Inside the dark after-hours club, Jaclyn smiled as the sharp-jawed man returned. In his hand, he was holding a syringe and she knew what was inside.
The drive between Cologne and Munich took 6 hours, so she had not received an injection since they left Cologne and the effects had already died down. Thus, she was craving more. She never knew something could make her feel so good and the effects were addictive. So addictive that she couldn't stop thinking about it.
It was no surprise that she felt this way. After all, heroin was one of the most addictive drugs available on the market. It made a person feel good by influencing the production of feel-good chemicals in the brain, such as dopamine and endorphins, and nearly one in four people that tried it for the first time became addicted to it.