On the Run with Love

Read On the Run with Love Online

Authors: J.M. Benjamin

On the Run with Love
J.M. Benjamin
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
Title Page
On the Run with Love
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Twenty-nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-one
Chapter Thirty-two
Chapter Thirty-three
Chapter Thirty-four
Chapter Thirty-five
Chapter Thirty-six
Chapter Thirty-seven
Chapter Thirty-eight
Chapter Thirty-nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-one
Chapter Forty-two
Chapter Forty-three
Chapter Forty-four
Chapter Forty-five
Chapter Forty-six
Chapter Forty-seven
Chapter Forty-eight
Chapter Forty-nine
Chapter Fifty
Chapter Fifty-one
Chapter Fifty-two
Chapter Fifty-three
Epilogue
Copyright Page
On the Run with Love
by
 
J.M.
Benjamin
To all those who continue to support my bodies of work.
Thank you!
J.M.
Prologue
The first bullet whizzed through the air, shattering the bottle of Rémy Martin Grand Cru VS on the table and piercing the soft flesh of Freddie's upper left side, separating two of his ribs. The burning sensation ignited his insides letting his intoxicated mind know he had been shot. But he wasn't surprised. How could he be when he saw it coming, saw them coming, from across the crowded club.
The second shot caught him in the neck. His blood splattered all over a screaming female beside him who was scrambling to get away.
Yes, he saw the bullets coming. He could see them in his eyes before he saw the glint of the cold steel in the shooter's hand. When their eyes first met, his instincts went into survival mode. He saw murder and knew he was the victim. As he reached for his pistol, something happened. Something just made him stop, and he accepted what was taking place. He was tired.
His whole world as he knew it had come crashing down around him. Everything was gone and the only thing that remained was the fact that he was a wanted man. Not only by the police but by everyone it seemed. They all wanted him out of the way. Freddie couldn't eat or sleep without the incessant thought that he was running out of time.
The third shot that hit him like a sledgehammer in the abdomen was the welcoming committee that told him it was all over. And he welcomed it.
Freddie embraced the warm sensation he felt creeping over his entire body. He welcomed the way everything and everyone around him began moving in slow motion.
The sound of screaming voices and the tempo of the popular club mix by Adrian Sykes warped in Freddie's ears to match the steady rhythm of his heartbeat as it slowly got drowned out. His heartbeat was pounding loudly in his eardrums over all the commotion.
Even the fourth bullet, the last shot he felt, seemed to move in slow motion. From the barrel of the gun, he followed its
Matrix
-like trajectory as it zeroed in on him. He watched it come dangerously close to a woman's ducking head, break a glass in a man's hand, and finally lodge itself deep inside his own flesh. Simultaneously, Freddie's mind was sent to that place where pain can no longer reach.
His last sight was of those eyes and the determination in them. He knew it was coming; no one can run forever. His last thought was,
damn, why did it have to be me?
Chapter One
One Year Earlier
 
“Pimpin' is easy when you got the looks and the mouthpiece to back it up,” old head Butch the barber remarked as he turned Freddie's chair toward the mirror.
Freddie Holmes looked into his own reflection, admiring his light brown complexion. He was half Dominican and it showed in his features. His father, whoever he was, had left him with naturally curly brown hair and hazel eyes that took on a greenish tint in the summer. He wore his hair close with neatly shaped sideburns and a trimmed goatee. Freddie really didn't need a haircut, but because he took pride in his good looks, he made biweekly trips to Nu Cuts Barbershop, his old friend's establishment. Butch had been cutting Freddie's hair for almost ten years, since he was eleven. So he knew exactly how he liked his hair cut.
“Unc, touch up this sideburn a little. It looks thicker than this one,” Freddie said, turning his head from side to side.
“You must be goin' blind, nephew. I know what the hell I'm doin'. When you sit in my chair, I create freakin' masterpieces,” Butch boasted with a chuckle. “I'm like a gotdamn Picasso in this bad boy, huhhh!” Butch added with a preacher's flair, making the other patrons laugh.
“Man, just fix my joint 'fore you make me late,” Freddie replied with a smirk. Butch was like an uncle to Freddie for real. Their families went back generations, even before Freddie came into existence.
Butch's second barber, Mr. Shuttleworth, a short West Indian man, stopped the cut he was doing on another brother to glance over at Freddie. “Let meh fin' out da likkle young gal yuh 'bout to tie da knot wid wear da pants and got yuh runnin' home wid your nose open,” Mr. Shuttleworth joked in his native tongue as the patrons joined in with laughter.
Freddie took it in stride. “Nah, man, I got a funeral to go to.”
“Oh, da wedding's today?” Mr. Shuttleworth snapped back, laughing hard. “'Cause mine damn sure was a funeral! Man!” Everybody fell out.
“Nephew,” Butch said between cackles, “I ain't no gay-ass joker or nuttin', and excuse my French, Mr. Shuttleworth, but if I had your hand, I'd throw mine away. What in the hell is you gettin' married fo'?”
“Yeah, mon. All dem fine women I done seen yuh wid,” Mr. Shuttleworth joined in, as he shook his head in mock disbelief. “Yuh violatin' the player's code, my youth!” Everyone in the shop just exploded in laughter.
Freddie chuckled along. “Naw, Unc, you got me twisted. See, y'all see these broads at they best. But I'm tellin' you, you ain't seen shit until they butt-ass naked bangin' at your door at two in the mornin' wit' a broken heart and a butcher knife.”
“Well, I don't know about the butcher knife,” Butch replied, “but a buck-naked sista can bang on my door anytime!”
“Mine too!” someone in the peanut gallery yelled out.
Freddie just shook his head at the two old coons because he knew they didn't understand. You see, he was blessed with features that spoke for themselves. And he had developed a razor-sharp game that made females Silly Putty in his hands. But he wasn't a cold-hearted individual. He was a dog to some and a player to most; still, he wasn't cold enough to not let females' emotions affect him once he was done with them. Money, sex, in that order. Those old coons hadn't seen what Freddie could do to or get from women. Besides, they had never been desired the way Freddie often was. Now the thrill was gone and the game had become more problematic than it was worth.
“Y'all just don't understand,” he stated simply.
“Understand what? Pussy? Man, the day pussy becomes a problem, I'll be the first black muthafucka in line lookin' for trouble!” the third barber, Nas, exclaimed, now joining in.
“Right behind me!” one of the regular customers added.
Then, as if on cue, the door busted open and in walked a problem. Everybody abruptly stopped laughing when they saw this big black nigga standing in the door holding this fine, thick redbone firmly by the neck.
“Cream, get off me! You hurtin' me!” the redbone begged.
“Bitch, I'ma do more than that if you don't point out this Freddie muhfucka!” the big black monster-looking stranger thundered as he shook her real hard, like a ragdoll.
Freddie tensed up at the sound of his name. Then he recognized the girl. She was a stripper he'd met, or rather ran back into, at the new gentlemen's club on Richmond Street. He'd first met her back in the day at Club Knockers in their city. He had sexed her a few times before he realized she was more of a liability than an asset. By then she had already caught feelings. And with the cat standing in the doorway, he remembered her saying that her man had been in the county jail for a few weeks, and her trick ass was out sucking the next man's dick.
“In the chair, Cream! Right there!” She pointed at Freddie with satisfaction. She'd gladly take her ass whuppin' if she could see Freddie's no-good ass take one too.
Cream shoved her aside and approached Freddie. “You know her, nigga?” Cream demanded.
Freddie silently cussed himself out for leaving his gun in the car. He eyed the Goliath in front of him, realizing he was in an awkward position. He wasn't usually defending himself.
“Come on, man, you can't be serious,” Freddie replied, checking all around for the upper hand.
“Answer the question, muhfucka! Let me hear you say you fucked my wife!”
Wife?
Freddie thought and looked back at the redbone. He could see her smirk through the tears. The tension was too thick to reply verbally. It was either move or get moved on, and Freddie wasn't about to choose the latter. His next move was quick and effective. He spotted clippers in Butch's hand and, with lightning-fast agility, grabbed the cord and swung the clippers as hard as he could into Cream's nose. Cream grunted and fell back, but only momentarily. As Freddie got out of the chair, Cream lunged at him, only to catch a Nike ACG boot in the nuts that folded him up. A pistol fell to the floor from Cream's waistline. Freddie caught him with a crushing left that broke the gargantuan man down, proving that he had a glass jaw.
“Bitch-ass nigga! Confrontin' me over this stankin'-ass broad!” Freddie barked as he bent down to pick up the pistol. “And, you was gonna shoot me?” Freddie grabbed a handful of Cream's cornrows and brought the steel down hard on his jaw line, making him spit out a tooth. “Don't you ever bring this shit down the west end, nigga!” Freddie yelled, punctuating every word with a blow.
The redbone was in shock. She was sure Big Cream would beat Freddie down. She jumped on Freddie's back, all nails and teeth like a wolf protecting her young. “Get off my man, motherfucka!” she bellowed.
Freddie fought to get his arm loose from her grip. “This bitch,” he said, and chuckled in disgust. He grabbed a handful of weave and brought her face down hard on his knee as Butch begged him to stop. She doubled over and crumpled to the ground.
“Gotdammit, Freddie, I said stop!” Butch yelled and locked his sawed-off shotgun for emphasis. He had been calling Freddie the whole time but Freddie was in a zone.
Freddie heard the metallic clack and froze mid-motion of pummeling Cream again with the pistol. Blood was everywhere. He stood up, breathing uncontrollably. “Now, nigga, take your punk ass back to the east end,” Freddie said before he spat on Cream's mangled body.
“I hate you, Freddie! You ain't shit!” the redbone screamed with her nose bleeding.
“Neither was your rotten-ass pussy! That's why I ain't givin' you what you want now!” Freddie taunted her.
“Somebody get this brother out my shop,” Butch ordered. Nas and another man helped Cream and the redbone out.
“It ain't over,” Cream mumbled through lips that were already beginning to swell, but Freddie didn't hear him. He turned back to Butch as Cream was carried out.
Butch just shook his head. “On second thought, I'm glad yo' pretty ass is gettin' married.”
“Just fix my muthafuckin' sideburns so I can go,” Freddie spat, climbing back into the chair. “Actin' like you was gonna shoot some-damn-body.” Freddie smiled.
“I was. You. I love you, but I'll kill you before I let you shut my business down, neph,” Butch replied with a straight face.
Freddie knew he was capable because he was an old-school gangster, but he knew he could never harm a hair on him. “Just finish me up, unc.” Freddie took another look in the full-sized barber mirror. Butch the barber shook his head as he did what he was told.
* * *
Freddie inserted his key into the door of his apartment. He glanced down at himself and at all the blood splattered over his Polo shirt. He was still mad, but the more he thought about it, the funnier it became. Cream was a grown-ass man on some high school shit, fighting over a piece of ass. Now that was a violation of the player's code. If anything, he should have shaken Freddie's hand for showing him how triflin' the woman he married really was. He was sure, in her profession, she had done a little something strange for a little change while Cream was locked up. Freddie busted out laughing at the thought, as he entered the apartment.
“Freddie?” he heard a sweet voice call out from the kitchen. “Your mother said she was gonna kill you if you . . .” His fiancée, Simone, came out of the kitchen wearing only a dress slip and stockings. Putting her earrings on, she stopped short when she saw her man covered in blood, and she quickly rushed to him.
“Freddie! Are you okay? What happened?” she asked in a quick succession, checking him for wounds. Then she noticed he was laughing. “And what's so funny?”
Freddie shook his head and kissed her lightly on the lips. “Plainfield,” he replied with irony.
“What you done did, boy?” she inquired with a sigh.
“Don't sweat it, babe. This joker just had his people fucked up, yo,” Freddie told her, checking his watch. “Let me take a quick shower and I'll be ready, a'ight?” He quickly stepped off to avoid any more questions. Wasn't no way he was gonna tell Simone he had to smash a brother over a piece of ass.
Freddie headed down the hallway, pulling off his Black Label jacket. He pulled his Ralph Lauren Polo shirt over his head and tossed it into the hamper. He turned on the shower and tested the temperature until it was to his liking. He got undressed, pulling off his black Nike ACG boots, Antik Denim jeans, and Movado watch. Freddie climbed into the shower and held his head under the nozzle, letting the water cascade down his face. He watched the brown residue of dried blood slip down the drain, and thought about how easily the tables could have been turned. He could be somewhere stitched up and swollen right now.
His mind was brought back by the touch of a silky hand caressing his back. He turned around to find Simone in the shower with him, smiling into his eyes. Freddie took one look at Simone's deep, dark Foxy Brown eyes, her small but pert breasts, nipples erect, and her thick hips; and he forgot all about the fight. Freddie wrapped his arms around her waist and palmed her ass. “Now we really gonna be late,” he remarked.
Simone playfully hit him then wrapped her arms around his neck. “No, we're not. I'm just checkin' on my man. You came home covered in blood, laughing, and I ain't supposed to worry?”
Freddie took one long look into Simone's eyes and knew why he was marrying her. Love was written all over her face. There was no explanation that could put her concern to rest. So he just caressed her face and gently sucked her bottom lip. Then Freddie kissed her.
“Dig, ma, I love you, okay? And ain't nothing in the world gonna take me from you, so don't worry about daddy. It's okay.”
Simone gazed back trustingly and nodded. “It's just . . . It's been so crazy out there, baby. I just want you to be careful.”
“Wit' all this chocolate waitin' for me, a nigga gots to be careful.” Freddie grinned, making her blush. “Now, can we be a little late?” he flirted, massaging her ass and pulling her closer.
“So your mother can kill me? I don't think so,” she answered, kissing him softly. “But, ah, good things come to those who wait,” she promised seductively, stepping out of the shower, dripping chocolate. Simone grabbed a towel and strutted out of the bathroom knowing her man was watching. She was just happy that he was home safe.
* * *
Meanwhile, a heated Dante looked at his man Cream in disgust.
This sucka for love–ass nigga
, Dante thought as one of his top crew members, Cream, lay back on the couch with his face stitched up and his jaw wired shut. He couldn't believe his man played himself over that slut of a wife of his. Dante knew the chick was trifling because half the clique had tossed her up before Cream had married her. But this was different. Freddie had washed his man out and shit had to be handled. Dante knew what had to be done. The question was how he intended to go about it. He had options.
He had a clique of wolves on the come up who would end not only Freddie, but his entire family's lives, for the right price. After putting them in position to lock down the entire east end of town with heroin and the best weed money could buy, leaving only coke sales to the scramblers, he knew there was nothing anyone of them wouldn't jump at the chance to handle. But although it wasn't a large territory that his young boys controlled, it was a lucrative one, one he was willing to risk over Cream's matter. With that money came the opportunity to expand. Dante knew he had to protect his investment because at his command his team would do whatever it took to get paper. Seeing Cream flip over a female, and a bird at that, made Dante think. What would he do if shit got hectic and cases were caught? To be a killer in the streets was one thing, but to hold water in a storm was the test of a real gangsta. Dante planned to keep a close eye on Cream.

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