2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] ‘I remember old McGill [...] Lots say he’s rougher than a cob’.at ...a cob under rough as..., adj.
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] ‘Got two gunshot victims, Child Services up my ass like two dozen hemorrhoids ready to burst’.at have (someone) up one’s ass (v.) under ass, n.
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] Probably had no ass. [...] No matter, she’d still let him give her a poke or two. She wasn’t an ass woman no way.at ass-man (n.) under ass, n.
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] When Ned wasn’t [...] inhaling crank, he was buried asshole deep in snatch.at asshole-deep (adj.) under asshole, n.
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] Alonzo said, ‘Nosy piece of bacon.’ A deafening blast erupted from the .30-30’s barrel. Half the officer’s face opened.at bacon, n.2
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] ‘Just a whiff of her swagger make you feel like your balls was blued’.at blue balls (n.) under balls, n.
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] ‘Get your beaver tail down in the basement with the others’.at beaver tail (n.) under beaver, n.1
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] ‘They’s a wad in here big enough to gag a horse’.at big enough to choke a bull (adj.) under big, adj.
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] ‘He wanted to rob you blind, he could’ve made off like a goat in miles of clover’.at rob blind (v.) under blind, adv.1
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] Ned flashed a meth-mouth smile, wanting to embed his old bone in her.at bone, n.1
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] Others gave [...] pocketknives passed down from long-gone kinfolk, or brass that had not been fired.at brass, n.1
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] Wanted to know what Deputy Sheriff Whalen thought he was doing, searching abandoned houses down in bum-fuck.at Bumfuck, Egypt, n.
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] [N]eeding something he was out of, a bump of crank to subside this ache from within.at bump, n.3
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] Needed a good buzz. A stiff dick. Something to whittle the edge off.at buzz, n.
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] Walkup was an ex-carny, had traveled with the county fairs, run the Pick a Ducky, Win a Prize game.at carney, n.2
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] Angus flipped his coffin nail onto the cracked pavement.at coffin nail, n.2
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] [H]e glanced up at the barn. Not confined enough for cooking crank.at cook, v.1
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] [Y]ammering that he and Beatle had crashed hard after too many days of tweaking.at crash (out), v.
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] But this man had presence, something tougher than that greasy-haired dime bag dealer.at dime bag (n.) under dime, n.
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] Ned had double-crossed Pete [...] He wouldn’t get a chance to double her.at double, v.2
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] ‘Smells like some sour son of a bitch drained his vein back here’.at drain one’s/the (main) vein (v.) under drain, v.
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] ‘How the shit some double-crossing drip-dick like you know about something like this?’.at drip-dick (n.) under drip, n.
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] ‘[S]he’ll be busy on her back trading spread-eagle for a wage the next few nights’.at spread eagle, n.
2013 F. Bill Donnybrook [ebook] ‘What’s up with you and the fisheyes in the Jeep, some kind of fetish thing?’[ibid.] ‘You fish-eyed faggot! Quit pressing your prick into my ass’.at fish-eye, n.1