Darius Mitchell built the biggest drug operation Milwaukee's North Side has ever seen. The car wash on Fond du Lac Avenue runs clean money through its bays while the real product moves through a network of corners, trap houses, and loyal soldiers from Teutonia to Capitol Drive. The economics are beautiful. The margins are expanding. The crown fits perfectly.Then Prophet sends fentanyl down from Chicago, and the math changes overnight.The bodies start showing up at Aurora Sinai Medical Center, where Darius's mother Lorraine works the emergency room night shift. Seventy-three overdoses in eight weeks. Twelve dead. The geographic pattern is unmistakable — it's all Darius's territory, all his product, all his responsibility. Detective Sarah Kowalski's federal task force is building a case with wiretaps, financial forensics, and the patient certainty of prosecutors who don't move until the evidence is airtight.Meanwhile, Darius's world is fracturing from the inside. His enforcer Trell — his best friend since childhood, the one who built the street discipline that holds the operation together — is getting high on his own supply, disappearing for days, skimming money to feed a habit he can't admit he has. Young Murda, the sixteen-year-old Trell recruited, is escalating violence beyond anything the operation can contain. And Keyana Williams, the UWM social work student Darius has been building a life with, discovers that the man she loves is the reason her brother DeShawn just got arrested for possession.Trap Gospel is the story of an empire's last summer. Told through rotating first-person perspectives — the king, the enforcer, the detective, the girlfriend, the mother — it follows the terrible mathematics of what happens when a man who's mastered the economics of the street discovers that the real cost was never in the ledger. The gospel of the trap is this: what you build will own you.For readers of Sister Souljah, Wahida Clark, and K'wan who want street fiction that refuses to look away from the human cost. For anyone who understands that the smartest person in the room can still be the one who destroys everything he touches.Book 2 of The North Side Series.