The Pit Summers Interracial Pool Party Oil It Up 🔥 Extended
Benny saw him first. He stood up, naked-chested and dripping with coconut oil, and walked to the ladder. “Mr. Hargrove.”
Lee smiled. “We saved you a cup.”
He took the shotgun off his arm. Leaned it against a tree. the pit summers interracial pool party oil it up
He came down. And The Pit, for one afternoon, was just a pool. No sides. No history. Just oil-slick skin and cold drinks and the sound of people who’d finally learned to swim in the same water.
By two o’clock, the sun was a hammer. The water was still cold, so nobody stayed in long. Instead, they lay on towels and inflatable rafts, slicking themselves with oil until they gleamed like wet seals. Lee’s brown skin turned to polished mahogany. Benny’s olive shoulders caught the light like hammered copper. Tisha oiled Gina’s back, and Paulie oiled Darnell’s, and nobody flinched. The Pit, which had held nothing but silence and bad memories for thirty years, began to fill with laughter. Benny saw him first
Around four, old man Hargrove appeared at the top of the quarry path. He was eighty-two, white as chalk, and had a shotgun broken over his arm. He stared down at the scene: fifty people, every shade from coffee to cream, oiled up and splashing, sharing beers, passing a joint, slow-dancing to a bootleg R&B mix on Marcus’s speakers.
For three generations, The Pit had been exactly that—a sunken, concrete scar in the earth, an abandoned quarry at the edge of the county line. The old-timer white folks remembered it as the place their fathers drowned bootleg whiskey runners. The Black families who’d moved out from the city in the ‘80s knew it as the forbidden swimming hole their children were warned away from. No one swam together. That was the law, unwritten but absolute. Hargrove
“Your father would roll over.”
The invitation said nothing more than “The Pit. Summers. Oil it up.”
