Sleazy Neon
By
Sam Kinkaid
0 ratings - 0* vote
“Places like this, they’re the very worst you can get and you, Mr Abberline, you’re worse than a drug pusher. Why a drug pusher, he’s only harming his clients. The drugs themselves are inanimate objects, they can’t be harmed. But you, you’re harming everyone. You’re harming the men who allow themselves to be corrupted by your whores and you’re harming the whores themselves
“Places like this, they’re the very worst you can get and you, Mr Abberline, you’re worse than a
“Places like this, they’re the very worst you can get and you, Mr Abberline, you’re worse than a drug pusher. Why a drug pusher, he’s only harming his clients. The drugs themselves are inanimate objects, they can’t be harmed. But you, you’re harming everyone. You’re harming the men who allow themselves to be corrupted by your whores and you’re harming the whores themselves
“Places like this, they’re the very worst you can get and you, Mr Abberline, you’re worse than a drug pusher. Why a drug pusher, he’s only harming his clients. The drugs themselves are inanimate objects, they can’t be harmed. But you, you’re harming everyone. You’re harming the men who allow themselves to be corrupted by your whores and you’re harming the whores themselves. In short you’re just a rat who corrupts everyone, everything.”
Caspar Abberline is a small fish in a big pond, a minor gangster, pimp and strip club owner dependant on the good will of the Mafia for his continued survival. But Caspar is also a weak man, easily influenced by those who seek what power he has; people like his lover, Rhonda, the thuggish gangster Ginino and the mysterious Ivy, who breezes in on the train from Connecticut to turn his world upside down. Soon Caspar’s search for redemption will lead to disaster for those around him and pit Caspar himself in a desperate struggle for survival against the one man he can truly call his friend.
contains violence, strong language and scenes of a sexual nature.
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