Part 1 (2/2)

KoKo laid down and dialed the number for the phone on the plane.

”Hey, baby. You miss me already?” Kayson asked.

”Yes, of course. But I think I'm in labor.”

Kayson got quiet. ”What happened?”

”When I got in the shower the games began. You know this is your fault.”

”How is it my fault?”

”You and your doggie style.”

”You and your 'not until six weeks.' The Enforcer don't play that.”

”Whatever!”

”I'm on my way back. Keep me posted.”

”Okay, baby. Hurry!” KoKo felt another sharp pain.

She tried to remain calm and fall asleep, but the pain and pressure began to take over. She got up and attempted to walk to the kitchen to get some water. When she turned the corner, she felt a heavy object hit her head, and then she saw black.

”Wake up, KoKo,” she heard the soft, yet commanding voice say.

Struggling to open her eyes and lift her head, KoKo sat half way up and got the shock of her life. Keisha stood over her with a gun in her hand.

”What the f.u.c.k!” KoKo mumbled. She tried to move her hands, but they were cuffed to the pipe under the kitchen sink.

KoKo yanked her shackled hands, trying to break free. ”What are you doing?” she asked, trying to bring her head to her hands. And as she did so, she pulled back a handful of blood.

”See, I tried to be patient. I tried to wait and see if the animals would wipe themselves out, but you are f.u.c.king relentless. I put Mo on you. I put Boa on you. I even put the cops on you, and for some reason...you just won't fade the f.u.c.k out!”

”What the f.u.c.k is wrong with you?” KoKo looked partly confused and shocked.

”You're what's wrong with me. You're the reason Malik did not love me. You're the reason why my daughter is gone!” she yelled.

”I am your daughter,” KoKo tried to bring her back to reality.

Keisha laughed hard and loud while holding her stomach. ”You are soooooo stupid. Didn't Tyquan tell you to open your eyes?” she leaned down toward her. ”I am not your mother. Nine tried to tell you everything. I kept telling Mo, 'That b.i.t.c.h is smart. She is going to figure this whole thing out.' But Mo said, 'No she won't.' It was the death of her, but I ain't going out like that,” she leaned in and held the chain in her face and with gritted teeth she continued. ”You took my Star. She was all I had in this world. You owe me, and just when I was about to cash in, that nosey husband of yours f.u.c.ked with the accounts. Now, I need you to tell me where my money is.”

”I don't know s.h.i.+t about your money,” KoKo said as the crease in her forehead appeared.

”I figured you would say that. So I guess I will have to go to plan B.”

Keisha pulled a metal object from a bag and walked over to the stove. She turned the fire up high and placed the object on the flame.

”This is all about money?” KoKo asked as a sharp pain struck her stomach and back. Her head throbbed.

”It has always been about money,” she leaned back down. ”They owe me. I sacrificed everything, and I want what's coming to me. They didn't give it to me, but you will,” she stood and walked back to the stove.

KoKo could hear her phone ringing incessantly. She knew Kayson was calling her back to back.

”So, where did you say my money was?” Keisha asked, coming toward her with the hot object.

”f.u.c.k you!” KoKo shouted.

Keisha stepped over her and placed the red, hot tip on her leg.

”Ahhh!” KoKo yelled out as the pain shot through her body.

”You still don't know?”

”I don't know s.h.i.+t!” KoKo spat in her face.

Keisha smiled, wiped the saliva away, and then burned KoKo again.

”m.u.t.h.af.u.c.ka!” KoKo screamed out this time. The pain was so severe her water broke.

Keisha went back to the stove. ”Let's see how much Kayson will love you with the skin burned off your pretty little face,” Keisha placed the object back on the fire.

Tears came to KoKo's eyes, but she would not let them fall.

Keisha pulled up a chair and looked at her watch. ”I gotta let it get good and hot,” she crossed her legs.

”b.i.t.c.h, you better kill me!”

”Oh, don't worry. I am. But I want to do it real slow. While we wait, I want to tell you a few things. I don't know if you knew this, but Monique really did like your little orphan you're going to leave behind. We had so many arguments over if we should kill you or not. She was real conflicted. Thank G.o.d, you got to her because she was really getting ready to f.u.c.k things up with her guilty conscience; especially when her son came back into the picture. And Boa, you must have been f.u.c.king him real good because he was flip-flopping. Mo had to pay him big time, and if Boa's suicidal girlfriend wouldn't have pulled her stunt, I would have been living free by now.

She paused and looked at her watch again. ”Oh well, water under the bridge,” she rose to her feet, heading toward the stove.

Again, KoKo could hear her phone ringing off the hook.

”b.i.t.c.h, you better hide good because Kayson will not rest until your grave is cold.”

Keisha turned toward KoKo. She squatted beside her to look in her eyes. ”I'm not afraid of your husband,” she smirked. ”To be truthful, you have no idea who he really is,” she stated, lowering her eyes. ”Let me ask you something,” Keisha s.h.i.+fted her weight from one side to the other. ”When he crawls between your thighs and gives you all that power, inch by glorious inch, making you see what he wants you to see, hear what he wants you to hear, feel what he wants you to feel, rendering you incapable of thought and control,” she paused. ”Can you really say you know who he is? You climbed into a dangerous game with some very powerful players. Each one led by their desires. Money. Power. Greed. s.e.x,” she chuckled. ”I think they call it . . . temptation. And oh, it can be a beautiful thing in the hands of the right person; but in the hands of the wrong person, it can be deadly. And you, my dear, were dealt a very deadly hand.”

KoKo stared in her eyes, unfazed by her little speech.

”Finally, your smart a.s.s mouth is closed,” Keisha slowly stood up and headed to the stove.

KoKo's pains were coming faster and faster. She needed to say something to distract her.

”The only thing worse than a greedy b.i.t.c.h, is a thirsty one. b.i.t.c.h, you ain't 'bout this life. You ain't worthy enough to suck a dog's d.i.c.k!” KoKo looked at her with low eyes and flared nostrils. ”I didn't climb into this game. I walked in the front door and sat right down at the m.u.t.h.af.u.c.kin table. And I have been trumping you m.u.t.h.af.u.c.kas from day one,” KoKo continued to taunt her.

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