Читать книгу The Good Life - Dorian Sykes - Страница 7

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Chapter One

Trey pulled up in his mom’s new Honda Civic, blasting EPMD’s “Strictly Business.” He hit the horn twice, then jumped out, leaving the car running. Wink turned in his seat on the sofa and pulled back the blinds. He stood up and met Trey at the front door.

“What up, doe,” said Trey, extending his hand for a pound. His high yellow face was pulled back into a smile, obviously happy about something.

“Chillin’. Fuck you smilin’ so hard for, and why you all dressed up?” asked Wink as he walked back into the living room and took a seat on the sofa.

“Don’t tell me you forgot,” said Trey as he patted his flat top in the mirror mounted above the fireplace.

“Today’s the senior picnic. I thought I told you,” he said, turning to face Wink.

“You probably did. But I’m not going.”

“Why not? Do you know how many chicks is gon’ be on the Rock, all ready to do whatever?”

“That shit ain’t going nowhere. It’s all gon’ be there.”

“What’s up with you lately? First you cut your fade off, now you talkin’ ’bout it’s gon’ be there. What’s gon’ be there?”

Wink lifted a magazine from the coffee table, revealing ten dime rocks packaged in plastic packs.

“You’re still on that shit?” asked Trey as to say he wasn’t impressed. “Where’d you get that from?”

“That’s not important. What’s important is that it’s going to make us rich.”

“Wink, what do you know about what you holding? It’s more to it than what you think.”

“You’re right, and that’s why I’m gon’ learn all there is to know. This right here is just an experiment to get our feet wet.”

“You keep saying we like I agreed to this. Tell me this, where you plan on sellin’ that shit at?”

“Right here. We’re from this block.”

“And you think J-Bo’s gon’ go for that?”

Wink smiled. “We’ll cross that bridge when we get there.” That was his whole plan. He hoped J-Bo would say something to him about being on the block. He would use that conversation when it took place as his means to cut into J-Bo.

“I wish you’d leave that shit alone and come to the picnic with me.”

“Then what? When we get back, then what?”

“What you mean?”

“What are we gonna do for the rest of the summer, ride around faking? Going to the same clubs, breakdancin’? Trey, we ain’t kids no more. It’s time to get this money, and this is the best thing going,” said Wink as he raised one of the crack packs up like it was gold.

“So, you’re not going to the picnic?”

“Fuck that picnic. If you had any sense, you’d say fuck it too and put your money with mine’s and get on.”

“I’m straight.”

There was a pound at the front door. Wink covered the rocks with the magazine, then stood up. Before he could get the door, Krazy walked right in with Willie on his heels.

“What I tell you about walkin’ in my crib like that, huh?” asked Wink.

“I ain’t try’na hear that shit. What’s up? Y’all niggas ready to hit the rock?” asked Krazy, walking around Wink.

You could look in Krazy’s eyes and see where he got his nickname. He tried to live up to his name every chance he got. He was always down for everything.

“Why you not dressed, Wink?” asked Willie.

“He says he’s not going,” informed Trey.

“What? Why not?” asked Willie.

“He wants to be the next Butch Jones,” Trey said, hitting up on the magazine.

“Now, this what we ’pose to be doing,” said Krazy. He picked up one of the rocks. He was all too familiar with the sky-blue clear pack. He had found a thousand empty ones just like it lying around his house. His moms was strung out on crack.

“Not you too,” said Trey.

“You know how much money these niggas is out there making? All the other crews gettin’ money except us. We the only ones still runnin’ around doing the same shit we was doing last summer,” said Wink.

“You ain’t gotta tell me, my nigga. I already know the business,” said Krazy.

“Can we kick it about this later after we come from the picnic?” asked Trey.

“Y’all go ’head. I gotta take care of something,” said Wink.

“Yo, Wink, I’m with you, my nigga. Make sure you put me down,” said Krazy.

“Me too,” said Willie, always one to follow along. There were leaders and followers. Willie belonged to the latter group.

“What about you?” Wink asked Trey.

“I’ma see what’s up,” Trey said, not wanting to seem soft in front of the crew.

Wink walked them to the door and gave them all pounds. “Tomorrow, come through and we gon’ chop it up on how we gon’ get this money.”

“Stay up, my nigga,” they all said.

Wink watched as they piled into Trey’s mom’s Civic and peeled off. He hoped Trey would eventually come around once he saw how easy it was to make the money. Trey was his best friend, and Wink wanted him by his side, making money too. They were both spoiled rotten by their moms. Only difference was Wink had more heart. He was willing to try his hand at new things, while Trey just wanted to continue being spoiled and ride around flossing in his mom’s car. But Wink felt it was time to grow up and start holding they own nuts. So, in order to get them up and running, he’d have to be the one to show his crew the ropes. The only problem was he had to learn the game himself.

Wink looked across the street at Ms. Bowers’ house. All her grandkids were drug dealers out there pumpin’ for J-Bo, and in return, J-Bo would hit Ms. Bowers off with a cut of the money made. Her crib sat in the center of the block, directly across the street from Wink’s house. Ms. Bowers’ crib was the central office of all the drug activities. Her grandchildren would stand in the driveway, making sales as customers pulled up. They stashed their dope sacks on the sides of houses in empty potato chip bags or under any other garbage, so if the raid team pulled up, nobody would be found with drugs in their possession.

Wink was catching on quick. It was time to test his hand at pitching. He went inside the house to grab the ten dime rocks he’d bought from Ms. Bowers’ grandson, Cedd, the night before. Wink was trying to buy some weight, but nobody would sell him any. They knew he was green to the game, so Cedd made him pay like he owed the game. He charged Wink one hundred dollars for ten dime rocks, no deal, no nothin’. Straight up dollar for dollar. Wink couldn’t argue because he didn’t even know what type of deal he wanted, and all he had was a little over a hundred dollars to his name. For real, Wink didn’t care about making a profit. He just wanted the experience of being out there on the block, pitching. The money would come later, he told himself.

Hope, Wink’s mom, was at work and would be until midnight, so he had all day to scratch the block. He locked up the house and started down the stairs. Crackheads were pulling up on the block left and right, copping and going. Cedd and his brother, Small-man, had the block on lock. Cedd would line the cars up like it was a fast food joint. He’d wave each car forward, taking the money first, then hand signaling Small-man their order. They had the shit moving like an assembly line out that mothafucka.

Wink already knew posting up in front of Ms. Bowers’ crib was out of the question. He had to find his own spot to set up shop. Wink walked up the block while watching the constant traffic. The majority of the customers were white people coming all the way down from the suburbs to get those little white-and-yellow rocks that everybody was going crazy over. Wink wondered exactly how much money each one of them crackers was spending. For them to drive a country mile, he knew they weren’t spending no ten or twenty dollars.

At the corner of 7 Mile and Charest sat an old automotive shop. Out of all the years Wink had been living on Charest, he had never once seen the shop open, so he figured it would be the best place to set up shop. He dug inside his pocket and pulled out the quarter-size bag of ranch Ruffles where he had the ten rocks. He scanned the side of the shop for a stash spot, then put the bag inside the aged mailbox and walked up to the bus stop. After watching the traffic for a few days, Wink knew every customer by face and car, so it wouldn’t be hard to spot them when they drove past.

A matter of seconds passed before he recognized a battered burgundy pickup. Wink flagged the white man down before he could turn the corner.

“Woo, I got you right here. What you need, my man?” asked Wink.

“Since when y’all start doing things up here?” asked the older white man as he suspiciously looked Wink over a few times.

“Things change every day. You coppin’ or what?” Wink shot back at the man while leaning inside the passenger-side window.

The man unfolded a fifty-dollar bill and said, “I don’t want no funny business.”

“You gonna get the same stuff you been getting. Just pull over in the alley right there.” He raced over to the mailbox and poured five rocks into the palm of his hand. He tossed the bag back inside the box and rushed around to the back of the shop.

“Here you go,” he said, handing the man his order.

“Looks the same. A’ight, see you later,” the man said, pulling away.

Wink was so geeked that he had to take another look at the fifty-dollar bill. His first sale in the game, and it was for fifty dollars. He thought about having it framed ’cause he knew there’d be plenty more where that came from.

Two more cars turned the corner. Wink let the first car pass and flagged the blue Fiesta down.

“Pull in the alley,” Wink said, waving his hand.

“In the alley? You bet’ not be try’na rob me, ’cause I’ma fight ’bout mine’s,” the no-teeth, nappy-neck woman said before she buzzed into the alleyway.

“What you got, baby girl?” Wink asked, leaning into the driver-side window.

“Twenty. Make sure they’re two nice ones,” she said, handing Wink a sweaty twenty.

He looked at the faded bill on his way to the mailbox and wondered how many hands that same bill went through already. He tucked the money in his pimp pocket on his Guess jeans and then raised the lid on the box. He hadn’t seen J-Bo approaching the block, coming from Gallagher Street. Wink closed the mailbox and walked around back to the alley.

“Thank you, baby,” said the woman. She didn’t waste no time packing her pipe and taking a hit right there in the alley.

Wink watched the woman’s reactions like a first grader at the zoo. Her eyes bucked the size of silver dollars, as she held the smoke in for as long as she could before blowing out a stank cloud of crack smog. The smell made Wink’s stomach turn over. He backed away from the car with his hand over his face.

“Damn,” he said, fanning the stench.

The woman finally buzzed off down the alley. When Wink turned around, there sat J-Bo in his yellow 924 Porsche, just sitting there, staring dead at him. Wink got to the end of the alley and tried not making direct eye contact with J-Bo, but he hit his horn.

“Com’ere, young dawg,” Ordered J-Bo with a wave.

The moment Wink had been waiting on had arrived sooner than he thought. He played it cool and walked over to the driver’s side.

“What you doin’ out here?” asked J-Bo.

“The same thing everybody else is out here doing, Try’na eat,” answered Wink.

J-Bo sorta liked the young nigga’s answer because he didn’t lie, but he didn’t like the fact that the young nigga didn’t show any signs of fear.

“You know who I am?” asked J-Bo.

“I’ve heard of you here and there. Why? What’s up?” asked Wink.

“Then you know this my block. This whole hood is mine’s, and everything in it.”

Again, Wink showed no sign of fear. This made J-Bo angry because he had put so much work in to keep every nigga in line, and now some youngin’ wasn’t recognizing his authority. The last thing he needed was for a renegade to sprout up. Next thing you know, everybody would be on renegade time, bucking J-Bo’s system to getting money.

J-Bo pulled over and got out. “I think we got off on the wrong foot,” he started, extending his hand for Wink’s. “What’s ya name?”

“Wink.”

“I’m J-Bo, as you may know. Don’t you stay down the street?”

“Yeah, across from Ms. Bowers.”

“I thought you looked familiar. Anyway, check this out, young dawg. I saw what you were doin’, and that shit can’t happen again.”

“What, me try’na get some money, or me sellin’ in the alley?”

“Both. Come on. Let’s walk down to the corner,” said J-Bo. They started walking, and he continued speaking. “You can’t be out here, especially not in the alley. That’s a sure way to bring the cops around here. There’s a reason why I got things centered in the middle of the block. What I just saw you doing is called short-stoppin’, and it can get you killed out here.”

“By who?”

J-Bo laughed, then stopped to face Wink. “Young dawg, when somebody kills you, the last thing you’re going to be worried about is who. Hopefully we understand each other that I won’t see you back out here on my block again.”

“J-Bo, with all due respect, I grew up on this block. Born and raised. How can you or any other nigga tell me I can’t get money out here?”

“I’m not tellin’ you. I’m warning you. Young dawg, I don’t know what you think this shit is out here, but it ain’t a game. What, you woke up this morning and just decided that you were going to sell drugs? It don’t work like that.”

“Then how does it work? Why don’t you teach me, because I’m gon’ get some of this money.”

J-Bo had to laugh. He held a smile while he looked Wink over. He reminded him so much of himself, thirsty and eager to learn the game. But just as fast as the smile appeared, it vanished. “You have to first learn the game before anything. Then once you do that, you have to stack yo’ own money. Then find you a spot you can call your own and get your own clientele. You see,” J-Bo said, raising his hands and spinning around in a circle. “You see, this is mine’s, and I will do what’s necessary to protect it. If you ever make it this far in the game, you’ll feel the same way, and only then will you understand.”

Wink soaked up every word. He’d never listened to any of his teachers at school as intently as he was listening to J-Bo. He couldn’t believe that he was actually standing there, having a face-to-face talk about the game with his idol.

“Let me see what you’re out here workin’,” said J-Bo.

Wink raced to the mailbox and came back with the last three rocks. He poured them into J-Bo’s palm for him to inspect.

“Where’d you get these from? They look like some of mine’s.”

“That’s like tellin’, ain’t it?” asked Wink.

“Sho’ is. I was just testin’ to see if you’d tell something. That’s the first rule of the game, No snitchin’.”

Wink nodded at this. He waited for further instructions, anything. As long as it was coming from his idol, it was good as gold.

“Come on and take a ride with me. I’ma take you up under my wing,” said J-Bo.

Wink damn near shouted; he was so excited. To be in J-Bo’s presence was enough, but to ride shotgun in his Porsche was some other shit. Every head on the block turned as J-Bo blew past with Wink shotgun.

“We’ll go downtown and cruise Belle Isle,” said J-Bo.

“That’s cool,” said Wink. He was hoping they’d bump into his crew so they could see him doing it big with J-Bo. Wink told himself that he could get used to this, and he was ready to put in whatever work he had to.

The Good Life

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