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  Dear Reader:

  Is it possible for a man to truly change? Can he go from being selfish and immature, to being responsible and compassionate? In A Cold Piece of Work, Solomon Singletary becomes that man. Curtis Bunn has penned an honest portrayal of a man who initially believes that women are fit for only one purpose but realizes that without one true love, nothing else really matters.

  A man can have a thousand lovers but, at the end of the day, he might very well have absolutely nothing to show for it. Once he comprehends that he has allowed Mrs. Right to slip through his fingers, Solomon becomes determined to make amends for his previous actions. It is not easy but he forges on, hell bent on rekindling a flame that has long ago been extinguished and trying to make up the time he has lost with the one person who should be the most important element in his life.

  A Cold Piece of Work is both a masterpiece and a conversation piece. It is refreshing to see a male writer write so candidly about men, instead of trying to sugarcoat the truth or portray them in a perfect, positive light. Everyone is flawed but everyone can also be redeemed.

  As the Founder of The National Book Club Conference and an Essence Bestselling Author, Bunn knows what readers expect from a powerful book, and he delivers expertly.

  As always, thanks for supporting myself and the Strebor Books family. We strive to bring you cutting-edge literature that cannot be found anyplace else. For more information on our titles, please visit Zanestore.com. My personal web site is Eroticanoir.com and my online social network is PlanetZane.org.

  Blessings,

  Publisher

  Strebor Books

  www.simonsays.com/streborbooks

  Strebor Books

  P.O. Box 6505

  Largo, MD 20792

  http://www.streborbooks.com

  www.SimonandSchuster.com

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  © 2011 by Curtis Bunn

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means whatsoever. For information address Strebor Books, P.O. Box 6505, Largo, MD 20792.

  ISBN 978-1-59309-349-5

  ISBN 978-1-4516-1716-0 (ebook)

  LCCN 2011927933

  First Strebor Books trade paperback edition July 2011

  Cover design: www.mariondesigns.com

  Cover photograph: © Keith Saunders/Marion Designs

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  The Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau can bring authors to your live event. For more information or to book an event, contact the Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau at 1-866-248-3049 or visit our website at www.simonspeakers.com.

  To my son, Curtis Jr., daughter, Gwendolyn (Bunny)

  and my nephew, Gordon, who is like a son.

  You warm my heart, even on the coldest days.

  Contents

  Acknowledgments

  Chapter 1: Love to Love You

  Chapter 2: Dinero

  Chapter 3: Eight was Enough

  Chapter 4: Storm after the Calm

  Chapter 5: The Chase

  Chapter 6: Be Careful What You Ask For

  Chapter 7: Can’t Stop, Won’t Stop

  Chapter 8: Let the Truth Be Told

  Chapter 9: The Book of Revelations

  Chapter 10: Baby Steps

  Chapter 11: Oh, What a Night

  Chapter 12: Sonny Days

  Chapter 13: Daddy’s Home

  Chapter 14: Father Knows No Rest

  Chapter 15: The Power of (Good) Sex

  Chapter 16: It Goes Both Ways

  Chapter 17: Trouble in Paradise

  Chapter 18: One Down, Three to Go

  Chapter 19: More Trouble in Paradise

  Chapter 20: Ball of Confusion

  Chapter 21: Temperature Drops

  Chapter 22: Senseless & Sensibilities

  Chapter 23: Home Alone-Ly

  Chapter 24: The Truth is in the Wine

  Chapter 25: On the Brink

  Chapter 26: Relationship Roundtable

  Chapter 27: Back & Forth...& Back

  Chapter 28: The Truth of the Matter

  Chapter 29: Here Comes the Judge

  Chapter 30: Mercy, Mercy Me

  Chapter 31: A Warm Piece of Work

  About the Author

  Reader Discussion Guide

  Homecoming Weekend

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  God, the Almighty, is the beginning and the end for me. He carried me not only through the journey of writing this book, but also through my daily challenges. As with everything in my life, He deserves all the praise.

  Family is everything, and mine makes me whole, starting with my late father, Edward Bunn Sr. His memory lives through us, his family. My mom, Julia Bunn, is the best and most giving. My brothers, Billy and Eddie, and my sister, Tammy, mean the world to me. My grandmother, Nettie Royster, is our spiritual foundation.

  Curtis Jr. and Gwendolyn (Bunny) are my children and lifeblood. My nephew, Gordon, is essentially my second son. And my niece, Tamayah (Bink Bink), and nephew, Eddie Jr., are blessings. My cousins, Greg Agnew and Warren Eggleston, are like my brothers. And I am grateful for cousin Carolyn Keener and uncle Al and aunts Thelma and Barbara.

  Najah Aziz is special to me and is fodder for a future book—a love story.

  So much love and respect go to Zane, Charmaine Roberts Parker and the entire Strebor Books family for the confidence to make this book a joyful reality. I’m proud to be a part of the Strebor family.

  My support is vast and I am grateful (there are not enough pages to document everyone by name) for the people who mean something to me. Here are some: Trevor Nigel Lawrence, Wayne Ferguson, Kerry Muldrow, Keith Gibson, Randy Brown, Sam Myers, Tony Hall, Tony Starks, Darryl (DJ) Johnson, Rick Eley, Denise Bethea, Betty Roby, Tara Ford Payne, Diana Joseph, Marc Davenport, Greg Willis, Ronnie Bagley, Brian White, Ronnie Akers, Jacques Walden, Dennis Wade, Julian Jackson, Mark Webb, Kelvin Lloyd, Frank Nelson, Mark Bartlett, Marvin Burch, Shelia Bryant, George Hughes, Serena Knight, Marty McNeal, Tamitrice Mitchell, Edward (Bat) Lewis, Kathy Brown, Darryl K. Washington, Shelia Harrison, Patricia Easley, Lateefah Aziz, Kent Davis, Jeff Stevenson, Derrick Muldrow, Lyle V. Harris, Brad Corbin, J.B. Hill, William Mitchell, Carmen Carter, Lesley Hanesworth, Gina Dorsey, Mary Knatt, Sonya Perry, E. Franklin Dudley, Skip Grimes, Denise Taylor, Bob White, Jeri Byrom, Hadjii Hand, Laurie Hunt, Monya Bunch, Karen Shepherd, Clifford Benton, Rob Parker, Cliff Brown, Stephen A. Smith, D. Orlando Ledbetter, Michele Ship, Leslie LeGrande Pitt, Francine McCarley, Emma Harris, Garry Howard, Len Burnett, Venus Chapman, D.L. Cummings, Jay Nichols, Ralph Howard, Paul Spencer, Jai Wilson, Garry Raines, Glen Robinson, Dwayne Gray, Jessica Ferguson, Carolyn Glover, David R. Squires, Mike Dean, Veda McNeal, Alvin Whitney, Avis Easley, Kimberly Yeager, Penny Payne, Tawana Turner-Green, Sonji Robinson, Vonda Henderson, Mark Lassiter, Shauna Tisdale, Tony Carter, Tamaira Thompson, Sharon Foster, LaToya Williams, Claire Batiste, Olivia Alston, Brenda O’Bryant, Sheryl Williams Jones, Leticia McCoy, Dorothy (Dot) Harrell, Bruce Lee, Elaine Richardson, Aggie Nteta, Danny Anderson, Val Guilford, Luther Clark, Leon H. Carter, Bruce Lee, Curtis West, Zack Withers, Ramona Palmer, Andre Aldridge, Marilyn Bibby, Brad Turner, Desyre Morgan, Billy Robinson, Denise Thomas, D.D. Turner, Judith Greer, David A. Brown, Linda Vestal, Sharon Foster, Anita Wilson, Derek T. Dingle, Tim Lewis, Carrie Haley, Demetress Graves, Dexter Santos, Ron Thomas, April Tarver, Karen Faddis, Michelle Lemon, Regina Collins, Michelle Hixon, Jay Nichols, Regina Troy, Karen Turner, Quim
onder Jones, Dr. Yvonne Sanders-Butler, Toni Tyrell, Tanecia Raphael, Tracie Andrews, Sheila Powe, Tammy Grier, Sid Tutani, Mike Christian, Carla Griffin and The Osagyefuo Amoatia Ofori Panin, King of Akyem Abuakwa Eastern Region of Ghana, West Africa.

  Special thanks and love to my great alma mater, Norfolk State University (Class of 1983); the brothers of Alpha Phi Alpha (especially the Notorious E Pi of Norfolk State); Ballou High School (Class of ’79), Washington, D.C.; the lovely ladies of Like The River The Salon in Atlanta, the Aziz family and ALL of Southeast Washington, D.C.

  I am also grateful to all the book clubs that have supported this work and to my literary friends Nathan McCall, Kimberla Lawson Roby, Carol Mackey, Linda Duggins, Karen Hunter, Troy Johnson of www.aalbc.com and Terrie Williams.

  I’m sure I left off some names; I ask your forgiveness. If you know me, you know I appreciate and I am grateful for you.

  Peace and blessings,

  CURTIS

  CHAPTER 1

  LOVE TO LOVE YOU

  The force of his thrusts pushed her to the edge of the four-poster bed. She was lathered as much in satisfaction as she was in sweat, exhilarated and weary—and unable to hold herself atop the mattress against his unrelenting strikes. A different kind of man would have postponed the passion; at least long enough to pull up her naked, vulnerable body.

  But Solomon Singletary was hardly one to subscribe to conventional thinking or deeds. He always had a point to prove and always was committed to proving it—with actions, not words.

  And so, Solomon thrust on…and on, until they, as one, careened onto the carpet together, she cushioning his fall from beneath him. So paralyzed in pleasure was she that she never felt the impact of the tumble. Rather, she found humor that they made love clean across the bed and onto the floor, and she found delight that the fall did not disengage them.

  Solomon lost neither his connection to her nor his cadence, and stroked her on the carpet just as he had on the sheets—purposefully, unrelentingly, deeply.

  “What are you trying to do?” she asked. “Make love to me? Or make me love you?”

  Solomon did not answer—not with words. He continued to speak the language of passion, rotating his hips forward, as one would a hula-hoop. Her shapely, chocolate legs were airborne and his knees were carpet-burned raw, but hardly did he temper his pace.

  His answer: Both.

  She finally spoke the words that slowed Solomon. “Okay, okay,” she said. “Okay.” She gave in, and that pleased Solomon. She would have said the words earlier—before they tumbled off the bed—but he never allowed her to catch her breath. All she could make were indecipherable sounds.

  “I mean, damn,” she said, panting. “We’re good together…Damn.”

  Solomon kissed her on her left shoulder and rolled off her and onto the floor, on his wide, strong back. He looked up toward the dark ceiling illuminated by the single candle on the night-stand, so pleased with himself that a smile formed on his face.

  Then he dozed off right there on the floor. She didn’t bother to wake him. Instead, she reached up and pulled the comforter off the bed and over both of them. She nestled her head on his hairy chest, smiled to herself and drifted off to sleep with him, right there on the floor.

  That was the last time she saw Solomon Singletary. And he only saw her a few times, but only in dreams that did not make much sense.

  “I wish I knew what the hell it meant,” he said to his closest friend, Raymond. He and Ray became tight five years earlier, when they got paired together during a round of golf at Mystery Valley in Lithonia, just east of Atlanta. They had a good time, exchanged numbers and ended up becoming not only golf buddies, but also great friends.

  Ray was very much the opposite of Solomon. He was not as tall but just as handsome, and he was charismatic and likeable, in a different way. Solomon was sort of regal to some, arrogant to others. Ray was more every man. He had a wife of seven years, Cynthia, and a six-year-old son, Ray-Ray. He was stable.

  Solomon knew a lot of people, but only liked some and trusted only a few. He really only tolerated most; especially the various women who ran in and out of his life like some nagging virus. “In the end,” he told Ray, “the one person you can trust is yourself. And even with that, how many times have you lied to yourself?”

  Ray figured there was something deep inside Solomon that would bring him to such feelings, and he figured if Solomon wanted him to know, he would have told him. So he never asked. Ray and Solomon coveted each other’s friendship and had a certain trust. And they shared most everything with each other.

  Ray’s way was to provide levity when possible, which, for him, was practically all the time. His upbeat disposition seldom changed. If the Falcons lost a football game, he’d show disgust and disappointment for a while, but he’d let it go.

  Solomon Singletary was not that way. He could be solemn at times, even-tempered at others and occasionally aggressive. Above all, he was quite adept at pulling people close to him. He had a unique ability to be open but remain private. He could be disinterested but still engaging. And those unique qualities made people open up to him; especially women.

  “You’re so interesting,” Michele told him that last night together. “We’ve dated for six months. You try to act like you don’t love me, but you do; I can tell by how we make love. Why won’t you say you love me?”

  “Come here.” Michele came over to him, to the edge of her bed. “Don’t get caught up on what I say to you or don’t say,” he said. “Worry about what I do to you; how I make you feel.”

  “Is everything about sex with you?”

  “See, I wasn’t even talking about sex. I was talking about how you feel inside, when we’re together, when you think of me,” Solomon said. “That’s more important than what I say. Right?”

  Before she could answer, he leaned over and kissed her on the lips softly and lovingly. “What does that kiss say?”

  “It says you want to make love,” Michele said sarcastically. “Some things can get lost in translation. That’s why you should say it. Plus, sometimes it’s just good to hear.”

  “Hear this.” Solomon kissed Michele again. This time, it was not a peck, but a sustained coming together of lips and tongue and saliva. He leaned her back on the bed, and she watched as he pulled his tank top over his head, revealing his expansive chest and broad shoulders.

  He smiled at her and she smiled back and the talk of saying “I love you” ceased.

  “Whatever happened to that girl?” Ray asked Solomon. “You regret not having her now?”

  “Regret? What’s that? You make a decision and you stick to it. No looking back. But a few years ago, I saw a woman briefly who reminded me of her, and it made me think about calling her.”

  “You thought about it? Why didn’t you call her?” Ray wanted to know.

  “Hard to say. Young, dumb. Silly,” Solomon answered. “What would’ve been the point? I got a job here with Coke and wasn’t about to do the long distance thing. So what was the point?”

  “Well, did you at least break up on good terms?” Ray asked.

  “The last time I saw her, she was on the floor next to her bed, sleeping. I got up and put on my clothes and left. The next day, the movers came and I drove here, to Atlanta.”

  “Wait,” Ray said, standing up. “She didn’t know you were moving out of town?”

  “Nah,” Solomon said, looking off. “Nah.”

  “How can you just roll out on the girl like that?”

  CHAPTER 2

  DINERO

  Solomon Singletary had a perfectly rhythmic name, a strong name, a Biblical name—a name that effortlessly rolled off the tongue, like a drop of rain down a windshield.

  To say his full name was akin to singing the first notes of a song, a ballad about love lost and found or triumph over tragedy. Something that signified a happy ending.

  And yet, on many occasions, when he was feeling especially ornery, he preferred to be ca
lled “Money.” This was a rather parochial moniker for someone who was quite sophisticated, well-traveled, educated and unassuming.

  The irony was that his name was not about currency at all. Not really. It was more about confidence.

  When he was twelve, playing basketball at Fort Stanton Park in Southeast Washington, D.C, an older guy who was respected in the neighborhood because he was an outstanding player—but mostly because he could whip anyone’s ass—told a group of his peers one July afternoon his impressions of Solomon as a player.

  “This one right here,” Big George said, holding onto the back of Solomon’s t-shirt. “This kid is a player. This kid is money.”

  Those thirteen words from Big George changed the way Solomon looked at himself. He became the most respected kid in the neighborhood just on Big George’s word. He was money, literally. At least for Big George.

  It was not until about three months later, when the weather broke for good and outdoor hoops was close to being shelved until spring, that Solomon learned Big George had been placing bets on his pickup games with other older guys. They bet on most everything and would even bet to see who could predict what time the Metro bus would come over the hill on Morris Road toward the park.

  While handing him fifty dollars a week before Halloween, Big George said to Solomon: “Like I said a while ago, you are money. I bet on your teams to win and you did. So, here’s your cut.”

  “Why didn’t you tell me you were betting on my teams?” Solomon asked, and it was the right question.

  “’Cause I didn’t want you to be gambling. And I didn’t want you to know,” Big George said. “Sometimes, people start trying to do too much when they know someone’s relying on them. I wanted you to do what you do, play like you play. And you were money.”

  “Why do you say that? Money?” Solomon asked.

  “’Cause money is good,” Big George said. “With money, you can do anything. I looked at you as a good player who could do anything on the court. You were good. You were reliable. I could see that in you.”