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Head Games

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by Mary B. Morrison




  Also by Mary B. Morrison

  The Crystal Series

  Baby, You’re the Best **Just Can’t Let Go ** The One I’ve Waited For

  If I Can’t Have You Series

  If I Can’t Have You ** I’d Rather Be with You ** If You Don’t Know

  Me

  Soulmates Dissipate Series

  Soulmates Dissipate ** Never Again Once More

  He’s Just a Friend ** Somebody’s Gotta Be on Top

  Nothing Has Ever Felt Like This ** When Somebody Loves You Back

  Darius Jones

  The Honey Diaries Series

  Sweeter Than Honey ** Who’s Loving You ** Unconditionally Single

  Darius Jones

  She Ain’t the One (coauthored with Carl Weber)

  Maneater (anthology with Noire)

  The Eternal Engagement

  Justice Just Us Just Me

  Who’s Making Love

  Mary HoneyB Morrison

  Dicks Are Dumb: A Woman’s Guide to Choosing the Right Man

  Never Let a Man Come First: A Female’s Guide to Understanding Male

  Behavior

  Mary B. Morrison writing as HoneyB

  Sexcapades ** Single Husbands ** Married on Mondays

  The Rich Girls’ Club

  Presented by Mary B. Morrison

  Diverse Stories: From the Imaginations of Sixth Graders

  (an anthology of fiction written by thirty-three sixth graders)

  Head Games

  MARY B. MORRISON

  KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.

  www.kensingtonbooks.com

  All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.

  Table of Contents

  Also by

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  PROLOGUE - The Crewe

  CHAPTER 1 - Trymm

  CHAPTER 2 - Trymm

  CHAPTER 3 - Francine

  CHAPTER 4 - Trymm

  CHAPTER 5 - Francine

  CHAPTER 6 - Trymm

  CHAPTER 7 - Trymm

  CHAPTER 8 - Trymm

  CHAPTER 9 - Francine

  CHAPTER 10 - Trymm

  CHAPTER 11 - Trymm

  CHAPTER 12 - Trymm

  CHAPTER 13 - Francine

  CHAPTER 14 - Trymm

  CHAPTER 15 - Trymm

  CHAPTER 16 - Trymm

  CHAPTER 17 - Trymm

  CHAPTER 18 - Trymm

  CHAPTER 19 - Kohl

  CHAPTER 20 - Ramona

  CHAPTER 21 - Kohl

  CHAPTER 22 - Kohl

  CHAPTER 23 - Kohl

  CHAPTER 24 - Kohl

  CHAPTER 25 - Ramona

  CHAPTER 26 - Kohl

  CHAPTER 27 - Kohl

  CHAPTER 28 - Kohl

  CHAPTER 29 - Ramona

  CHAPTER 30 - Kohl

  CHAPTER 31 - Kohl

  CHAPTER 32 - Kohl

  CHAPTER 33 - Kohl

  CHAPTER 34 - Dallas

  CHAPTER 35 - Dallas

  CHAPTER 36 - Dallas

  CHAPTER 37 - Dallas

  CHAPTER 38 - Dallas

  CHAPTER 39 - Dallas

  CHAPTER 40 - Dallas

  CHAPTER 41 - Dallas

  CHAPTER 42 - Dallas

  CHAPTER 43 - Dallas

  CHAPTER 44 - Dallas

  CHAPTER 45 - Dallas

  CHAPTER 46 - Dallas

  CHAPTER 47 - Blitz

  CHAPTER 48 - Blitz

  CHAPTER 49 - Blitz

  CHAPTER 50 - Blitz

  CHAPTER 51 - Elizabeth

  CHAPTER 52 - Blitz

  CHAPTER 53 - Elizabeth

  CHAPTER 54 - Blitz

  CHAPTER 55 - Blitz

  CHAPTER 56 - Elizabeth

  CHAPTER 57 - Blitz

  CHAPTER 58 - Elizabeth

  CHAPTER 59 - Blitz

  CHAPTER 60 - Blitz

  THE CONCLUSION - The Crewe

  Acknowledgments

  Discussion Questions

  To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.

  DAFINA BOOKS are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  119 West 40th Street

  New York, NY 10018

  Copyright © 2018 by Mary B. Morrison

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

  Library of Congress Card Catalogue Number: 2018932854

  Dafina and the Dafina logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.

  ISBN: 978-1-4967-1083-3

  eISBN-13: 978-1-4967-1086-4

  eISBN-10: 1-4967-1086-X

  To my family

  Jesse Byrd Jr. and Emaan Byrd

  Heidi Abbass

  Wayne Morrison

  Andrea Morrison

  Derrick Morrison

  Regina Morrison

  Margie Rickerson

  Debra Noel

  Edward Brian Allen

  LaTasha Allen

  In Loving Memory, Elizabeth Morrison

  One unanimous decision will change their lives . . . forever.

  PROLOGUE

  The Crewe

  June 30

  “Black women are easy, homies. Especially . . . the married ones.” Trymm—pronounced “trim”—the most influential of the crewe, valet-parked his black Mercedes GLS at The Cheesecake Bistro. “Where y’all at?”

  Females stood in clusters outside waiting to dine at the bistro that had some of the best dishes and drinks. Some held flat, square pagers. A few guys sprinkled throughout the crowd stared back and forth at Trymm’s car, then at Trymm.

  “Right behind ya, my brother.” Blitz drove up in his midnight-blue BMW Alpina B7, responding to the group on their conference call. “I’m telling y’all, black professional women are easier.” Handing the attendant his key, Blitz joined Trymm on the grimy sidewalk.

  Standing on St. Charles Avenue, they watched two streetcars travel in opposite directions on the neutral ground paved with more dirt than patches of dried grass, more brown than green. Nawlins was a city that care forgot. True for local government and tourists in search of their wildest experience, but the crewe took pride in what they called home.

  “Nope, under twenty-five. They’re the easiest.” Dallas backed his platinum Lexus LX into a space upfront, secured his gun in his side pocket, set the car alarm, and kept the keyless remote.

  “Nah, D. The overweight ones. They give it up real quick.” Kohl opened the door to his bronze Bentley Bentayga, retrieved his ticket from the guy wearing a red vest.

  Valet parking at the bistro was for customers only. Kohl handed the guy his usual $100 tip, to keep his mouth shut.

  En route to their destination, the crew walked side by side. A group of four women smiled back and forth among the guys. One woman complimented, “Nice cars, fellas.”

  A simple acknowledgment from Trymm as he held his wedding ring high, wiggling his finger. “Thanks, love,” and the guys continued their stroll.

  “Hold up. Where’re y’all headed? Y’all not coming in here?” the woman inquired.

  No one replied. Q and A with a female none of them were interested in was a waste of time.

  “Women, women, and more women, my brothers.” Blitz rubbed his hands.

  “And all of ’em passing out free pussy.” Trymm led the way across St. Mary Street.

  A large oval sign, with THE TROLLEY STOP CAFÉ painted in bold green letters, was plastered under the flat roof, right above the door. OPEN 24/7 was displayed in caps on a white banner that stretched
column-to-column, ten feet in front of the wooden green-painted wheelchair ramp. The red neon OPEN sign in the window was always lit. The twenty-two-year-old establishment, designed like a real city car—faded maroon framed windows gave the appearance diners were eating on the trolley—could easily be mistaken for being half a century old.

  A staple in the community, the restaurant commanded a hefty crowd all day during Essence Festival weekend. Too many badass females to count, the line snaked around the island centered in the parking lot, extending to the sidewalk. The all-too-familiar two-hours-plus wait wasn’t for the crewe.

  “Excuse us.” Trymm opened the door.

  The humidity welcomed the morning sunshine as four of New Orleans’s finest eligible bachelors entered the standing-room-only café. At a glance, it was clear that beautiful, scantily dressed women outnumbered the men three to one.

  “Glad you texted me, bro. Thanks for holding down the fort for us.” Trymm patted his eldest brother, Walter, on the back as Walter and his three friends stood. Trymm, Kohl, Blitz, and Dallas settled onto four of the six barstools at the counter.

  Walter placed his hand on Trymm’s shoulder. “No problem. You know I got you.”

  A gentleman in a crimson buttoned-down shirt had three top buttons undone. A gold cross lay flat on his furry patch of gray chest hairs. His matching colored shorts were meticulously creased. Standing erect, he confronted Walter. “Man, no disrespect, but we been waiting to be seated for over an hour.” He conspicuously clutched his Bible over his heart.

  “None taken, but y’all gon’ hafta wait a little longer. Ya heard me.” Walter, a six-three, 250-pound former professional wrestler, wasn’t asking.

  Trymm, Kohl, Blitz, and Dallas pushed their stool toward the counter. Stood facing the man. Dallas eased his hand into his pocket, gripped the handle of his gun. The crewe knew the dirty South could get filthy without notice. Dallas was always strapped.

  “Bay-bay, y’all sure looking extra fine today! Sit.” Dana, the crewe’s usual waitress, wiped away the food particles on the forest-green top, slapped menus in front of the fellas. “I got y’all in a sec, Trymm.” Mixing orange juice and champagne into a plastic container, Dana stacked four red acrylic tumblers on her tray, then headed toward the main dining room.

  The Trolley Stop Café had three areas—the bar was to the left upon entry; the street car section was to the right, up three stairs and another right; the interior was to the right up three steps, then left. Each square table was the same lacquer-coated cherrywood. Forty tables, 166 seats. Not one chair was empty.

  Walter redirected his attention to Trymm. “I’ll swing by and help Penny set up, but don’t be chillin’ all morning with these cats.” Walter scanned the eyes of Trymm’s friends. “Chasing pussy will leave you eating in the dark, gentlemen.” Walter positioned his wrist in front of Trymm’s face, pushed the start button on his stopwatch. “You’ve got two hours tops. See you at noon. Sharp. Not twelve-o-one.”

  Trymm clenched his teeth, braced himself. Being the youngest among ten children had benefits, and drawbacks. No need to respond. Walter wasn’t asking, nor was he joking.

  A wrestling competitor in high school and college, Walter, at the age of forty-five, had muscles solid as boulders. He bench-pressed three times his weight every morning before sunrise. “I have to make tracks to open my restaurant, and Penny can’t manage this incoming Essence Fest crowd by herself. Shit gon’ be busier tomorrow, so don’t even bring your black ass ova here.” He punched Trymm on the arm. Trymm leaned into Kohl, then sat up straight. “And don’t forget to give me your twenty-five hundred for Mom and Dad’s fiftieth anniversary party next month.”

  Trymm dug into his pants, peeled off twenty-five C-notes, slapped them in his brother’s hand.

  Walter stuffed the cash in his wallet. “Keep flashing. One of these fools gon’ bust you upside the head and empty all your pockets. Your ass gon’ get got too, Blitz. Let that Rolex rest. Y’all too old to say none of you have a wife. Trymm, what you holding out for? Disrespecting the family’s last name and shit. Francine ain’t going nowhere. Get the ring or I’ma get it for you. You’re proposing at Mom and Dad’s event. An hour and fifty-eight, Trymm.” Walter followed his buddies out the door.

  Trymm sat on the edge of his seat, planted one foot on the floor, the other on the bridge below, tightened his lips, looked at his crewe.

  Blitz stared back at him. The watch was a family heirloom (from his grandfather) gifted to him by his father when he’d graduated from college. “What? You sour, nigga? At least you have a tribe of siblings. Wish big Walt was my brother for real. Being an only child is the worst. I still get blamed for shit I didn’t do.”

  Sixteen years separated Trymm from Walter. Trymm was blessed to stand six inches taller than the brother who was like his second father. Disciplinarian was the role Walter assumed when they were kids. Mom, a housewife, and with their dad working sunrise to sunset each day of the week to make sure all of his kids had degrees and owned a business, Walter stepped up to help their mom, and he didn’t hesitate to beat an ass or two when he felt it was necessary.

  “Squash the monologue, Blitz. Man, I’ve been tripping all morning off of how weak black women are. They hawking us right now. Bet we could fuck a dozen each. That, and the fact that we’re all about to hit dat big three-o this year. When we gon’ slow our roll?”

  People heading to and from the restrooms walked sideways, squeezing their way between the back of the barstools and the customers lined along the wall. One more row of twelve diners and no one would have enough space to move.

  Unfolding the Times-Picayune newspaper Walter had left behind, Trymm Dupree adjusted the crotch of his gray, white, and black camouflage cargo shorts, giving his seven flaccid inches space to stretch out.

  He stroked his freshly shaved head, where three-carat-diamond studs lit up both of Trymm’s ears. Blackberry skin coated with coconut oil glistened on his flawlessly smooth face, thick lips, toned biceps, long athletic legs, all the way down to his pedicured feet, which rested in black leather open-toed sandals. Trymm scanned the front page of the metro section, slid the remainder one counter space over to Kohl.

  “We should do some unforgettable shit!” Kohl peeled off the sport pages. “Let’s take a thirty-day trip, dip to the DR, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, St. Martin, the Bahamas. Wherever it’s hot, the chicks are freaks, and they won’t hesitate to suck all of our dicks for the price”—nodding upward, he gave the crewe a tight smile that barely showed his teeth—“of a po’boy.”

  Blitz slapped Kohl on the nape of his neck. “The dime a dozen are in Brazil, nigga.”

  “Well, Rio de Janeiro, Ipanema, then,” Kohl snapped back. “You ain’t Walter. I’ll take you down. You know what I meant.”

  Standing at six-two, tipping the scale at 270 pounds, Kohl was an only child. Unlike the rest of his crewe, Kohl’s midsection was flabby and wide. From his hairline to his ankles, a stray bullet wouldn’t hit him in the ass. Kohl’s toasted-almond skin had red undertones from his Indian heritage. His jet-black hair was braided into a foot-long ponytail. Letting it down drew too much attention. Adopted son of a preacher man and a stay-at-home mom, Kohl wasn’t permitted to pierce or tattoo any parts of his temple. His gold polo, with a fleur-de-lis logo, black slacks, and lace-up, hard-sole shoes were the most casual he’d dress.

  “Fuck all that flight hopping, so it won’t get back to Rev. and the First Lady. When I was stationed in Afghanistan, Dubai was my one-stop shop for all the pussy I wanted.” Dallas smiled, lifted his left brow. “I had women from all the places you mentioned”—he pointed at Kohl, then touched each finger as he continued—“and add Africa, Asia, Australia, Russia. They were all within a few blocks’ radius, and that’s not half the list. And, hear me out, paying for pussy over there is legit.”

  Dallas didn’t have an incentive to return to the United States while he was enlisted in the military, so he vacationed abroad. With two half-bro
thers by his father, Hawk, they might as well all have been dead, Dallas’s combat buddies became his overseas family. The crewe was as close as he’d come to having brothers stateside. During deployment he’d gone eighteen months without seeing a woman he didn’t have to kill.

  Their section was packed. Squeezing had turned into pushing and shoving. A few verbal confrontations erupted. The newest owner, son of the original founder, yelled, “I need everyone to clear this aisle. Now. If you do not have a space to stand against the wall, if you’re not going to the restroom, wait outside.” Maroon dude with the cross secured his position in front of the window. None of the crewe inched their seats closer to the counter.

  Kohl, as usual, had to prove he knew a lil more about the subject at hand. “And they let you have babes waiting in your bed when you check into your hotel room.”

  “Touché.” Dallas didn’t want to get into a pissing match with Kohl over the trivial when Dallas had more firsthand experiences than he could count. “It’s hypocritical. Kinda like how your folks know you own that strip club and hookah lounge, but they take your tithes under the table.”

  The smallest of the crewe, five-ten, 180 pounds, 80 percent of Dallas’s left side of his body, from his chin down, was covered in tattoos. There was nothing to fight for after his mother drowned in their house during Katrina. The military trained him to kill the enemy. Problem now was determining who the real enemy was. Being raised in a Baptist church didn’t save his soul. Dallas harbored animosity for God. Post-traumatic stress disorder was God’s fault.

  Blitz joined in. “All pussy taste different, but when I’m ready to bust a nut, smashing is the same. I don’t care where’s she’s from, long as she ain’t dumb. I’m gon’ get mine, if that bitch doesn’t get hers, that’s on her.” He snagged the front part of the paper leaving the classifieds for Dallas.

 

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