We show a scene from the side at the climax:
A nearby street sign says " Park "
A sidewalk confrontation viewed from the street, side view.
A Queen Bee red bag lady has charged a nobody blue bag girl.
The Queen is standing threateningly over her whom she has just knocked down into the street from the sidewalk on her back.
The blue bag girl, on the ground, has pulled her piece, now holding with both hands, and is discharging it upward toward her assailant, point blank, while lying on her back in the street.
(Maybe she misses! See Randall Collins' current post, micro sociology. Excerpt:
This explains another, as yet little recognized pattern: when violence actually happens, it is usually incompetent. Most of the times people fire a gun at a human target, they miss; their shots go wide, they hit the wrong person, sometimes a bystander, sometimes friendly fire on their own side. This is a product of the situation, the confrontation. We know this because the accuracy of soldiers and police on firing ranges is much higher than when firing at a human target. We can pin this down further; inhibition in live firing declines with greater distance; artillery troops are more reliable than infantry with small arms, so are fighter and bomber crews and navy crews; it is not the statistical chances of being killed or injured by the enemy that makes close-range fighters incompetent. At the other end of the spectrum, very close face-to-face confrontation makes firing even more inaccurate; shootings at a distance of less than 2 meters are extremely inaccurate.)
Their dogs are peeing on each other nearby.
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