"Did you see it?" Vera asked, gesturing back toward the Fleshpot marquee.
They kept walking, two small shadows lost in the glowing, tawny heart of New York, where every street corner was a stage and every person was just waiting for their close-up in the wreckage of Times Square. Fleshpot on 42nd Street
"The movie? Nah. Probably just another quickie shot in a weekend," Jimmy replied. "Did you see it
The neon hum of 42nd Street didn’t just light up the pavement; it pulsed like a dying star, casting everything in shades of synthetic magenta and bruised violet. It was 1973, and the "Deuce" was a fever dream of grindhouse theaters, steam rising from sewer grates, and the heavy scent of roasted nuts and cheap cologne. It was 1973, and the "Deuce" was a
They started walking toward 8th Avenue, navigating the sea of sailors on leave, three-card monte dealers, and the "fleshpots" the movie posters promised—the storefronts where intimacy was sold by the minute behind velvet curtains. To the tourists, it was a den of iniquity. To Jimmy and Vera, it was just the neighborhood.
Jimmy stood outside the Selwyn Theatre, his collar turned up against a wind that tasted of diesel and desperation. He wasn’t there for the movies, but the movies were everywhere. The marquee across the street screamed Fleshpot on 42nd Street in jagged, hand-painted letters. Below it, a poster featured a woman with eyes that looked right through the viewer, a mixture of boredom and a secret she’d never tell for less than a twenty.