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The sea was black and far beyond the sand. An icy gust blew between whatever shelter the promenade offered. Life was out of kilter in the world and here was proof. A bright band
of amusement arcades caught the full force of the wind. Their hyperactivity was manic, all lights flashing, each a city in its final throes. A tiny fairground horse
whinnied at The House of the Dead where ghouls materialised and were cut down in a spray of music. The place was empty but men lay on stone steps, buckled and broken in pools
of flat Sega blood, and everywhere the roar of tiny coins and pebbles on the shore.
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Out of kilter and broken. Late winter light, which is to say, no light at all, except this. And it was buzzing and flashing, its synapses wholly preoccupied, breath short, chest tight,
sweating slightly. Rank upon brilliant rank of potential cardiac arrest, and all for nothing. It was the latest gothic passing its dark wing over a deserted resort on its way to the blood bank.
And here was England, shouting at the sea, a single bent figure glaring behind the change desk, surveying its domain of new grotesque. It was terrible to see it. Outside the fresh, free
silence and the barren wind, a fast car, the darkness vast, without a single star.
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