Claps echoed in the distance—slow, steady pulses that weren’t loud enough to draw the wax moths’ attention, yet insistent enough to pique curiosity. The black-armored soldiers moved in formation along the vine-choked walls of a derelict building, rifles raised. At a silent command from their leader, they halted at the structure’s corner, preparing for whatever lay beyond.
Just as they readied themselves to rush in, the echo of shotgun shells being loaded made their hearts jolt. Instantly on alert, they realized they were surrounded by a different band of survivors—far less welcoming than the last group. Some perched on rooftops, others crouched in nearby alleys, all hidden behind wax-coated masks and training weapons on the soldiers. A dozen pairs of eyes glinted in the murk. Remarkably, that rhythmic clapping persisted, but no one spared it a glance.
Time passed in a tense stalemate before they finally understood the source of the sound. Beneath the stifling hush of the apocalypse, two figures coupled in a corner—coated in sticky wax, stifling any moans to avoid the moths’ keen hearing. The soldiers exchanged uneasy glances as the thrusts and wet slaps continued without pause.
Nearly everyone in this group of survivors wore a thick layer of hardened wax from head to toe, as though it were armor of their own.
“We don’t want trouble,” one soldier said calmly, lowering his gun just a fraction. “We’re searching for someone.”
“This can be easy,” replied a woman whose voice was surprisingly sweet. “Hand over your weapons and armor, then leave.” Her face was obscured by a wax-caked mask shaped like a pink bunny’s head—complete with protruding ears. Though the mask looked playful, the rifle in her grip told another story, as did the crowd of tense, battle-worn people flanking her.
“I’m afraid I can’t do that,” the soldier admitted, fingers tightening on the stock of his weapon. Another soldier quietly gestured toward a sewer entrance partly hidden by debris.
The pink-bunny woman spotted the gesture and blocked their path. “You’re not from around here, are you?” she asked, sounding genuinely puzzled.
“You might have guns, but we have the advantage,” she continued. “If either side fires, the moths will come. They leave us alone when we’re covered in wax—but you? You’re sitting targets.” She raised her voice just enough to add emphasis. “Put the guns on the ground, strip off your armor, and back off.”
“Quiet,” hissed one soldier. “You’ll attract them.” Despite their protests, they set their weapons down to defuse the tense standoff.
“And for the love of everything, would you two stop it?!” the woman suddenly barked at the couple still mid-act on the other side of the building. Naked but encrusted in a waxy sheen, the man held the woman’s waist, each thrust creating a rhythmic clap and trembling waves across her hips.
The next few moments felt like a single drawn breath of eerie silence.
“Move!” the soldier leader shouted. He and his squad grabbed their guns and sprinted for the sewer entrance without warning. Gunfire erupted behind them—bullets pinged and glanced off their core-infused suits, each impact denting the metal plating. The sudden onslaught roused the moths. Gathering in a black cloud overhead, the insects released streams of corrosive wax that burned through walls and pavement alike.
Lines on the soldiers’ armor glowed a hot orange, enabling them to burst forward at uncanny speed. They aimed for the masked woman, desperation clear in their charge. Before she could fully react, the leader swung his rifle butt at her head, the blow precise and disorienting. Her mask shattered free for the briefest moment, revealing startled eyes. Another soldier’s gloved fist followed, knocking her unconscious as they barreled past the other survivors who continued firing in vain.
They skidded to the sewer’s entrance, frantically prying at the heavy cover that sealed it. One by one, the first three soldiers dropped inside—but four remained above ground, struggling against the hail of bullets and diving moths.
“Private! Jump!” the leader bellowed from below, voice echoing off the damp walls. But the moths swarmed, drowning out his cry in a cacophony of clicking wings and the ragged screams of his fellow squad members. Panicked gunshots reverberated, muffled almost instantly by the shrieking insects.
Inside the sewer, those who made it fell silent in grief for the lives lost above. Their leader urged them onward.
“The water, sir!” a female soldier yelled, gesturing to the filthy sewage flowing around their boots. “If they follow us here, they’ll drown or get stuck—”
“No!” The leader barked, eyes blazing with urgency. “We keep running. Our cores will keep us moving faster than they can track.”
They sprinted through the narrow passage, steps made unsteady by the sludge. One soldier’s legs buckled, sending a ripple of panic through the group as they scrambled to lift her back up.
In that frozen instant, the leader felt certain they’d be overtaken. Every beat of his heart hammered with dread.
“It was a pleasure—” another soldier began, turning his rifle under his chin in a grim resolution.
Bang!
The gunshot ricocheted, missing the soldier’s head entirely. A scarred, wax-covered hand had intervened, knocking the barrel off target. The figure behind it was imposing, muscles tense with the bearing of authority—a Baron. Others flanked him, igniting a flamethrower that roared to life with infernal light. A sheet of flame erupted, forming a searing barricade that incinerated the moths attempting to follow. The roaring blaze illuminated the Baron’s features: it was Gazier.
“Let’s move!” Gazier commanded, extending his hand to help the startled soldier up. “We don’t have much time—the flamethrower’s fuel won’t last.”
They hurried down the opposite tunnel, guided by torches and the flicker of scorching flames behind them.
Tense silence prevailed until Gazier spoke into the darkness, his voice echoing off glistening walls. “Why didn’t you take the shot?”
“What?” The squad leader barely heard the question over the roar in his own mind—guilt, sorrow, and fury colliding.
“Pink bunny,” Gazier clarified. “You had a clean shot at her. Why didn’t you take it?”
“She’s doing what she has to do to survive,” the soldier replied brusquely. “It’s nothing personal. I didn’t see a need for a kill shot.” His eyes flickered away, haunted by the memory of that moment. “Besides… she looked familiar.”
Gazier snorted, a dry, humorless sound. “Another way of saying you’re soft-hearted.”
“Compassionate,” the soldier corrected with cold composure. “Forgiving. And I swear, she reminded me of someone.”
“Of course she looked familiar.” Gazier let out a sardonic laugh. “Anyone who runs with ‘Pink Bunny’ leaves chaos in her wake. I’d be shocked if you didn’t know her. She’s trouble wherever she goes.”
The soldier frowned. “So why not end her yourself?”
They came to a brief halt before another corridor. Gazier shrugged as if acknowledging the weight of it. “She’s under protection… Emily’s protection. They’re friends, or at least they used to be. Though I heard Emily tried to burn her alive once—” He gave a twisted chuckle. “Wouldn’t shock me if Emily finally got sick of her nonsense.”
With that grim explanation hanging in the air, Gazier gestured for them to press on. The wavering firelight receded behind them, leaving only darkness and the unsettling knowledge that neither traitors nor monsters were in short supply—and that alliances could shift as swiftly as the moths moved above
“It feels so eerie. I remember reading about them in Hound’s book,” whispered one of Gazier’s trusted soldiers, standing far enough away that their new companions couldn’t overhear. “What did the book say to do about them?”“They were supposed to die to the moths,” Gazier replied, a wry twist to his lips as he knotted a frayed lace on his dirty boots.“WHAT?” The soldier’s voice nearly echoed in the hushed, abandoned office building they had chosen as a temporary sanctuary. Four floors high and cluttered with ancient desks and toppled chairs, it felt marginally safe so long as they remained quiet. “Then why are they here—alive?”Gazier took a moment before answering, tugging the knot tight. “I’ve decided. Fuck the book!”The soldier’s eyes went wide at those words. “Hound always said it was for the greater good—that all the killing served some higher purpose. And you believed him for a long time.”“I do believe him,” Gazier muttered, voice ragged with frustration. “But the bodies just
Hound stood atop a small podium outside his residence, facing rows of seers assembled in strict formation. Their eyes bore faint, glowing tear marks that betrayed a shared unease. It was stiflingly quiet; the throng of onlookers included scientists kept under watch and, on the podium beside Hound, Emily and Evee—Sofie clinging to Evee’s side. Although the sun blazed overhead, the sweat on the seers’ faces wasn’t from heat, but from raw anticipation of what Hound might demand.He began pacing, shoulders tight. His gaze skimmed over the crowd, lingering on each wary face. Finally, he spoke in a low, resonant voice:“You are bound to me by oath. You live for me, and you die for me if I will it so.”A murmur rippled through the onlookers, their apprehension flaring at his words. He paused, hands trembling as if he fought to steady them.“Yet you have served me faithfully all this time. As your Baron, I offer you a choice.”Hound glanced to the side, where the scientists stood under guard,
Near Gazier’s LocationA distant explosion rocked the street as part of a building facade blew outward, sending Gazier hurtling through the air. His body smashed through the wide glass windows of the adjacent structure, shards raining down around him. He crashed onto the floor inside, momentarily disoriented, only to roll to his feet in one fluid motion. Three armored soldiers appeared in pursuit, gliding seamlessly across the gap using ethereal wingsuits generated by their core-powered suits. The wingsuits shimmered, then faded away upon their landing.They quickly surrounded Gazier, forming a tight perimeter. One soldier—their leader—slung a rifle from his back and pointed it straight at him, the others following suit.“WHERE ARE THEY?” the leader barked.Raising his hands, Gazier attempted a calm smile. “I’m not sure what you’re rambling about. We could talk this out like civilized men, yeah?”The soldiers closed in, making sure he had no avenue of escape. There was a frustrated ed
His lifeless body slumped under its own weight as Emily looked on, her expression disturbingly blank. Another corpse—nothing more. She slowly raised her gaze from the fallen soldier to Gazier, who stood hunched forward, struggling for breath.“How much for your gun?” he asked through a pained grin, wincing at the burn of his recent backstab wound. Emily, edging closer, offered a curt reply:“I’m not selling.”She moved until she was almost within arm’s reach, studying Gazier with a blend of concern and malice. He, noticing her tense scrutiny, tried to dispel the uneasy silence:“Let’s see. You tracked me down, handled those soldiers, and showed up just in time. So, let me guess—the big, bad boss is on his way, and I’m screwed?”He tried a dry chuckle, but Emily’s face remained impassive.“Tough crowd,” he added quietly.Her anger slowly melted into grief. She rested her forehead on Gazier’s shoulder, tears flowing silently as her fingers bunched in his shirt, wrinkling it with every t
“What am I doing with my life,” he whispered, his voice low and heavy. The words echoed through the dark, narrow alley, bouncing off empty walls and disappearing into the void. Only two others were present to hear him—his silent coworker and a terrified young woman clutching her purse, her wide, tear-filled eyes pleading for mercy.“I’ll give you anything—money, favors—whatever you want,” she stammered, her voice trembling and breaking with every word.“You hear that, Hound? Anything we want,” Puck said with a cruel laugh, his boots scraping against the gritty pavement as he moved closer. “What I want, sweetheart, isn’t in your purse. Can you give me that?”Her face paled, her lips trembling as she tried to reason with him. “I… my family values my honor above all else. Please, I’ll give you money, connections—I can even cover your academy fees. Registration opens soon, and I’ll pay for it all.”Unmoved, Puck continued his advance, closing the space between them until her back pressed
Off in the distance, a plank crashed to the ground. Footsteps followed—fast, frantic, and heavy with terror.Hound’s hand slipped into his pant’s pocket, pulling out a metallic syringe. Inside, a bright purple fluid fizzled violently, light dancing through the glass. Without hesitation, he jammed the needle into his forearm. The reaction was immediate. Black veins crawled across his skin, spreading like ink in water. Every hair on his body stood on end.His pupils turned silver, glowing against the darkness. He tilted his head, staring through the shadows. The world shifted under his gaze—what others saw as blackness revealed its truth to him.There, stumbling through the mist, was a boy. Dark hair, thin frame, sweat dripping down his pale face. He looked back constantly, his wide eyes screaming fear. But Hound wasn’t fooled. The boy’s soul flickered faintly in the dark, and at its center was a brand—clear, unmistakable.A gust of wind swept through the alley, carrying the shadows wit
“What do you wanna be when you grow up, son?” Davin asked, his voice warm, his hands rough from a lifetime of hard work resting on the worn wooden table. The dinner wasn’t fancy—plain white rice and boiled vegetables—but the love in the small home made up for what it lacked in wealth. Family was their greatest treasure.“He’s gonna be a great businessman one day, honey,” Angela chimed in, her tone hopeful. “And he’s going to make so much money we won’t have a worry in this world. Isn’t that right, baby?”Hound hesitated, his small hands gripping his spoon tightly. “I had another nightmare, Mom. I’m scared.” His voice cracked as he pushed the rice around on his plate. “I was… I was a bad person.”Davin smiled, soft and reassuring. “Come here, big boy.” He opened his arms wide, but Hound shook his head.“It’s okay, Dad. I know they’re just dreams. Like you always say,” Hound mumbled, shoving another spoonful of bland rice into his mouth.Angela’s smile softened as she watched her son. “
Hound’s eyes shot open, his body screaming in agony. He tried to move instinctively, but pain locked him in place. His shattered bones, jagged wounds, and the overwhelming loss of blood left him teetering on the brink of consciousness. His breathing came in shallow gasps, his body limp in the dark puddle that surrounded him, as if lying still could prolong his fleeting life.A door creaked open somewhere in the distance. Footsteps followed, hesitant at first, then quicker—urgent and determined.“I need your help” a voice broke through the darkness, shaky and desperate, “I’m stuck here, in the heart of Rivermirror, and I don’t have the means or connections to get home on my own. I’ll take you to a vitaecer, but in return, you don’t kill me… and you help me get back. Deal?”, Emily requested, her heart still pounding from her run.Hound blinked sluggishly, unable to process the words. His vision spun—figures blurred and swayed, the world too heavy to hold onto.“I’ll take your silence as
His lifeless body slumped under its own weight as Emily looked on, her expression disturbingly blank. Another corpse—nothing more. She slowly raised her gaze from the fallen soldier to Gazier, who stood hunched forward, struggling for breath.“How much for your gun?” he asked through a pained grin, wincing at the burn of his recent backstab wound. Emily, edging closer, offered a curt reply:“I’m not selling.”She moved until she was almost within arm’s reach, studying Gazier with a blend of concern and malice. He, noticing her tense scrutiny, tried to dispel the uneasy silence:“Let’s see. You tracked me down, handled those soldiers, and showed up just in time. So, let me guess—the big, bad boss is on his way, and I’m screwed?”He tried a dry chuckle, but Emily’s face remained impassive.“Tough crowd,” he added quietly.Her anger slowly melted into grief. She rested her forehead on Gazier’s shoulder, tears flowing silently as her fingers bunched in his shirt, wrinkling it with every t
Near Gazier’s LocationA distant explosion rocked the street as part of a building facade blew outward, sending Gazier hurtling through the air. His body smashed through the wide glass windows of the adjacent structure, shards raining down around him. He crashed onto the floor inside, momentarily disoriented, only to roll to his feet in one fluid motion. Three armored soldiers appeared in pursuit, gliding seamlessly across the gap using ethereal wingsuits generated by their core-powered suits. The wingsuits shimmered, then faded away upon their landing.They quickly surrounded Gazier, forming a tight perimeter. One soldier—their leader—slung a rifle from his back and pointed it straight at him, the others following suit.“WHERE ARE THEY?” the leader barked.Raising his hands, Gazier attempted a calm smile. “I’m not sure what you’re rambling about. We could talk this out like civilized men, yeah?”The soldiers closed in, making sure he had no avenue of escape. There was a frustrated ed
Hound stood atop a small podium outside his residence, facing rows of seers assembled in strict formation. Their eyes bore faint, glowing tear marks that betrayed a shared unease. It was stiflingly quiet; the throng of onlookers included scientists kept under watch and, on the podium beside Hound, Emily and Evee—Sofie clinging to Evee’s side. Although the sun blazed overhead, the sweat on the seers’ faces wasn’t from heat, but from raw anticipation of what Hound might demand.He began pacing, shoulders tight. His gaze skimmed over the crowd, lingering on each wary face. Finally, he spoke in a low, resonant voice:“You are bound to me by oath. You live for me, and you die for me if I will it so.”A murmur rippled through the onlookers, their apprehension flaring at his words. He paused, hands trembling as if he fought to steady them.“Yet you have served me faithfully all this time. As your Baron, I offer you a choice.”Hound glanced to the side, where the scientists stood under guard,
“It feels so eerie. I remember reading about them in Hound’s book,” whispered one of Gazier’s trusted soldiers, standing far enough away that their new companions couldn’t overhear. “What did the book say to do about them?”“They were supposed to die to the moths,” Gazier replied, a wry twist to his lips as he knotted a frayed lace on his dirty boots.“WHAT?” The soldier’s voice nearly echoed in the hushed, abandoned office building they had chosen as a temporary sanctuary. Four floors high and cluttered with ancient desks and toppled chairs, it felt marginally safe so long as they remained quiet. “Then why are they here—alive?”Gazier took a moment before answering, tugging the knot tight. “I’ve decided. Fuck the book!”The soldier’s eyes went wide at those words. “Hound always said it was for the greater good—that all the killing served some higher purpose. And you believed him for a long time.”“I do believe him,” Gazier muttered, voice ragged with frustration. “But the bodies just
Claps echoed in the distance—slow, steady pulses that weren’t loud enough to draw the wax moths’ attention, yet insistent enough to pique curiosity. The black-armored soldiers moved in formation along the vine-choked walls of a derelict building, rifles raised. At a silent command from their leader, they halted at the structure’s corner, preparing for whatever lay beyond.Just as they readied themselves to rush in, the echo of shotgun shells being loaded made their hearts jolt. Instantly on alert, they realized they were surrounded by a different band of survivors—far less welcoming than the last group. Some perched on rooftops, others crouched in nearby alleys, all hidden behind wax-coated masks and training weapons on the soldiers. A dozen pairs of eyes glinted in the murk. Remarkably, that rhythmic clapping persisted, but no one spared it a glance.Time passed in a tense stalemate before they finally understood the source of the sound. Beneath the stifling hush of the apocalypse, t
Hound, gripping Binge’s horn with a vice-like hold, twisted the creature’s overgrown head and slammed it into the nearest wall, the impact sending cracks through chipped concrete. Anger radiated from Hound with each motion, his knuckles white against Binge’s twisted horn.“You know,” he began, voice lilting with derision, “I understand why you stood up to me. The Relay Core’s got you all fired up. After all, it’s the reason you’re in this sorry state.” His smile widened, eyes going bright with a twisted excitement as if savoring every pained breath Binge took.“You’ve done me no real wrong. And I’m not even mad at you,” he added, studying Binge’s snarling face from the corner of those bloodshot, vein-riddled eyes. A low, menacing growl rumbled from Binge’s throat, refusing to waver despite the pain.“It’s my nature to harm,” Hound continued, pressing Binge’s head harder into the wall until the grinding of bone on brick was audible. “And, well… being a leader takes that out of my hands
The reinforced steel door swung open, revealing the horrors lurking just beyond. They entered the dim, silent room with cautious steps, unsettled by Binge’s unusual quiet. The air itself felt hostile, thick with the metallic stink of blood and the nauseating reek of decaying limbs. Strewn about the floor were the scientists, each missing at least one limb, their torn flesh and viscera laid bare as they crawled, clinging to life by a thread of sheer will.Sofie pressed closer to Evee, her grip tight and trembling, as though she feared losing hold of the only stable thing left. Perched on the ceiling in a far corner, Binge watched them like a predatory beast, his overgrown nails and twisted limbs planted firmly against the walls. His stare felt invasive, a silent threat daring them to make a wrong move.“You are ever so generous!” he hissed, the crimson glow of his eyes locking onto Sofie, who buried herself deeper against Evee, her arms wound protectively around Evee’s waist.Without w
“You said they were a crew—mostly scientists—and they’re familiar with Erlin?” Emily asked, her breath still ragged from a late-night core-hunting mission with Gazier. Hound, standing near a cracked windowframe, sighed with fatigue from her relentless questions, already regretting he’d revealed so much.“Yes, are you familiar with them?” he countered, eyeing Emily warily. She hesitated, glancing away in a manner that piqued his suspicion. In a swift movement, he closed the gap between them until their noses almost touched. “Spill!”Emily steadied his face with her palms, fingers resting gently along his jawline. She searched his eyes—dark and intense—before placing a brief peck on his lower lip. The moment was fleeting but charged with electricity. She slipped past him, making her way to the grand glass window overlooking the skeletal skyline outside. “What are we doing, Hound?” she asked quietly.“I don’t think I understand your question. Speak plainly,” he said, following her to the
“What is the reason for your visit?” He repeated himself, his tone still steady and calm, his eyes darting around looking for a volunteer to respond. A long silence ensued while the tension rose. The corridor itself seemed to hold its breath, anticipating the next move.“We are here for a routine checkup,” a scientist finally voiced, shaking from terror. There were no words but it was very clear the others did not approve of his cooperation by their exchanged morbid expressions. The fluorescent lights overhead emphasized every twitch of their faces, rendering their fear in stark detail.“A checkup on what exactly?” Hound asked, but before he could get a response Vorn interrupted, “A checkup on something above your clearance.” He spoke with absolute confidence, and no fear in his eyes. The tension crackled like electricity between them, distant machinery humming somewhere deeper in the building.A seer emerged from behind him, the sound of an unsheathing blade screeching filling the em