I just want you to be happy.”
“How can I be happy here?”
“We find happiness in all that God gives us,” Sister Louise smiled. “This may not be where you want to be, but believe me when I say that this is not your last stop. I may be hard on you, Regret, but believe me when I say that the life you have here is much better than the one you could have out there. And at the rate you’re going, you may never experience a real home. If that is the case, then it is my, and all of the other sisters’, job to make sure you leave this place with the right values that a young woman needs to know.”
“Like what?” Regret asked curiously.
“Like how to make your bed in the morning.” Sister Louise touched Regret softly on the cheek, and surprisingly, the young girl did not back away.
Although Regret felt the smile inside, she did not let it show on her face. She allowed Sister Louise’s thumb to stroke her cheek only once before she pulled away and bounded up the stairs.
“And I expect to see you at Craft, Regret! We have a guest coming.”
“Yea, yea,” Regret said under her breath when she was at the top of the stairs and out of earshot. She walked down the hall, passing many of the other girls’ rooms who were also on the west wing. When she finally reached hers, she was happy to see that nobody was in sight. They all must have gone outside after their English lesson. Regret had. . .
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