Being eaten alive cannot be that terrible. It was a tempting idea, as I thought on the vultures that wait there upon the fence. As I thought on the beaks snapping at my ventricles, claws grasping with taloned ferocity deep into the pit of my stomach. It cannot be so bad. Inside the bar, I sip on scotch and soda I was out with a woman; an older beaut that led me in magnificent circles of conversation till I found myself drunk and without a word to say. Slightly later in the evening I ran into an old flame that I never wished had gone out. --Yet as they do, so did she-- This vulture was stunning in the lamplight of the plaza, asking me over a drink how I came to have this woman out, in all this time without one. Boredom was my only answer. Its tendency to draw me in, with an excusable neglect to realize the futility of such sport. She knew, merely in the look she gave me. She knew the ***** secret of the skin that grasps and yearns for that almighty friction. She knew, for indeed she played the game well enough. Many men have found her since me, and many more would seek her out and find her, until I was merely a tally on the mark. But she knew that moment, over scotch and soda, how bad the vultures had me, she knew that moment, sitting there upon the fence, that she led the charge. She never said a word, finished her drink, took a dance with a man I'll never know. The woman I came with stormed home, enraged over something I'll never know, and the world danced around me to a tune of which I'll never know. Instead, I sat over another scotch and soda and wondered how bad it could possibly be to be eaten alive.