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oh, all these minutes passing, sick of feeling used. if you wanna break these walls down, you’re gonna get bruised.
oh, all these minutes passing, sick of feeling used. if you wanna break these walls down, you’re gonna get bruised.
Have you seen the bridge that leads out from The Badlands; it's all done up in black, strung by wires and pillars, laden with asphalt cracked, broken and chipped. Vehicles come in, constant, but none ever leave, the exiting transition is barren, almost falling away into the river that, they say, leads out in the ocean beyond. The air is tinged with the faintest touches of salt, like tears of the woeful who look beyond the bridge, never able to cross, never able to leave. There's nothing, they say, but roads and fields yonder, trees in sparse gatherings, cliffs that edge their rocks higher and higher, looking down onto The Badlands; like sentinels on their perches, eyes of boulders and soil that have become frozen because they too cannot leave. The bridge is called the ways of the Hopeless; those that attempt to cross, but instead, pitch themselves over in the river below, falling, failing, and dying.
It always rains in The Badlands, and even with spires lit and streets glimmering in neons and pale luminescence, there were thickets of shadows, oppressing and teeming, spilling out onto the roads where mindless individuals edged. They sat within warmth and leather, and stared straight ahead, unseeing. The bus terminal was crowded, bodies compressed beneath the awning, awaiting transit in the dwindling hours of twilight and gloom. Refuge and gossip, words passing between lips that tasted of cherries and nicotine, tainted fruit and wasted dreams. A common night for the vagabond.
"I heard that Cassie tried crossing the Hopeless, she tried running away with Spencer."
"Oh my god, why with Spence though?"
No matter or reflection that the vagabond lovers were somewhere, lost, in the turns of the river. None ever make it across. They should've known better.
"Maybe they wanted to die." Smoke and smog in tendrils of white hazed between eyes of broken azure, feathered with lashes spiked and gilded in the rain and smudges of grey blotted and hosting each as her gaze penetrated through hazel and brown. Alexia. Her impression was a silhouette of waning health and hope, waterlogged tresses of rosewood, translucent skin burdened under the ebon threads of her jacket two sizes larger than what was befitting to her typical frame. Persistent narcotics and fed constant abuse saw her debut worn and almost haggard, despite all dressings and attempts for visual appeal in those raccoon framed eyes and chapped lips cradling the charcoal stick of her preferred smoke; clove and black.
"Yeah, maybe. . ."
The bus screeched into the terminal, the trains were abandoned at this hour and only one rail existed, a one way transportation that fled to the Northern section of The Badlands, where shadows weren't so dark and depravity lurked behind pallid smiles of bone and lies and the church was founded where memories and beginnings and ends dominated. Alexia boarded the bus, almost lazily and sluggish, her stature wavering as more clamoured on and fell into their seats with shuffling breath and attempts to gather warmth. The rain continued, never ceasing, and Alexia watched the lines of heaven sent tears against the stained glass of the transport, ignoring the man who sat next to her and immediately tuned out into the flickering lights and neon. She gazed to the alley ways where people stood betwixt, laughter bubbling between them as they clutched the insides of their elbows and awaited the sweeping euphoria. She envied them, just a bit, for their careless endeavors, to trust whoever proffered a simple promise and a contract of temporary release. But, Alexia had only one source, and his vice was terrible and demanding, costly degrees of loyalty and old worn connections that he tugged on daily.
The vibration of her cellular phone against her thighs pulled her envious musings to the side, the purposely low setting of the screen barely illuminating the text: instructions, a change in meetings, a new location.
Passion.
"I know Passion, it's part of the West district." Her seat companion muttered, eyes on her phone, a smile on his lips, no shame reflected there in his eavesdropping.
"Oh." Alexia murmured, immediately pulling an inhale through her nostrils and mouth, billows of smoke purposely released into his direction. A scowl briefly flickered over his lips, scrunching up brows and nose until he stood and crossed to another seat. Alexia responded accordingly to the aforementioned missive, lazily punching in her rejoinder with a swift sigh and dropping the device back to nestle on her thighs suddenly gone frigid. Last minutes changes unnerved her, caused her anxiety to propel into a hypersensitivity that drew her jacket tighter and her teeth to gnash against the butt of her addiction. Not that the Western district broke protocol and contract, but that establishments like Passion meant crowds and bodies, flesh and taint and music; eyes and mouths. Alexia would never deny her patron, she couldn't, even if she desired to deny the new location. She needed this, craved this, and after days of stagnation in her own loft of bare nothings and nicotine stained walls, she had to find it. Release and numbing whispers, promises and golden liquids in needles and pallid desires that would make her feel, if only for a moment, better. Whole.
The Western district was like any other of The Badlands, towers and warehouses, homes and businesses on every street and corner. She could already hear music down the boulevard, thrumming through concrete as the rain dragged her hair down, mussed it against her complexion until she drew her hood up and through the flicker of neon, she read the sign, glanced over the door and the line pouring out from the propped-open entrance. They all huddled together away from the rain, girls with wide eyes, broken glances they were. Alexia mused over their waif forms, no different than her own, and by passed the surge of bodies. It took a flash of skin, a peeking pull of her jacket to expose the body lined with gaping black, and a whispered name that saw her entry way that was followed by mutters of protest and inquiry.
The interior of Passion was like any other club she had frequented, but there was a fresh perspective aligned in the walls and placement of luxury, a new attempt to the universal aesthetics of such a place. Alexia shook out the water from her tresses, combed through them with trembling gestures and released the knotted plait she had woven that morning, but she did not release her jacket. She kept it draped over shoulders and arms despite the humidity of bodies and breath. She wore it like a barrier, a shield. . .
"Alex!" Over music and laughter, she pirouetted on the call of her moniker and watched, with a small quirk of her lips, as the lanky prince of The Badlands sauntered up to her, clothed in black, slashes through his blouse revealing marked skin of ink and bruises, and the tight fabric of his trousers allowing much the same view. Danny. Her arms laced around his torso, squeezing and he buried his Chesire smile into her damp hair.
"I didn't think you'd come. Place is amazing, 'innit?"
"It's not bad, never been here though."
"Well shit, good thing I got called here. Most of my customers prefer this place and the owner is," he whistled, jostling her body with a knife-sharp elbow into her ribs. "Totally my type, too bad you're the only girl for me, Alex." Her eyes rolled, lashes fluttering in her amusement until he tugged on her clothing, nails scraping against her sensitive flesh.
"Stop, I'm cold." Alexia muttered, drawing the jacket tighter and watching as Danny's lips dropped into a sullen pout. Petulant and exaggerated, all of it a ploy and a play. Danny was no better of a liar than she, she was just a tad more clever. "Don't make that face, it's unbecoming." She teased, eyes spanning over the crowd.
"Yeah well, you're the tease with that ragged thing." He plucked the fabric between his forefinger and thumb. "But, I promised someone I'd meet them in the back about an hour ago. Hang out, enjoy the music, there's a band coming on in a few." Danny began, fingers toying with the bottle-black dye of his hair next, already wandering away from her, leaving her to the crushing sea of bodies already festering within the foyer as the rain increased, pounding without mercy. Alexia ground her clove addiction out on an unsuspecting spine, the girl barely registering the charred circle worn into her clothing before the dance floor was braved, elbows and shoulders, hips swaying and bodies wed to one another. Some murmured about the band Danny had mentioned, murmuring of the players and the almost scandalous arrangement of the entire venue. Alexia shoved her way through, already worn and irritated by Danny's priorities. Her patience was frayed and bloodied, chipped and bruised, and yet he required her to wait. Maybe it was a game, an attempt to tease and test her boundaries of restraint. Her lips pulled tight in a simper of agony and desperation, her body immediately falling into the embrace of another that dipped her low, all hands and hot breath on her skin that only compounded her frustration.
At least there will be good music. . .
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