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Ties to the Hood
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Ties to the Hood: G-Code
Aija Monique
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Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
SHUN
Phil
PROLOGUE - The Fall
CHAPTER 1 - Pinched
CHAPTER 2 - Fumble
CHAPTER 3 - Smacked
CHAPTER 4 - Pussy Whipped
CHAPTER 5 - Loot
CHAPTER 6 - Game Plan
CHAPTER 7 - Blood on My Hands
CHAPTER 8 - The Culprit
CHAPTER 9 - Sole Proprietorship
CHAPTER 10 - Corporate Intoxication
CHAPTER 11 - The Truth Is Blinding
CHAPTER 12 - Who’s to Blame?
CHAPTER 13 - The Meeting
CHAPTER 14 - Loyalty or Power
CHAPTER 15 - End Game
CHAPTER 16 - Run
CHAPTER 17 - Low Life
CHAPTER 18 - Bye-Bye, Frankie
CHAPTER 19 - Dana Santiago
CHAPTER 20 - Casey
CHAPTER 21 - Permission Slip
CHAPTER 22 - The Rescue
CHAPTER 23 - Fresh Start
CHAPTER 24 - Miami Vice
CHAPTER 25 - Discretion Is Advised
CHAPTER 26 - Word Is Bond
CHAPTER 27 - Discovered
CHAPTER 28 - The Truth
CHAPTER 29 - Two Birds with One Stone
CHAPTER 30 - Damn
CHAPTER 31 - One Phone Call
Cyrus
CHAPTER 32 - Flash
CHAPTER 33 - Los Angeles Police
CHAPTER 34 - Los Angeles Police
CHAPTER 35 - Los Angeles Police
CHAPTER 36 - Los Angeles Police
CHAPTER 37 - Los Angeles Police
CHAPTER 38 - Phase 1
CHAPTER 39 - Truth if You Dare
CHAPTER 40 - Love Kills
Urban Books, LLC
300 Farmingdale Road, NY-Route 109
Farmingdale, NY 11735
Ties to the Hood: G-Code
Copyright © 2017 Aija Monique
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without prior consent of the Publisher, except brief quotes used in reviews.
ISBN: 978-1-6228-6565-9
This is a work of fiction. Any references or similarities to actual events, real people, living or dead, or to real locales are intended to give the novel a sense of reality. Any similarity in other names, characters, places, and incidents is entirely coincidental.
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SHUN
All could be lost in the blink of an eye. Bad decisions, lies, deceit, and betrayal only beget death. After graduating high school, I was determined to get the hell out of the cesspool they called Kern County. There, my future was already set in stone. I was most valuable player of Kern County High School basketball team. Basketball was my ticket out. My life was defined by how many points I could score in a night. I was popular defined by how loud the crowd roared and the shoves and chants of my fellow players.
I often wondered how long that would last if I happened to fall and break my ankle or tear a ligament. I knew one thing: I wasn’t going to stand around and wait for that to happen.
My cousin Phil was too hardheaded to listen to a damn thing I had to say. I guess I was the young and naive one. Some of this turned out to be true. I went on to become one of the few and the proud. I was brave enough to address the threats of our lands but naive to the fact that rules and loyalty were fragile when faced with death and confinement.
Leaving the hood in search of a better life wasn’t all fun and games. Matter of fact, it was treacherous. They say the good often die young. Well, I did, in the confines of a jail cell, trying to uphold the laws of loyalty and respect. My soul was crushed.
I often looked back to graduation day. My cousin Phil threw me a party. I got drunk as fuck and nearly missed my bus headed to boot camp the following day. I was an official “jarhead,” a true marine. I wore that uniform with such pride. I never would’ve thought I’d be seated on a bus, headed straight to prison.
“Murder?” Taking the fall for my sergeant was the worst mistake ever. Then again, snitching was social suicide, and there was no way my days in the service would last much longer had I stood up for myself. The murder of a gay marine spread through the media like a virus. Protestors from all over were outside the gates of the base and courthouse.
The freedom to fight for your country, gay or straight, was the highlight of the year. I was deemed the bastard who defiled the honor and glory of the armed services across branches. I might as well have stood outside the White House and burned the American flag. I was guilty anyhow. Fernandez wasn’t my best friend, but he was a man that stood next to me in our lineup and pulled me over the wall when my leg hit a cramp in the field. He wasn’t no fagot, not no outright pink-wearing muthafucka. He didn’t do much to hide his sexual orientation either. He was the class clown when we got a moment’s peace, and a soldier better than many when the time warranted. Still, having respected the man, I didn’t take a step out of line as his commanding officer ordered the beating on Fernandez that subsequently caused his death. Back home, Kern County Projects taught you to keep your mouth closed, no snitching allowed. I saw how badly that man was being treated, but it wasn’t my business; another rule of the hood I carried with me.
Number one: no snitching. Number two: mind your own damn business. They go hand in hand, really.
Phil was hotter than lava at my leaving the hood. Though he understood my thirst for bigger and brighter things, he felt abandoned. He didn’t have anyone else in the hood who was actual blood. His parents were lost to the ways of the world, from drugs to prostitution. To me, the hood equaled death, and that’s what most people living throughout the housing complex expected. It was a blessing for a man to reach the age of twenty-one in the hood, and most were highly praised if they reached the age of eighteen.
Graduation was the best day ever. Shit, it was my time to hang loose. I barely made it. But I did, and my next stop would be San Diego Marine Corps Base in California. I wouldn’t be too far from Phil. However, two different worlds. My life was looking up. I still looked at a life of staring down the barrel of a gun, but in a world where men were protectors of the people, not one where children are dodging bullets, and young girls are prostituting for a hit.
Graduation was cool until the argument between Phil and me. I didn’t mean to hurt him. I actually thought he’d be happy for me. But he felt betrayed. He couldn’t stand the fact that I was going to leave him there alone. I can remember some of his rants now.
“You ain’t shit without me. I’m a real nigga. You will always need me. Your very life depends on it,” Phil said as he pointed his calloused index finger in my face.
That’s when all hell broke loose. We actually came to blows. My guts were soft as shit the entire night preparing to leave for San Diego the next morning. I thought I’d never see Phil again, but there he was, waiting to see me off. We were like brothers.
I didn’t see too much why Phil was so dramatic about my leaving. He had a sidekick. Cyrus. He was a hothead as well but less groomed in the area of finessing his kills. He just didn’t give a shit unless Phil was talking. Cyrus was there, and he always hung on to Phil’s every word, as if he were God or something. Cyrus wanted out too. He was just too much of a follower to express himse
lf.
Funny thing is that Cyrus didn’t even live within the gates of the Kern County Projects. The man stayed five blocks over in a quiet neighborhood with his mother. She was a single parent and couldn’t afford the luxuries of Nikes and Jordans, but she kept food on the table and a nice roof over his head. Cyrus had options. He could get away with most things, based on the fact that he wasn’t labeled as a hood kid.
Even the schools labeled us as underachievers. Kern County Project kids had their own class, as if we weren’t good enough to circulate with the general public. Our test scores weren’t recorded with standardized testing. We were segregated. I was determined to make a better life for myself. In the end, Phil wanted the same.
Change came due to circumstances that caused both of us to reevaluate our take on life. Friends weren’t friends at all. Women were nothing but gold digging tramps, and laws were just made to be broken. Living on the right side of the fence didn’t mean law-abiding citizens. It meant clout—who had it versus who had the most.
There I was sitting on a bus going straight into the gates of hell. I had done my time. Still, I get a one-way ticket back to Kern County Projects with my dick in my hands.
Phil
Man, the hood love me. Ain’t no point in leavin’. Especially if this is all you know. I have to admit that I was hotter than lava at Shun for leaving. We were a team. My blood. In reality, I know my boy had to leave, but I hated to see him go. He was my motivation to make it in and out of the day because I had someone to care for, watch over, make sure he was straight, you feel me?
Now, I’m here with these half-baked goons that can’t trap for shit. Always spendin’ before they eat and chasing after pussy. Tainted pussy at that. With no parents and an elderly grandmother who wanted nothing to do with me, I had to make a dolla out of fifteen cents.
I enjoy my life. I come and go as I please, and I am met with respect—or else. My trigger finga is extremely happy, and I take strongly after Beanie Sigel’s true statement in State Property, “Get down or lay down.” Definite true story for me.
Real shit, with Shun returning home, I couldn’t be happier. I was skinnin’and grinnin’. It was a shame he had to do time for some shit he probably had nothing to do with. The entire trial was bullshit. Don’t sound like nothing he would put his hands on. The fuckin’ media made a mockery of my cutty like he was on the down low. Murdering a gay soldier was almost grounds for public execution, let news at eleven tell it. Shun could give two fucks whether a nigga liked dick. All he ever saw was plan and execution. All I see is the money. For real, for real, if it was a hit. I guarantee it would have been done without a blink of an eye if the money was right.
I put fifteen young men on my squad. I generously gave opportunity for advancement in this business. I only have one rule: respect. With respect, all else follows. With respect comes loyalty, power, and most importantly, affluence. I educate my men on the importance of these things because without it, you can’t call yourself a man. The goal of every man should be to answer and to work for no one. However, in order to do that, you must follow protocol. Pay your dues, service your community, and allow for no disrespect.
I admit I’m into making a public display of those who are disloyal. My head is hot. I get excited when I’m presented with the opportunity to prove a point. Shun could never understand that concept. Fear is what makes people move out the way. Shun prized himself in moving in silence, and he discussed discipline heavy while in the service. I can dig it. I even used some of those same phrases when I was training my goons for money and murder. It takes discipline to move this work. I dare a nigga to abuse my work. I don’t give a shit if they pay for it. No drug is acceptable except weed.
On to the business of family. It hurts my heart to know that Shun is my only true friend and bloodline. I have children, but my baby momma is dirty as hell and a money-hungry bitch. I take care of mine. I’m just not gonna provide for her selfish needs. I miss my boy, but I am not in a position to have him around. Things get funky real quick out here in these streets, and I’d go crazy if something ever happened to my kids.
I get angry easy and admit that my emotions often override reason. I get like that when I feel as though I’m being taken advantage of. I don’t have parents. My mom was on drugs heavy, and it eventually took her out. The lights went out then. I was nine, and, well, my dad didn’t seem to give a shit. He was abusive and a damn pimp himself. He was murdered right on our front porch. Dude came right up behind ’im and rocked his shit. I never respected a man who couldn’t stand toe-to-toe with his foe. I made a promise then that I would approach and execute my intentions with no questions. I didn’t have time for meaningless arguments. Shun changed me for the best, and, I have to say, so did my son. I focused on the almighty dolla. Without it, I couldn’t provide for my son. It was more than my dad ever did for me, so I made right by my seeds. I wanted the best for my children.
Though it seemed I wanted for nothing, that was far from the truth. The street life kept me hungry for more. I became a predator to those who fell victim to my wrath, but in reality, all I truly wanted was love and a shot at a normal life. Sure, my head was filled with anger, but it all stemmed from fear. I couldn’t let the streets feel me internally. They would eat me alive. And right now, all I had is my street cred. No matter how bad I wanted to hang all this shit up, I couldn’t. Someone would be sure to take me out in a hurry for any show of weakness.
Besides, both Shun and I tried the right way, and it turned around and bit us both in the ass. So for now, it’s money and power, and those who get greedy often get eaten by bigger fish, deceived by their own eyes.
PROLOGUE
The Fall
“Aye, but I didn’t do it! I didn’t do shit, man. Mitch, tell ’em. Sergeant, tell ’em. You know I didn’t do it,” Shun yelled in a panic as the marshals dragged him out of the barracks in his underwear.
“Come with me, soldier.”
Shun caught the eyes of each of his bunk mates’ solemn but stern faces as he kicked and pleaded for the same backup he would expect on the battlefield. No one stepped forward. The truth was, over a handful of his colleagues had a hand in harassing Fernandez, mostly lewd comments about him wearing lipstick and soliciting his talent for giving blow jobs. Any one of them could have been a suspect if Shun hadn’t witnessed the crime himself.
* * *
That was all she wrote. Shun did a nickel in the pen and got out in three years, on account of good behavior. First thing he did was put a call in to his cousin Phil. He wondered what Phil was up to, having heard he was still on that same hype—out there in the hood, drug sales, and petty theft. No telling how many bodies he dumped. All was well. Phil was on cloud nine and excited for Shun to get back home and get this money. Phil failed to talk in code, he was too juiced. Shun, on the other hand, was so afraid of incriminating himself he hurried Phil off the phone. Shun had learned his lesson. Doing good didn’t pay off, and, hell, doing bad had the same result, if caught. Do right by the law and end up in the pen, just the same.
He walked out of Wasco County Prison, and the first thing that hit his fresh white tee was a gust of dirt. The soil didn’t bother him, though. He welcomed it because there were no gates around it. The guards had the nerve to toss him his Marine Corps uniform from his previous tour as if he were down with the flag. As far as he was concerned, the Iranians could walk right past him, guns blazing. He couldn’t guarantee he wouldn’t throw on a damn turban and blow some shit up himself. He was done with the “America the Brave” shit. He was ready to tackle a new way of life, civilian life, if his cousin Phil didn’t get him into trouble.
He stood outside the gates of Wasco Prison for about fifteen minutes. He was just about to panic until he saw his cutty speeding up in a brand-new, candy-painted, old-school Camaro.
“What’s up, ma nigga? They finally let yo’ ass out!” Phil said.
“Yeah, man. They let this innocent man out!”
 
; “Man, it’s good. You out. You served your time. You can tell me. Hell, everybody in prison innocent, right?”
“I’m not jawsin’ about this, cutty. I didn’t do nothing. His own bunk mates killed him on some ole gay shit. I could care less if that man wanted pussy or penis. Just as long as his gun was locked and loaded when the enemy was lurking, you feel me? It’s all good now, though. Granny told me to do right. I listened. Look what it got me. Absolutely nothing. So case closed. You got that work for me I asked for?” Shun asked.
“You know I got it. You know I’m runnin’ shit out in the hood now, right? I got these hoes turning triple tricks a night. Got some weed going,” Phil answered.
“What about that white girl? You not fucking with that yet? That’s where the money at, and clientele? Who you servicing? Them niggas in the hood or you got white bread clients now?”
“What I need from them? I got ma goons, plenty money, and pussy. I’m good. You start fooling around with too many people or adding faulty-ass niggas to yo’ crew, and then wham—you locked up. Fucking snitches, and them be the men on your team.”
“I feel you, bro. I have a plan, though,” Phil said with a look of determination on his face. Shun didn’t faze much of what Phil said when he had his undivided attention. He was thinking on how he was going to build from his new pals at work. Shun shared no plans with working a 9 to 5, not after Wade approached him at the office.
“Yo, man, know anyone I can score some weed and coke from?” Wade “The Suit” said as he bounced into the men’s room. Wade was the rich kid in the office. He always walked around like he had his own theme song playing his head. He bought to please. He only got the job on some hype to prove he didn’t need Daddy’s money, but his mother was feeding him over five grand a month for supposed groceries and help paying $400 rent for a studio apartment.