In the streets, where thuggin’ and criminal activity are certainly the norm, damn near anything goes, and Derrick Bellamy is no exception. In his quest to get his mother and little brother out of the hood, he chooses to hustle coke. To assist Derrick, his girlfriend decides to introduce him to Fat Jerome, a big-timer in the drug game. But when she reveals a previous dark encounter between her and Fat Jerome, Derrick becomes furious and contemplates the unthinkable.
While Derrick is busy with street matters, he doesn’t take into consideration how much his actions are affecting his family. Neither is he focused enough to do anything about it—that is, until he has an encounter with the law and his outlook on life begins to change. Follow Derrick and a cast of characters from the hood as they wreak havoc on unsuspecting individuals, all in the name of getting what they desire, whether right or wrong. No one can convince them to change their ways. Like it or not, that’s just the way it is with them.
Release date:
January 26, 2016
Publisher:
Urban Books
Print pages:
352
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“Ese muchacho is gonna learn the hard way to respect his elders.” The elderly Hispanic man uttered this to himself as he watched Derrick’s car slowly passing by like it was a hearse in a funeral procession. The young man was slumped down in the driver’s seat and leaning sideways. He was sitting so low in his ride that only his dark blue New York Yankees baseball cap could be seen. His music, rapper Jay-Z’s “Hard Knock Life,” was blasting hard and outrageously loud, sending shockwaves through the neighborhood.
It was Sunday morning and considered blatantly disrespectful by the elders and the religious communities for anyone to be blasting music as loud as Derrick’s speakers were while church service was being conducted. Derrick, however, didn’t give a damn. He looked over at the elderly Hispanic man and saw him fixing his face in an agitated fashion. The elderly man shook his head in the negative at Derrick’s ill demeanor. Instead of Derrick refraining from interfering with the peace of the elderly man and church service that was being held at the church on the corner of the neighborhood, he gave the elderly man his middle finger and turned his music up even louder.
“Boy, turn that music down. Haven’t you any respect?” the elderly man yelled.
“Won’t you put some teeth in your muthafuckin’ mouth?” Derrick shot back. Fuckin’ old folks always thinking a nigga gotta give them some respect. I ain’t gotta do a damn thing. Fuck them!
The elderly Hispanic man grabbed his cane, got up from his chair on his porch, and went inside his house. “I am old enough to be the young man’s padre, but he disrespects me like I’m someone his age. Heavenly Father, forgive him.”
Derrick continued moving through the hood. He was smoking on some of the greenest and most potent weed on the west side of Charlotte, North Carolina, where there were more young black men roaming the hood without fathers in their lives than there were police patrolling the streets where the young men hustled. Derrick was one of them: a young man, eighteen years old to be exact, without a father figure in his life. He had just graduated the previous year from high school, and had only one thing on his mind: getting money. He certainly had reasons.
He took a left on Lanordo Street and parked in the lot of an apartment that rested right at the corner of Lanordo and Bivens Streets. He killed his engine and exited his candy apple red chromed-out old-school Chevy Impala. He was wearing a white khaki polo shirt, blue jeans by Calvin Klein, and all-white Air Force Ones. Derrick’s jeans were so oversized that when he walked they fell below his buttocks. Had he been in a prison environment wearing his pants in such a manner, some male looking for a young man to become his prison bitch would walk up to him without warning and touch him on his ass cheeks in hopes of having an intimate affair. Or, worse, rape him!
He took a deep drag from his marijuana cigarette, released the smoke from his nostrils after holding it in a few seconds, then said with both his hands lifted skyward, “The world is mines!”
His little eleven-year-old brother, Mike-Mike, was sitting on the front steps of their apartment, playing with his basketball. “Who are you now, Scarface?” his little brother asked.
“Damn right. I’m Tony muthafuckin’ Montana!”
“Derrick, boy, you high. Betta not let Momma see—”
Before Mike-Mike could finish his sentence, their mother came out of their apartment. She marched toward Derrick. “I know you ain’t smoking a blunt out here in my yard, Derrick.” She reached for it. Although high as the sky, he managed to dodge her attempt. “You done bumped your head for real. You know I don’t pl—”
“I know, I know, Momma. You don’t play that,” he said, cutting her off and tossing the blunt somewhere onto the lawn. “I really don’t see what the fuss is all about though. It’s just weed.”
Arms folded, she repeated, “Just weed?”
“Yeah, Momma, just weed. A natural herb from the earth.”
“I wouldn’t give a fat baby’s backside if it was only an Indian’s peace pipe. You find somewhere else to puff on it! That stuff ain’t doing nothing but killing your brain cells.”
“A’ight then, whatever. If I wanted to hear a sermon I would have gone to church,” he muttered.
“What you say? I promise you, boy, I’ll knock your teeth straight down your damn throat.”
“Yeah, and I’ll forget all about you, too,” Derrick uttered to himself. “This woman needs a man in her life. Every day she finds something to trip about,” he said under his breath, walking toward Mike-Mike. He put his open palm on top of his little brother’s forehead and slightly pushed it back. “What’s up, knucklehead?”
“Nothing,” replied Mike-Mike. “Just practicing my skills. I got a mean crossover; look.” Mike-Mike started dribbling his basketball around and in and out of his legs. “Try to take the ball from me, Derrick.”
Derrick positioned himself to take the ball but, when he reached for it, his little brother did a crossover move on him so smooth and sweet that Derrick nearly broke his ankle in his attempt to take the ball. “Okay, li’l bruh. I see you got mad skills.”
“Told you.”
“Keep it up and you might end up in the NBA one day.”
“Might?”
“You’ve gotta work hard, also on your schoolwork. What your report card look like anyway?”
“I passed to the next grade. Didn’t I, Momma?” Their mother was still standing there with her arms folded. Before she could reply, Mike-Mike added, “You know my birthday’s tomorrow.”
“And?”
“And you promised me that you were gonna buy me some Air Force Ones. The all-white ones like yours.”
“Well, I lied. Now what?”
Mike-Mike sucked his teeth and made his sad face. “C’mon now, Derrick, you promised me that—”
“Have I ever made a promise to you that I didn’t keep?” Derrick said, cutting him off.
“No, but you just said that you lied about getting me those Air Force Ones.”
“Boy, you know I got you.” Derrick then hit his little brother hard in his upper left arm.
“Ouchhh! Man, that hurt.”
“Shut up and take it like a man. What I tell you about being all soft?”
Derrick’s mother hit him hard in his chest. “And what I tell you about hitting him like that? He’s a kid, not a punching bag.”
“So what? That doesn’t mean he gotta be soft. I don’t want no soft, sugar-filled brother.”
“Hitting him, Derrick, is not gonna make him hard or manly.”
“With all due respect, Momma, how do you know? You’re not a man.”
“And you not his daddy. For your information, I don’t have to be a man to know what one acts like. If you wanna do something, try being a positive example for him to follow. Now let me see you inside the house. I got a bone to pick with you.”
Derrick immediately knew that something had to be wrong. Anytime his mother didn’t want to talk to him about something in the presence of Mike-Mike, it was serious.
The north side of Charlotte bred niggas who would bust a nigga’s bubble for simply looking at a gangsta the wrong way. God forbid a nigga say the wrong thing out of his mouth. On that side of town, before the sun could grace the sky fully with its presence, a meeting was being conducted. Fat Jerome, a big-time drug dealer, had ordered two of his most ruthless hit men to meet him at a gambling house off Fifteenth Street and Davison Avenue. The two hitmen were Tye-Tye and Rasco. Tye-Tye was known for cutting dudes’ throats and leaving ’em in the woods to bleed to death. And Rasco was known for putting his 9 mm Glock in his enemy’s mouth and pulling the trigger. The two of them only did jobs for Fat Jerome. They made Fat Jerome one of the most feared drug dealers to work for.
“Fellas, I requested this meeting because I got a li’l problem on the west side with an individual I gave some coke to on consignment. I really didn’t want to fuck with the kid, but Veronda convinced me.”
“You talking ’bout li’l fine-ass Veronda, the ex-stripper who used to run li’l errands and shit for us, right?” asked Tye-Tye.
“Right. She fucks with the guy and asked me to front him something on her name. Since the bitch cool and shit, I hit the li’l nigga off with a whole kilo.”
“A kilo? Damn, Fat Jerome, you ain’t never gave me a kilo of coke to hustle,” interjected Rasco, scratching his arm like a junkie fiending for drugs.
His outburst made Fat Jerome mad. But because of a flight he had to catch, he kept his anger under control. “Cut the bullshit. You’re a killa, not a damn drug dealer.”
“Yeah, but—”
“Just play your position, dawg. You don’t see the lungs in your body trying to do what your kidneys are responsible for doing, do you?”
“I’m just saying—”
“Nah, answer my question.”
Rasco looked at Tye-Tye who kept his eyes on Fat Jerome. “You right, dawg,” said Rasco. “You right.”
“Precisely. Besides, whether I give you coke to hustle or not, I still take care of you and Tye, don’t I?”
“Fat Jerome, you take good care of us, trust me,” interjected Tye-Tye. Tye-Tye didn’t know why Rasco would fix his mouth to say what he said to Fat Jerome, because Fat Jerome had both of them eating good. In Tye-Tye’s eyes there was no need to complain.
“Man, I was just throwing that out there, that’s all,” said Rasco. “No offense intended,” he lied. Truth was, he not only wanted to do hits, he wanted to step his game up and become his own boss so that he could do as he pleased, including drugs if he wanted to.
“Do that shit on your own time. I got a fuckin’ flight to catch,” said Fat Jerome, trying to keep his anger on ice and chill. He hated being interrupted, especially for something frivolous, or for something that could have waited to be brought up some other time. He sighed, and then continued.
“Now, that young cat I was telling y’all about, I was hitting him off good with coke, and the nigga never came up short with my cheese ’til here recently. I shot him a block last month and haven’t heard from him since.”
“The nigga hasn’t called you or nothing?” asked Tye-Tye.
“He hasn’t done shit. In fact, I tried his and Veronda’s cell phone numbers. Both of their numbers changed. And Veronda ain’t living at the same address she was living at prior to this shit.”
“So I guess this young nigga call himself not paying you then, huh?” asked Tye.
“Precisely. Which means we gotta straight punish his ass. If the nigga feels like his balls are that big to fuck me, then it’s time to show him how we crack balls that big.”
Rasco cracked his knuckles. “Oh, fo’sho’, my nigga.”
Fat Jerome threw him the keys to his Hummer, and tossed him a small Ziploc bag full of chronic. “Put that underneath my driver’s side seat.” While Rasco went to do so, Fat Jerome motioned with his head for Tye-Tye to lag behind. When Rasco was clearly out of sight, Fat Jerome said to Tye-Tye, “Rasco’s loyalty is questionable, and we can’t have that. Plus, I heard from a reliable source that the nigga done started smoking crack. This, you and I both know, is a violation in our crew.” One of Fat Jerome’s rules for those of his Cash Money Clique was “no getting high.” No getting high off their supply or anyone else’s. Fat Jerome believed that drugs like coke and heroin clouded a street soldier’s vision. So, drug use was strictly prohibited.
“Nah, we don’t do that shit. That’s for the junkies. But is this shit true, though?” Tye-Tye shot back.
“It’s true. And remember when my dope house in Matthews, North Carolina, got robbed?”
“Yeah, I remember you telling me about that shit,” Tye-Tye responded, with his nose spread and a mean street grit on his face.
“Word is, his ass is the one who set that shit up. The nigga who told me said that Rasco came to him first and asked him if he wanted to make some fast cash. He told the dude what was up, but when the dude found out that Rasco wanted him to rob a spot that belonged to me, he refused. This same nigga smoke weed laced with crack. He said he and Rasco done smoked that shit numerous times together.”
“So why is this coming to the surface now, Fat Jerome? Matter of fact, where is this nigga who told you all this?”
“I heard the nigga got popped coming back from Miami somewhere. His name was Short-Arm.”
“I know that nigga. He has been missing about a good-ass seven or eight months.”
“Precisely. The reason I didn’t say anything is because I wanted to give Rasco the benefit of the doubt. But when the nigga screamed just a moment ago about me not ever giving him any crack to sell, he made me fuckin’ angry. He’s a nigga we no longer need, therefore, see his ass, because, Tye, little violations left uncheck leads to big ones. Rasco is a snake. And some snakes don’t rattle. That’s what makes them so deadly.”
“I’ll holler at him ASAP,” replied Tye-Tye.
“Precisely. And do it the thug way,” said Fat Jerome as the two of them parted company.
Fat Jerome was a thirty-five-year-old drug dealer who believed in unity. He hated dishonest, disloyal street soldiers. He knew that a house divided couldn’t stand. Therefore, weak links had to be eliminated regardless of the major love one might have for that weak link. He loved Rasco, because it was Rasco who saved his ass from catching a sexually transmitted disease.
At the time, he didn’t know Rasco, nor did Rasco know him. Rasco had only heard of Fat Jerome as a dude whose name was ringing all over the Queen City for being deep in the game. While at a strip club one night, though, Rasco saw this real big, fat-ass dude—six foot three and every bit of 300 pounds—standing in front of the stage that the strippers were doing their dances on. The fat dude was light skinned with long dreadlocks that hung far down his back just above his Gucci belt. On his wrist was a diamond bezel platinum Rolex watch that sparkled every time lights from the club reflected off of it. In the fat man’s hands were stacks of cash that he handed out to the strippers who twirled booty and pussy in his face.
One of the girls who stripped and danced before the fat man was a chick Rasco knew well. Her name was Jessica, a white chick with a fat ass who had death on her pussy. Rasco knew her from high school. She had syphilis, the same STD that put gangster and mob boss Al Capone’s dick in the dirt. Before Jessica could drop to her knees to give the fat man some head, Rasco interrupted, “Yo, big man, trust me, you don’t want this bitch sucking your dick. The bitch got syphilis.”
The fat man looked at Rasco. “Yo, who the fuck are you and how did you get in here?” he questioned, realizing Rasco had entered the VIP room uninvited.
“I know the club owner, dawg. Regardless of that, this here bitch got death on her pussy. Ain’t that fuckin’ right, Jessica?”
“Nigga, you lying like the devil,” she shot back, getting up from her knees.
“I’m lying?” Rasco repeated. He then grabbed her by the back of her hair. “Bitch, if I’m lying then this lying-ass nigga ’bout to blow your brains out ’cause you know your pussy got death on it.” He slipped his 9 mm out from his waist and positioned it at her head.
“Hold on. Hold on, yo. Put your gun away, bro, and let the ho go,” the fat man ordered.
Rasco pushed her head hard toward the door, and kicked her in her ass. “Stankin’-ass bitch! You know that pussy between your legs would send a nigga to his grave. I hate y’all kind of bitches.”
“You just a hater,” she shouted, before storming out of VIP and slamming the door behind her.
Rasco put his gun away and looked at the fat man. “Excuse me, big man, for the interruption, but that bitch dirty. You look like a cool dude, so I just wanted to warn you.”
“Dayum, man, for a minute I didn’t know what the fuck was going on. I appreciate you, though, shit. By the way, I’m Fat Jerome.”
“Nice to meet you, Fat Jerome. If you ever need a true soldier in your corner, I’m available,” Rasco assured him. Fat Jerome had a lot of soldiers who rolled with him. He honestly didn’t need any more. However, there was something about this five foot eleven dark-skinned, slim soldier, Rasco, that Fat Jerome liked. It was the fact that Rasco had just aggressively saved his life and was extremely bold about it. That was enough to make Rasco a part of his moneymaking team. Since Rasco was aggressive and wasn’t afraid to use a gun, Fat Jerome linked him up with Tye-Tye and the both of them were used as hit men.
All Fat Jerome wanted any soldier in his crew to do was simply play their position and the family would continue to get money. He didn’t want killers in his crew selling drugs, because all his killers had quick tempers. No one with a quick temper and short fuse would make a good drug dealer, because the very moment someone came up short with cash, those quick-tempered killers would have bodies all over Queen City.
Being a drug dealer meant compromising sometimes. So, Fat Jerome did his best to keep his soldiers in their rightful place. Rasco wanted to evolve though. When he secretly robbed one of his boss man’s drug houses, as well as started secretly smoking crack, and now a sudden outburst at an important meeting, he had proven himself to be a problem. A problem that Tye-Tye was now ordered to solve.
Derrick followed his mother into her bedroom and closed the door behind him. His mother went straight to her closest and retrieved a large brown paper b. . .
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