Angie works the alleys that reek of greasy sausages and ****, where beer-bellied men appear and vanish into doorway varnish of invisible rooms, spitting on their own doorsteps, stubby fingers running over stained vests and wire wool guts.
Harry lives out yonder where plastic bags’ ballet shoes are made of glue; he is sharing a hit with a dreadlocked kid, just another invisible face, a phantom-surfer nurse, to assist him in chasing the ultimate high on highway number twenty-two.
Invisible, hairy hands hold her down; Angie has to swallow, she can feel the pulsating vein of a softening **** over her tongue and swollen lips – she gives it a good old slap against her cheek, grabs the package, and makes sure no one follows.
Harry’s clawing at a face in that place where reality floats between the tip of the needle and the desperate edge of chemical dependency - his little angel taps him on the shoulder; he turns around, and stabs her in the throat.