Tram 83, a bustling nightclub in the middle of the mean streets of CDR. It seems like a brothel, until you figure it’s more respectable. You got the time to figure it out? Jazz shuffles all the time and the language has a kind of Coltrane beat to it, or perhaps a touch of Marlon James—bad language numbering of the rear ends of the night chicks and their silicone implants. The town has no name, though Tram 83 is the place where diggers gather along with the grifters and the hookers, and the town is part of a state ruthlessly run by a warlord. Sandwiched in the middle is obviously a poet without a prayer, Lucien from the Back Country, trying to mine money and a publisher or both in the mean streets of a mineral city. He shocks denizens of this dark world with his note-taking and his trips through pages of history, rather than drugs. Lucien’s bromancer is Requiem, all sleaze and cynicism, a man without a notebook to his name.