Dirty Rotten Liar (26 page)

What happens when beautiful, twenty-year-old petty thief
and ex-stripper Mink LaRue finds out she's a dead ringer
for the age-progressed photo of the missing oil heiress
Sable Dominion?
 
Find out in
 
Natural Born Liar
by Noire
 
Turn the page for an excerpt from Natural Born Liar. . . .
 
 
 
 
CHAPTER 1
 
 
The Rip-Off
P
ussy sold for pennies on the dollar on Friday nights in Harlem, and if you were looking for a couple of hot whirly-whirlies, then Club Wood was damn sure the place to be. Located on a busy corner off 125th Street, Wood stayed packed out with coochie-sniffin' niggas who were deep on the prowl, and some of the baddest bitches in the city of New York stripped, danced, and hosted private fuck-fests in the club's back rooms.
I had twirled around the strip poles earlier in the day, but I was taking the night off so I could collect some dough from a mark that me and my best friends, Peaches and Bunni, had recently ganked.
We'd schemed up a plan to lure a switch-hittin' old head into a motel room, then we snapped a bunch of shots of him sporting a sexy red bra and taking some real thick pipe up his ass.
Dude was a high-profile principal at a private boys' school and he didn't want no trouble. He didn't want no publicity neither, and in less than five minutes he had agreed to give up twenty g's to stop a picture of his hairy balls from being posted to his teenaged daughter's Facebook page.
The lick had gone down perfectly, and I was chillin' at the bar sipping slut juice and congratulating myself for a job well done when outta nowhere I caught a funny vibe.
Something wasn't right.
I got the feeling I was being watched. I had a bag full of blackmail dough slung over my shoulder, and something in my gut told me to get the fuck up outta Dodge.
I slid down from the barstool and broke for the door, but Hova's latest banga came on, and every pole freak in the house broke out in a mass stanky stroll. The strippers jumped down from the stage and hit the floor rolling hard, booties twerkin', hips grindin', stroking their pussies and sending a wave of horny niggas rushing down the aisles straight toward me.
WHO GON' STOP ME? WHO GON' STOP ME, HUH?
I crashed into about thirty sweaty niggas as I pushed through the crowd and tried to fight my way outside. I was shaking fools offa me left and right as their horny asses pulled me in all directions and tried to feel me up. A few of my regular customers offered to get me toasted, some wanted me to slide over in the corner so we could smoke some yay, and even more begged me to go in the back room and hit 'em with my patented-move, double-hump lap dance.
Somehow I made it past them, and I was
this close
to getting my ass outta there when a strong hand clamped down on my shoulder and a deep voice boomed, “Excuse me, ma'am.”
I almost shit. I didn't know if I should turn around swinging or make another break for the door, but I knew I was busted. The twenty racks I had just hustled from that principal felt like a ton of bricks weighing down my bag. This was supposed to be an easy little gank, and I couldn't believe that greasy old dick-rider had called the cops on me!
Getting arrested was gonna be a real big problem for me. I was already on probation for writing bad checks, and a thousand lies flew through my head as I thought about the bus ride to Rikers I was about to take.
“I said, excuse me, ma'am,” the voice boomed behind me again, “but is your name Nicki Minaj?”
I spun around so fast my pink-and-blond Chinese bangs swished across my forehead. I eyeballed the hand that was still gripping my shoulder. It sported a five-thousand-dollar platinum Versace ring on the pinkie finger, and I'd seen that fourteen-thousand-dollar Rolex Prince Cellini on sale at a jewelry store on Broadway.
“Oh! My bad.” Dude busted a grin as he checked me out. I was styling pussy-pink from the top of my Glama-Glo wig all the way down to my toenails, and it was real obvious that he was feeling my flow. “You look
just like
Mizz Minaj from the back, but you're even finer than she is in the face.”
I stunted on him. I was a con-mami, a pole dancer, and under the right circumstances I could be a big-ass thief. A chick like me had ninety-nine hustles but a rap star wasn't one of ' em.
I breathed a sigh of relief as I checked him out right back. Dude was handling his. He had pretty brown skin and real white teeth. His dome was freshly-lined and he stood at least six-five.
My eyes rolled over his gear as I added up his digits. Chocolate-brown Polo shirt, baggy jeans, Cool Grey Jordans. Uh-huh. He was thuggin' it and I was lovin' it. Papa was stackin' some real mean paper and he wasn't shy about flossin' it. I could almost see the fat money knots swelling up in his pockets and the hard piece of wood that was starting to rock up in his drawers too.
“I'm serious.” He grinned again and hit me with his dimples. “I didn't mean no disrespect, shawty. You just look so damn fly, so damn . . .
New York.
For real. My bad.”
His mistake was understandable because my shit was put together super-tight. I was rocking Fendi from my diamond-trimmed pink shades down to my tight pink miniskirt. My jewelry was pink mother-of-pearls from Tiffany's, and my pink-polished toenails looked nice and suckable in my peep-toe heels.
“No problem.” I grinned and played it sexy-classy. “Men take me for Nicki Minaj all the time.”
“Hell, yeah, with that kinda body I bet the fuck they do,” he growled. His voice was full of mad appreciation as he introduced himself. “My name is Dajuan,” he said. “Dajuan Latrell Sullivan. What's yours?”
“They call me Tasha,” I lied, sliding my shades off so he could peep my hazel eyes. “Tasha Pierce.”
“Look, I don't mean to come at you, Tasha, but I'm just visiting here tonight. Me and my brother own a club in Philly and we're thinking about opening up a joint around here pretty soon too. You look like you know this city. Can I buy you a drink so we can kick it for a while?”
A businessman? A club owner? I was definitely down for that!
“Nah, I don't think so,” I fronted. “I don't drink with strange dudes. For all I know you could be the Harlem River Strangler.”
He laughed and pulled out a business card. “I'm a balla, not a killer,” he said, passing it to me. “That's real talk. Look, I ain't tryna push up on you, I just want some good conversation, that's all. I ain't askin' you for no lap dance or nothing like that. I got a nice little spot over in the VIP joint, and we can have a few drinks together and then I'll have my driver drop you off anywhere you wanna go. You feelin' that?”
“Your driver?” I played him off, but I had never been the type to turn my back on a knockin' opportunity.
He looked through the glass doors and pointed toward the corner where a shiny black limo was parked right at the curb. An old white man was sitting behind the wheel, and when Dajuan waved at him the old man smiled and waved back.
I glanced down at his business card. The lights in the club were pretty dim, but I could tell it was made of thick, cream-colored card stock with heavy gold trim. The initials D.L.S. were scripted and embossed in large red letters, and a bunch of other words were printed on it real small.
That right there did it. I felt a rush coming on. God, I loved this fuckin' hustle! Hoodwinking niggas felt as good as the first hit on a crack pipe, and I had to stop myself from squealing with excitement. This Philly fool was gwapped out. Swimming in cream! Did I wanna sit in his VIP booth and have a drink with him? Did a wino piss on the stairs?
I shook my head again. I was wide open but I still had a role to play.
“Nah, I can't. I got other plans for tonight.”
I was praying he'd come at me one more time 'cause I just knew his deep-ass pockets were dying to get tricked out.
“So that's how y'all treat company around here? A Philly nigga can't get no Big Apple love?”
My bag was already full of dough, but a hustlin' chick like me was always good for one more con. I did the math in my head as I let Dajuan hold me by my waist and lead me back through the crowd. I was in debt with some real dangerous cats for some real crazy cash, and this was gonna be a great opportunity to get my weight up. Between his watch and his ring alone I could probably rack up at least ten grand at the pawnshop around the corner.
I switched my plump apple ass toward the VIP booth while Dajuan walked behind me watching it move. He seemed like an all right cat, but he was on the young side too. He was fine, but he didn't look like no genius. I was planning on getting his horny ass naked and doing a little dip and zip. Peaches and Bunni were expecting me to show up at the crib soon, and I figured I could lure Dajuan into the hotel next door and get the whole bizz over and done with in less than an hour.
I slid into the VIP booth just a' crackin' up inside. Somebody's mama shoulda warned him about pickin' up strangers 'cause this was about to be a mismatch. But what the hell
ever
! Niggas these days were just beggin' to get got, and even with a pocketbook full of cash I could always find time to roll an unsuspecting mark with nothing but pussy on his brain!
Coming soon
 
Millionaire Wives Club
by Tu-Shonda L. Whitaker
 
Four deliciously dramatic divas bask in the attention
of their own hit reality TV show,
The Millionaire Wives
Club
. But the spotlight isn't always so flattering. . . .
 
Turn the page for an excerpt from
Millionaire Wives Club
. . .
The Club
M
illions of dollars in premier fashions and champagne diamonds were on display at Manhattan's 40/40 Club as four ultrarich and ubersuccessful women—America's newest addition to reality TV—strolled the red carpet and smiled at the flashing lights of the paparazzi. The clicking of their designer stilettos was like exquisite steel-pan beats as they crossed the club's threshold, and the sultry sounds of Maxwell's live performance filled the air. Despite their individual insecurities and doubts, at this moment as they sauntered into the sunrise of superstardom, what mattered most was that they'd gotten their own piece of the latest in rich bitch candy.
“Ladies, ladies,” a reporter from
E! News
said, motioning for the four of them to come together and meet him across the room. “Can you all tell us a little about yourselves?” He looked at the woman to his left. “May we start with you?”
“I'm Milan Starks, wife of the great Yusef ‘Da Truef' Starks, number twenty-three on the New York Knicks.”A lovely mix of her cinnamon brown Dominican father and golden-skinned African American mother, Milan had an effortless beauty that didn't require makeup or facials to be perfect. She had a Marilyn Monroe mole on the corner of her top lip, hazel eyes, and her Beyoncé-like hips were a size ten, twelve at most, and she had a true apple bottom.
“Wasn't he suspended?” Evan Malik said and then quickly covered her mouth.“Oh, my apologies, I didn't mean to say that.”
“He was suspended,” the reporter said, following up on Evan's comment.“Do you want to tell us how you feel about that?” he asked Milan.
“My husband is a great man.” Milan smiled. “Sure, he hit a rough patch, but he's on his way back and will be better than ever.”
“Thank you, Mrs. Starks, now on to you, Mrs. Malik,” he said to Evan. “Is it true that you were the first to be cast for the show?”
Milan shifted her weight from one Christian Louboutin python pump to the other, praying the nausea she felt as she sized up Evan would go away. Evan stood five eleven, fabulously slender, a figure-eight shape, and skin the color of butterscotch. Her hair was cut in a short and spiky Halle Berry–inspired 'do with touches of honey blond that glimmered in the spotlights.
Milan hated that she and Evan had ended up in the same circle, because every time she saw Evan, heard Evan's voice, and was in her presence, Milan was forced to deal with the fact that Evan had won. Evan had ended up with the only man who made Milan feel true love was obtainable: Kendu. But since image was everything in this business, Milan planned to do her damnedest and pretend that they were all friends, even if the knife she had for Evan's back weighed down her Chloé clutch.
“Why of course, sweetie,” Evan said. “Who wouldn't want to start with me?” She winked.
“It's been five minutes,” Chaunci Morgan, Milan's neighbor and one of the four costars, whispered to Milan while maintaining a smile, “and already I'm sick of this bitch. Did she forget that she was a video ho?”
“Seems so,” Milan whispered back.
“Excuse you.” Jaise Williams, Evan's friend and their costar, turned toward Milan and then eyed Chaunci. “What did you just say?” she snapped.
“I said that she looks fabulous.” Milan smiled at Evan. “She gives retired video hos, I mean vixens, a good name.”
“Umm-hmm,” Chaunci added, snapping her fingers in a Z motion. “A true fashionista. You better work it, girl.”
“So, Mrs. Malik,” the reporter said,“tell the world who you are and what it means to be on the show.”
Evan paused. The microphone pointed toward her and the spotlights shining in her face caused her to draw a blank. There was no way she could say, “
Millionaire Wives Club
is a last-ditch effort to save my life, something to keep me busy and silence the self-destructive thoughts running through my mind.”And she definitely couldn't say, “I may be married to Kendu Malik, linebacker for the New York Giants, but it's an unending struggle holding on to the motherfucker.”
“Mrs. Malik,” the reporter interrupted her thoughts, “is everything okay? Do you want to fill us in?”
Evan blinked and shot him a Barbie-doll smile. “I am a beautiful wife”—she arched her eyebrows—“an outstanding mother, and I have the talent and the foresight to seize the moment. And being on the show will allow all women to see what it takes to be me.”
“And what exactly does that mean?” the reporter probed.
“What she means,” Chaunci mumbled to Milan, “is that she thinks us peons are pissed that we didn't hit the same groupies party that she did.”
Milan tried not to laugh, but then couldn't hold it in any longer, and when she looked at Chaunci they both cracked up, neither one of them stopping until they noticed everyone standing around them was silent.
“Oh,” the producer, Bridget, said to them, batting her eyes, “don't stop on the boom mic's accord. For ratings' sake, carry on.”
Milan was embarrassed; the last thing she wanted was for her and Chaunci to be seen as the troublemaking pair. “I'ma, ummm”—Milan pointed to the bar—“go and have a drink.”
“I'll join you,” Chaunci said, as Bridget motioned for the camera guy, Carl, to follow them.
Once they were at the bar and had ordered their drinks, Carl tapped Chaunci on the shoulder. Both she and Milan turned around. “When I cut the camera on, tell us what happened over there.Why'd you say those things?”
He turned the camera on and pointed it at them.“Evan works my nerves,” Chaunci said, popping her lips. “I've known her for three days, since we met at the studio, and already she's been in my life too long.” She shot Milan a high five.“And believe me, as editor in chief of
Nubian Diva
magazine everyone knows that I'm too classy to lose my cool, but trust me, I will not hesitate to tap dat ass.” She pointed toward Evan.
“But since this is a nice place,” Milan interrupted as she sipped her drink,“we're not gon' tear it up.”
“So we're just going to sit here.” Chaunci crossed her legs.
“And enjoy our evening,” Milan added.
“Thanks, ladies.” Carl smiled and turned away.
Jaise stared at the
E! News
reporter, wondering how she should introduce herself to the world. Should she tell people the made-for-TV parts of her life story or should she lower the boom, let 'em know the truth, and maybe, just maybe, some sanity-teetering superwoman somewhere would understand that this single-mother-doing-her-thing bullshit was overrated?
She stood next to Evan and her eyes shifted from the people mingling across the room to the reporter standing before them. Her open-toed pencil heels were aching her feet, and she wondered why she had committed to doing reality TV, especially when her postdivorce resolution was no drama. Yet here she was drowning in it. All because she and Evan had sworn that cable's
Millionaire Wives Club
was the new bling they needed to rock.
It was public knowledge that Jaise had married and divorced ex–heavyweight champion Lawrence Williams, but she wondered if anyone knew how much she had suffered in silence during their marriage. She'd been slapped, punched, kicked, and humiliated, almost daily, by her ex. And if people didn't know it, would revealing it make hers a story of empowerment or weakness?
Then again, maybe she would look like a shero if she revealed how she had walked out on Lawrence by placing a sedative in his nightly shot of Hennessey, waited for him to drift to sleep, grabbed her son, and then escaped to a battered woman's shelter.
But she had been married to him for seven years and never once publicly complained. There was no way she could now admit before the world that a man with money had clouded her judgment. And since some shit was better left unsaid, Jaise stood there, waited for Evan to finish, and when the reporter turned to her she had her intro down pat.
“Mrs.Williams,” the reporter said,“can you tell us a little about yourself? We hear that you're superwoman. A single mom, the owner of the online Shabby Chic antique business—you seem to be doing it all.”
“Superwoman,” Jaise responded, laughing, “is a myth.” She flung her emerald-and-rhodium-draped wrist.“But I am handling money and power quite well.” She chuckled a bit.“I'm just so excited to be in the company of some remarkable women.”
Once Jaise was done the reporter shook the ladies' hands and said, “Good interview, ladies. Now I need to go and speak to your costars.”
As he turned away Jaise let out a sigh of relief. She sat down at one of the tables and lit a cigarette, and Evan sat across from her. As Jaise eased her feet from her four-inch heels, she said,“I hope I can survive this shit.” She looked at Evan and took a pull. “I keep thinking and rethinking what to say and what not to say.” She let out the smoke. “I swear somebody is going to think I'm crazy.”
“Girl,” Evan said, as she watched Milan and Chaunci laugh and converse at the bar, “just be yourself.”
“Be myself?” Jaise smirked. “Yeah, right.”
“No seriously, I mean, hell, I have no problems being me. I meant what I said to the reporter.”
“Well, I'm not that put together. I'm stressed and sometimes I feel beat down. And you know that's too real for TV.”
“It's
reality TV,
” Evan insisted. “Speak to the camera as if you were talking to me.”
Jaise laughed. “Okay, I'ma relax this bill collector's voice, put on my Brooklyn-mami twang, and say, ‘I'm so goddamn tired of faking the funk.The truth is my sixteen-year-old son needs a man to call daddy and, hell, I do too.' ”
Evan laughed, but her eyes were on Milan. She couldn't help but wonder what Milan had that she didn't. Why had Kendu chosen Milan for his best friend and why was Milan able to touch places and parts of Kendu that he wouldn't dare let Evan into? Kendu's rejection of her had steadily become Evan's obsession.
“What are you thinking about?” Jaise asked Evan once she realized she'd lost her attention. Jaise followed Evan's gaze to Chaunci and Milan. “Fuck them.”
“That's it!” Bridget unexpectedly walked over to their table and said, “That's the spirit. Fuck them, and just so you know, they just finished calling you two a buncha rats' asses.”
“What?” Jaise said, slipping her shoes back on. “They don't even know me.”
“And from the sound of it,” Bridget said, “they don't want to.”
“Let's go and straighten this out.” Jaise looked at Evan as she rose from her chair.
“Sit down,” Evan warned Jaise. “I wouldn't give those low-budget bitches the satisfaction.”
“Low-budget”—Bridget grabbed a napkin and a pen and scribbled down what Evan had just said—“bitch-es.”
“I thought most producers didn't get involved with the cast,” Evan snapped.
Bridget, who resembled a redheaded Heidi Klum, smiled and tossed her red hair over her shoulders. “Meet the new and improved way to produce.”
“Anyway,” Evan said, looking back at Jaise, “we have more going for us than to argue with a pair of half-dollar hos.”
 
“So what makes you different from all the other women?” the
E! News
reporter asked Chaunci.
Chaunci did her best to hold a steady smile and act sober considering she and Milan had had one too many shots of Patrón and glasses of white wine. Milan smiled sweetly, knowing that if her friend said even one word it was sure to be slurred.
“Well,” Chaunci attempted to speak in a steady tone, although her being tipsy was evident, “what makes me different is that I have my own, and all the rest of these women are uppity skeezers on the stroll.” She turned to Milan: “No offense.” Turning back toward the reporter she continued, “I'm not upset with them, though, not one bit. What woman wouldn't want to marry well?”
“But then they'd have to worry about groupies,” Milan managed to add without slurring.
“Any advice about that?” the reporter asked.
Chaunci laughed. “Certainly, I have some advice. As soon as some groupie comes shakin' it around your man, bust a cap in her ass and then put one in him. Shit, I can't say he won't cheat, but make sure he's a handicap motherfucker doin' it. All right.” She and Milan exchanged high fives again.
“So what do you think people will learn from the show?” the reporter asked Chaunci.
“That when these Joneses come down”—she sipped her drink with one hand and pointed her index finger with the other—“it's gon' be a motherfucker.”
“And there you have it.” The
E! News
reporter turned to face the camera. “I present to you the ladies of
Millionaire Wives Club.
Stay tuned!”

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