d like a war zone that the ci
fternoon light. The street was lined with boarded-up windows
. Iverson didn't even turn his head.
milk crate. The man held out a greasy pap
of his pocket, flicked a crumpled five-dollar bill between h
The brick walls were covered in overlapping layers of g
, passing a small plastic baggie back and forth. They hea
ad. His face was a blank, emotionless mas
meone who had nothing to lose and was hoping for a reason to snap. They scrambled backw
saw the faded, buzzing neon
open. The brass bell attached to the
es, and mothballs. The lighting was terrible, castin
tting behind the counter. He was squinting at a horse r
is voice rough from cigars. "The rich boy.
voice flat. He didn't stop to chat. He walked straig
ed moving the second Iverson walked into their aisle. Their eyes darted to
d to the other. "Baggy clothes, hood up. He'
ht hand drifted down to his belt, resti
dark, mocking smirk pulled
arted shoving boxes aside. He dragged metal objects across the wire racks,ckward. His heel caught the edge of a cardboard box, and he k
ched down and pulled a bulky
red-and-white p
, and squeezed the trigger. A loud, piercing burst
. He clicked i
, completely ignoring the two clerk
bill from his pocket and slapp
it up to the light. "What the hell
meone," Iverson said. The dange
sirens and the chaotic noise in the background of Brenda's phone call flashed through his mi
door open much har
Iverson stepped out onto the sidewalk, blending inst
p, pulled the drawstrings of his hoodie tight against
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