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	<title>THIAGO DESANT</title>
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	<pubDate>Tue, 14 Apr 2026 03:23:06 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>AI</title>
				
		<link>http://thiagodesant.com/AI</link>

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		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Apr 2026 03:23:06 +0000</pubDate>

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		<description>THIAGO DESANT
HOME&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; AUDIO&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; VIDEO&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; VISUAL&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; PROJECTS&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; ABOUT&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; NEWS&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; CONTACT

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		<excerpt>THIAGO DESANT HOME&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; AUDIO&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; VIDEO&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; VISUAL&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; PROJECTS&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; ABOUT&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; NEWS&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; CONTACT  ...</excerpt>

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		<title>Writing</title>
				
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		<pubDate>Mon, 03 Mar 2025 23:18:33 +0000</pubDate>

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		<description>&#60;img width="2000" height="2000" width_o="2000" height_o="2000" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/beb552cf3674ca94f82d81fe59e5b82b1f22851115833bfe4b3dd3e388c07647/TRDesant_logo_small.jpg" data-mid="1398858" border="0" data-scale="10"/&#62;THIAGO DESANT
HOME&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; AUDIO&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; VIDEO&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; VISUAL&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; PROJECTS&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; ABOUT &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp;NEWS &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp;CONTACT  

The
God of the Dead


by
Thiago Desant



The
morning sun oozed through the trees, the houses, the streets. Like
the napalm that once rained from the sky onto cities, onto shoppers,
onto influencers livestreaming their own deaths, onto pets in their
custom outfits, onto the homeless, onto the shopping carts filled
with garbage, and the Ferraris. Napalm that melted everything it
touched. Like the riots, the panic, the last gasps of an apocalypse
that came, but never finished.A world that should’ve ended,
but didn’t. Just shifted. Just kept going. Like a chewed-up
sandwich, spat out, swallowed again.Can mankind adapt to
anything? 


Even
after five years, the wind still smelled like rot. The hunters and
their horses smelled worse.They moved slowly through the
valley, rifles low, fingers twitching. A good hunt meant fresh meat
for the fighting pits. A bad hunt meant running. Nobody liked
running.This was how it usually went. Ride out. Find the wild
ones—the ones who turned before they had chips—and make them
useful. A clean headshot didn’t kill. It installed a chip, turned
them remote-control. 


Of
course, there was always the “kill option.” The incinerator
round.Since the parasite wrapped itself around every inch of
the brain, a regular bullet didn’t cut it. A kill-shot had to cook
the infection from the inside. One hit, and the thing’s skull
bubbled like boiling tar. Sometimes you’d even see the smoke,
curling out of the hole in its head.The others, the already
chipped, were never a problem. They’d turned same as everybody
else, but they came pre-tamed. Plug and play. Workforce ready. No
screaming, no struggling, just dead flesh on autopilot.


Some
worked. Some fought. Some just stood around, dressed nice, looking
expensive.


Zombies
made to entertain. 


Some
didn’t moan—they hummed the Super Mario theme, notes breaking
apart in wet, rattling groans. Their jaws barely moving, lips
cracked, but the melody played on. Some had LED halos over their
eyes, rings of pulsing rainbow light that flickered in sync with
every twitch, every shudder of their rotting frames. Some were
sprayed down in layers of synthetic skin, stretched too tight, too
smooth, plastic flesh covering what festered beneath. A fresh coat to
mask the stink, to keep them presentable.


Some
wore tailored suits, silk dresses, old-school gangster fedoras, their
owners dressing them like icons from a world that didn’t exist
anymore. Some wore cat ears, maid outfits, thigh-high stockings.Some
didn’t do much of anything. Until the right command. Then they
danced. Twitched and jerked in perfect rhythm, rotting feet shuffling
through pre-programmed steps.


All
of them, highly customized, a joke to the people who owned them.


The
ones still loose? Free stock. Unclaimed. Rich people paid good money
for them. More bodies for the circuit. More workers for the
factories. More pets for the sadistic bastards who kept them on
leashes for fun.Again, ride out, find the wild ones, turn them
remote-control. That’s how it always went. That’s how it should
go today. Up ahead, Santa Monica State Beach.The best hunting
grounds were always where people still had hope when the world
ended.They’d be there. The ones who turned mid-jog.
Mid-stretch. Mid-set. Beach bodies standing around, slack-jawed,
sun-bleached, still wearing their running shorts, their swimsuits,
their volleyball uniforms. Some probably still holding frisbees. Just
standing there. Waiting to be claimed.


Trent
and his crew—five in total—rode until they reached Ocean Avenue.
From there, they had a clear view of the Pacific Coast Highway.


They
dismounted. Set up their rifles. Scopes pointed down at the stretch
of road and beach below. Dead things shuffled across the sand,
wandered aimlessly over the pavement. Stragglers. Leftovers.Trent
glanced right. Zack. Barely twenty, thin mustache, hands shaking.
Scared.Trent squinted at him. "How old are you,
kid?""Nineteen." Voice barely above a
whisper."You got family?"Zack hesitated. Then
shook his head.Trent chewed on the inside of his cheek. "Ever
kill anything before?"Zack took too long to
answer."Figures," Trent muttered.
The kid
had no business being out here. Another dumb recruit thrown into the
meat grinder because someone told him it wouldn’t be so bad. Shoot
the undead, not people. Make some money. Hell, it’s practically a
desk job, right?Except for the horses. And the rotting stench.
And the fact that if something went wrong, your last five seconds on
Earth would be nothing but screams and teeth and blood.Trent
clapped him on the shoulder. "You’ll be fine. We’ll take
care of you."The others laughed.Trent raised his
rifle, found a muscular zombie stumbling through the sand. Tight
shorts, ripped body, the kind of guy who probably had a six-figure
supplement sponsorship before the world went to hell.Funny how
the parasite keeps them almost exactly the way they were when they
turned.They still rot, sure. Skin cracks, eyes sink, muscle
fibers break down. But not at the rate they should. Not the full,
collapsing-into-bone kind of rot.And the strength? That’s the
real mystery.It’s not just preserved—it’s amplified. A
fresh zombie could throw a grown man across a room. Hold its breath
forever. Sprint like an Olympic athlete on adrenaline. How does a
walking corpse get stronger?Nobody had an answer.Some
said the parasite acted like a stimulant, hijacking adrenal glands
and cranking them into overdrive. Others swore it produced a
synthetic protein, something that reinforced muscle fibers and slowed
tissue degradation. Theories, all of them. No lab had cracked
it."First, you take the shot."Suppressor
hissed.The bullet hit, and the zombie’s skull rocked back,
like it had just taken a hard slap from God. But it didn’t fall.
Didn’t die. Just froze.


"Then,
you take control."Trent pulled out his tablet. A few quick
taps.The zombie stopped moving completely.One more
tap—"RETRIEVE."Down on the beach, the thing’s
head twitched. Then it turned and started walking toward the
stairs."And you wait for them to come to you.
Simple."Zack swallowed hard. His hands still shook.The
others started firing. One by one, the dead stopped wandering. Heads
snapped toward the new masters. Some had been pacing the highway,
dragging feet across faded asphalt. Some had been sun-bleached on the
sand for years, hair fried, skin cracking.Didn’t matter. Now
they had orders.One by one, the drones came marching up the
stairs.


Zack
kept his rifle tight against his chest, breathing too fast, eyes
darting between the hunters and the slow-moving dead. He had that
look—the kind that came right before someone either pissed
themselves or ran.Trent sighed, shook his head. "Alright,
kid. Time to earn your keep."Zack blinked. "What?""You
heard me. Pick one."The others smirked, already
entertained.Zack swallowed, his Adam’s apple bobbing like
he’d just choked on something. He turned toward the beach, scanning
the drifting bodies like a kid staring at a test he hadn’t studied
for.Trent took a deep breath. "Alright, let me help. See
that one?" He pointed down to the sand, where a woman in a
tattered lifeguard swimsuit wandered near a collapsed volleyball net.
Her skin had gone pale and papery, sun damage peeling it back in
places, exposing dry, blue muscle. Bare feet dragged through the
sand, toenails long, thick like yellowed glass.Zack hesitated.
"She—she’s slow.""They’re all slow,
dumbass. That’s the point." Trent nudged him. "Come on,
aim."Zack lifted his rifle, elbows locked, but the barrel
trembled.Trent stepped behind him. "First rule of the
hunt, Zack: if you shake like that, you’ll miss, and then we all
have to clean up your mess.""I—I'm not
shaking."Trent leaned in close. "You are."The
others laughed again.Zack exhaled hard, gripping the rifle
tighter. His finger hovered over the trigger."Shoot, kid.
First the shot, then the chip."Zack bit his lip, eyes
flicking between the zombie’s empty gaze and the sand shifting
under its dragging feet. The distance wasn’t far. Maybe thirty
meters. A guaranteed hit.And yet he stood there, frozen, like
pulling the trigger meant something more than just taking a step
forward.Trent watched the sweat bead along his temple. Saw his
knuckles go white against the grip."You waiting for
permission?"Zack licked his lips. "I just—""It’s
already dead, kid. You’re not killing anything. You’re just
taking control."Zack’s breath hitched. The lifeguard’s
jaw slackened, a line of something dark and gelatinous sliding from
the corner of her mouth, caught in the weak morning breeze.Trent
clapped him on the back. "Pull the trigger, Zack."Zack
squeezed.The suppressor barely coughed, but the impact cracked
through the valley. The bullet connected—right in the forehead. The
woman’s head snapped back, body swaying like a drunk trying to
catch their balance.But she didn’t fall.Didn’t even
react.Just stood there, swaying.Zack’s breath hitched.
"Oh, shit."Trent smirked. "See? She barely felt
it."The hole in her forehead oozed something thick and
black, like oil. It ran down over her left eye, but she didn’t lift
a hand to wipe it away. Didn’t even seem to notice.Zack took
a half-step back. "Why—why didn’t she go down?"Trent
laughed. "Because you didn’t kill her, dumbass. You chipped
her." He flicked open his tablet, nodding at the screen.
"Alright, now finish it. Press the button."Zack
hesitated.Trent rolled his eyes. "Jesus. It’s just a
button." He held up the tablet, the interface flashing with a
red command: RETRIEVE. "Do it."Zack fumbled with the
device, fingers slick with sweat. He tapped the screen.The
zombie froze. Her arms hung loose at her sides. The blank expression
somehow emptier.Then, her head tilted toward him.Her feet
shifted.Slow, steady, she started walking up the
stairs.Straight to him.Zack swallowed hard, stepping back
on instinct.Trent smirked. "There you go, kid. That’s
yours now."The others laughed.Zack watched her move,
that slow, obedient shuffle.
Trent leaned in, lowering his
voice. "See? Easy. Not even a real person anymore."Zack
didn’t answer.Trent sighed. "You get used to it."He
turned away, already scanning the beach for the next target.
"Alright, let’s round up a few more. We got buyers
waiting."Zack kept staring at the woman, at the way her
body obeyed without thinking, without choice.Trent had said
"not a real person."But something about it didn’t
feel that simple.


Trent
watched Zack staring at the lifeguard as she shuffled toward him,
slow, mechanical, arms swaying slightly with each step.He knew
that look. The mistake every rookie makes."Don’t let
that fool you, kid," Trent said, wiping sweat from his brow.
"They only move like that when they’re idle. When they don’t
see prey."Zack turned to him. "What do you
mean?"Trent smirked. "I mean, when these things lock
onto something alive, when they know there's meat in front of them,
they don’t just move. They run. Fast."Zack glanced back
at the lifeguard, her pace slow, steady, lifeless. "She doesn’t
look fast."Trent exhaled through his nose, shaking his
head."Yeah. That’s what everybody says. Right up until
one of ‘em is tearing their throat out." He tapped the side of
Zack’s rifle. "That neuro-chip you just installed? That’s
the only thing keeping her like this. She’s tamed now."Zack
looked back at her, at the way her body moved in lazy, automated
steps."Without that chip, she'd be sprinting."Zack
stiffened.Trent tilted his head. "You ever seen a dog lock
onto a rabbit? The way its whole body commits, the way it stops being
an animal and just becomes an instinct?"Zack nodded,
slowly."That’s what they do. The second they recognize
prey, they are not slow. They are not tired. They are not
stopping."Zack swallowed. His hands clenched on the
rifle.Trent rolled his shoulders, cracked his neck."Let
me tell you about my daughter."The other hunters kept
working, but the energy shifted. The ones close enough to hear
stopped grinning.Zack glanced at them, then back at Trent.
"Your daughter?"Trent nodded, still staring at the
beach like he was seeing something else. Something five years
gone."She was a sprinter. Trained since she was a kid.
Olympic-level speed. Always had this perfect form, like her body just
knew how to run. Had scouts watching her. Nike deals waiting.
Everything."He let out a slow breath."Didn’t
mean shit."Zack swallowed. "She got caught?"Trent
turned, staring Zack dead in the eye. "She almost did. And
that’s the part you need to hear."Zack shifted
uncomfortably, but Trent kept going."She was at the track
when the city fell apart. At first, she didn’t know what was
happening—just saw people screaming, running. Then she saw what
they were running from."A pause. A long one.


"She
took off. Hit her fastest time in her life that day. Didn’t stop,
didn’t look back. And you know what? They kept up."Zack
stiffened."No one talks about that part." Trent’s
jaw tightened. "People think of zombies as slow, dumb, easy
targets. But that’s when they don’t care. When they’re not
locked in. When they don’t have something in front of them,
bleeding, sweating, moving. You think they’re slow?"Trent
leaned in. "Try running. See what happens."Zack
didn’t say anything."My daughter?" Trent continued,
voice lower now. "She was running full speed, and they were
gaining. She could hear them behind her. Not just their feet. Their
breathing. Their fucking nails scraping the pavement."Zack’s
hands clenched."She saw an open sewer drain just ahead.
One of those big-ass city ones, wide enough for her to squeeze
through. She knew she wouldn’t make it another thirty feet. So she
dove."Zack frowned. "A sewer?"Trent
nodded. "One of those big-ass runoff drains. The kind you barely
notice when you’re walking by. That day, it saved her life."He
ran a hand over his mouth."Water was black. Thick. Grease,
shit, dead rats, all of it. She slammed into it full force, barely
fit through the opening. Lost a shoe. Lost her bag. Nearly lost her
arm, too—felt their fingers scraping against her ankle as she went
under."Zack took a slow breath."She held it
together. Held her breath in that filth, in that cold, until she
couldn’t hear them anymore. Until the world got quiet again."Trent
rubbed his thumb against the butt of his rifle. "And when she
crawled out the other side, everything was burning."Zack
didn’t move.The sound of waves, of shifting sand, of metal on
metal echoed beneath them.Trent exhaled. "You think
they’re slow, kid? You think you can outrun ‘em? My daughter was
built to run. She trained for years. Had every genetic advantage."He
looked Zack in the eye."She barely made it."Zack
felt sweat dripping down his back.Trent turned back toward the
highway."Don’t ever let your guard down. Ever."Zack
swallowed, staring at the lifeguard zombie still walking toward him.
It was slow now. But only because they made it that way.


The
hunt was smooth. Too smooth. One by one, the zombies marched up the
stairs, chipped, controlled, mindless. The hunters barely spoke
anymore—just aimed, fired, tapped a button, collected the
stock.Zack was still shaken, but he was following orders.
Watching the lifeguard shuffle toward him, her bare feet dragging
over the pavement. He didn’t like how obedient she looked.Trent,
though? He was comfortable now. Too comfortable.He rolled his
shoulders, adjusting his grip on his rifle. Scanned the beach for
something better. Bigger. Then he saw it.Near the lifeguard
towers, standing alone, was a massive zombie. Tall. Thick with
muscle. Shirtless, dark skin pulled tight over what looked like years
of training. A fighter before death. Still a fighter after, but what
stood out wasn’t the size, it was the helmet.A golden
gladiator-style skullplate, custom-made, scratched and dented but
still gleaming under the morning sun.One of the rich bastards
had lost a fighter. A high-tier one. This wasn’t a wild one—this
was a pit champion that had gone rogue."Holy shit, would
you look at that?" Trent lowered his rifle, grinning.Zack
followed his gaze. "What is that thing?"Trent cracked
his neck. "That’s a goddamn paycheck."Zack
squinted. "But… how do you lose a zombie? That happens?"Trent
smirked. "You think rich assholes care? They can afford new
ones."Zack still looked confused. "But, like, it just
wandered off?"Trent exhaled. "Could be a few things.
Maybe the neuro-chip got damaged in a fight. Happens sometimes—not
often, but if they take enough of a beating, the chip can glitch out,
stop working right."Zack stared down at the thing standing
in the sun, motionless. "Or?"Trent’s smirk widened.
"Or someone stole it."Zack’s eyebrows pulled
together. "People steal zombies?"Trent chuckled.
"Hell yeah. Happens all the time. After the fights, when the
handlers are transporting them, gangs hit the convoys, steal as many
as they can. Sell ‘em off to underground fight rings all over the
world."Zack shook his head. "Why not just get fresh
ones?"Trent tapped the side of his head. "Because
these ones remember."Zack blinked. "Wait.
What?"Trent gestured toward the golden-masked zombie. "The
chip makes ‘em obedient, but whatever the parasite does to the
brain… it keeps what they learn. The longer a zombie fights, the
better it gets."


Zack’s
stomach turned.Trent grinned. "You don’t want some fresh
wild one getting chipped and sent into a ring all dumb and stiff. You
want one like this. One that’s been in the pits. One that already
knows how to dodge, how to counter, how to rip something apart."Zack
looked down at the thing again. It hadn’t moved. Hadn’t even
twitched.Trent rolled his shoulders. "Either it took
enough damage in the ring that its chip stopped working right… or
some dumbass stole it, tried to reprogram it, messed up, and got
himself and his crew eaten."Zack licked his lips. "So
it’s… wild now?"Trent raised his rifle. "Not for
long."He fired. The bullet hit dead center. The golden
skull snapped back. A dull clang rang out. The thing staggered,
almost fell. Then it stopped. Stood still.Zack held his breath.
The moment stretched too long.Trent flicked open his tablet.
"Alright, let’s bring him in—"The zombie snapped
its head forward. No hesitation. No twitching.And then it ran.
Not toward the sand. Toward the stairs.Zack’s stomach
dropped. "Holy shit—"The thing was already halfway
across the beach, legs pumping, arms swinging, covering ground like a
goddamn track star."Come on, guys, hit it! Help me out
here!" Trent barked, raising his rifle.Shots rang out.
Neuro-chip rounds fired in quick succession. Each one landed. Each
one did nothing. The golden-masked fighter didn’t slow. It tore
through the sand, feet barely sinking, kicking up sprays of dust as
it came straight for them."I’m using an incinerator,"
Mike growled, already switching ammo.Mike was
second-in-command, unofficially. The guy you listened to when Trent
wasn’t around. Bigger than Trent, meaner than Trent, but without
Trent’s patience. Mike was the kind of guy you’d expect to
survive the apocalypse—big, broad-shouldered, built like a guy who
used to work security at a strip club. A shaved head, deep-set eyes,
and a scar running along his jawline that made it look like he was
always grinding his teeth. He had that ex-military, ex-cop,
ex-something kind of presence. The kind of guy who used to be in
charge of people. Used to giving orders. Didn’t like being told
what to do. His arms were covered in tattoos, but they weren’t
the kind that meant anything—just blacked-out patches where old ink
had been erased, gang signs or past affiliations scrubbed over. The
kind of guy who had been part of something, but not anymore.His
voice was gravelly, like someone who smoked too much or just never
slept. His trigger finger was always too eager. His instinct wasn’t
to assess—it was to shoot, then shoot again, then figure out if it
was the right call later.Trent didn’t lower his rifle.
"Wait—""Fuck you," Mike snapped. "I’m
not waiting for that thing to get here. We have to kill it."Before
Trent could argue, Mike loaded an incinerator round and fired. The
bullet hit center mass, burrowing deep. For a split second, nothing
happened.Then smoke curled from the wound. The zombie
staggered, as if confused. Then it screamed.A high-pitched,
metallic wail like steel being shredded in an industrial press. Black
fluid boiled from the hole in its chest, hissing as it hit the
pavement. Then it kept running."What the fuck?!" Mike
fired again.Another shot. Another hit. More smoke. More boiling
rot. And still, it kept coming.The others raised their rifles.
More incinerators fired.The golden-masked zombie made it to the
base of the stairs—then stopped.Not because of the damage.
Because something was behind it.Zack saw them first. Shapes
moving in the sun. Big shapes. More of them. More fighters.One
by one, they emerged from behind the lifeguard towers, from between
the abandoned vendor stalls. Six, maybe seven. Maybe more.


A
hulking brute covered in cracked purple and green metallic armor,
like some kind of medieval knight redesigned by a psychopath.A
lanky one with metal rods drilled through its arms and shoulders,
standing too straight, too stiff, like it was waiting for a
command.A thin, twitching one, skin stapled over what looked
like cybernetics, its jaw split open—until it unhinged like a
snake’s and belched fire."The fuck is this?" One of
the hunters took a half-step back.Another zombie stepped
forward. This one wore chains. Thick steel links wrapped around its
arms and torso, like restraints that had been broken. Its hands were
missing. In their place were curved, rusted blades fused to
bone.Mike’s voice broke. "Where the hell did they all
come from?!"Trent’s lips pressed into a tight line. His
fingers twitched over his rifle grip."Some billionaire got
robbed," he muttered.Mike turned, eyes wide. "Wait.
You mean—""Yeah."Mike’s breath
hitched. "The owner of NeuroTech?"Trent exhaled
through his nose. "One of them."Zack stared at the
monsters lining up along the sand, at the custom-made abominations
worth more than entire city blocks."Billionaires lose
zombies?" His voice felt stupid coming out of his mouth, but he
needed to ask.Trent snorted. "Billionaires lose
everything. You think this guy’s the only one in the world? They
steal from each other all the time. But this… this was big. A whole
shipment went missing a few months back. A dozen, maybe more."Zack
swallowed. "Shouldn’t he have security?"


Trent
didn’t take his eyes off the horde. "Sure. But security ain’t
foolproof. If a guy like him is stealing from others, others are
stealing from him."Zack felt a chill go down his spine.
"So… what happened to the thieves?"Trent’s face
darkened. "Looks like something went wrong."The
golden-masked zombie twitched. Then, in perfect synchronization, the
others did too. All at once, they turned toward the stairs."Oh,
fuck this," Mike whispered.Another hunter shifted. "What
do we do?"Trent’s grip on his rifle tightened. His
throat bobbed."We’re fucked," he said flatly.


The
golden-masked zombie moved first. Mike lifted his rifle, squeezed the
trigger. The incinerator round hit square in the shoulder—too low,
too off-center, too desperate. Didn’t matter. The thing didn’t
even flinch. It was already leaping. Mike had time for one last
breath before the weight slammed into him, knocking him flat. A
hand—no, a claw—wrapped around his throat. Lifted. Mike choked
out something—maybe a curse, maybe a plea. Then the fingers
tightened. The pop of his windpipe sounded like a champagne cork.The
thing held him there for a moment, dangling, body jerking, fingers
still convulsing around his useless rifle. Then, like it was bored,
it slammed him into the pavement.Mike’s skull didn’t just
crack—it exploded. Blood. Brain. Bone.Then the thing turned
toward the others.Trent didn’t blink. Didn’t hesitate. His
gun was already up, his finger pulling the trigger—Click. His
heart stopped. He checked the mag. Empty.


"FUCK!"He spun, reaching for his backup pistol, but the fire-breather
was already moving, stepping forward, chest heaving.
A
second of silence. Then—a guttural roar.Its jaw split open,
smoke curling from between its broken teeth, nostrils flaring as heat
radiated from deep inside its chest.Trent turned to run. Didn’t
make it three steps. The fire hit him square in the back.It
didn’t just burn—it consumed. Trent screamed. He fell to his
knees, slapping at himself, at the flames, at his own melting flesh.
His hands hit the pavement, skin fusing to the hot concrete. 


The
fire-breather stepped forward. It didn’t even wait for him to die
before swinging one heavy, armored fist down. Trent’s body stopped
moving, but his head didn’t. It rolled three feet, hit the ground
with a dull thump. Stopped.The rest of the hunters had already
started running, but it didn’t matter. The other monsters were
already on them.The purple-and-green armored brute moved like a
tank, crushing one under its bulk, cracking ribs, ripping a man in
half like a rotisserie chicken. The one with the rusted blade hands
hacked through two more, metal claws punching through kevlar, through
ribs, through lungs.One of the hunters—a woman Zack hadn’t
even learned the name of yet—got her pistol up just in time for the
chain-covered zombie to wrap a steel link around her throat. One pull
and her neck snapped like a twig.Zack tried to move, but his
body wouldn’t. The golden-masked zombie turned to him now.The
others followed. Zack’s breath caught in his throat. They weren’t
just moving. They were coordinating. A full formation. Like
soldiers.He took a half-step back. Nowhere to go. Nowhere to
run. This was it.The blade-handed undead took another step
forward, raising its arms. Zack shut his eyes.And then—


A
shrieking hiss. A wet crack. A body hitting the ground. Zack’s eyes
snapped open. One of the zombies—the one in armor—had
something sticking out of its skull. A spear. The metal tip glowed
orange, so hot it looked like it had just been pulled from a forge.
Steam hissed from the wound. The stench of burning flesh and molten
metal filled the air. The zombie twitched. Stumbled.
Collapsed.Zack’s breath caught. A shadow moved. Not a zombie.
Something else. Someone. A tall figure, dark silhouette against the
smoke. No words. No warning. Just pure, brutal precision.Another
step forward. A flick of the wrist. The spear ripped free from the
fallen zombie’s skull, leaving a smoking crater where its brain had
been. The fire-breather turned toward the newcomer. Opened its mouth.
Smoke curled from its throat, heat building—The spear moved
again, straight into the mouth. The fire-breather’s jaw snapped
shut around the metal tip.


A
beat.Then its head detonated.The spear came free again,
slick with charred gore. Another step. Another kill.Zack
couldn’t breathe. The blade-handed zombie rushed forward, swinging
its rusted weapons in a vicious arc. The spear caught its wrist
mid-swing.A brutal twist—SNAP.The entire arm tore
free from the socket. The thing staggered. The spear spun, arced
downward, and buried itself straight through the skull. The rusted
blade-hands twitched once. Then nothing. Zack couldn’t move.
Couldn’t speak. Could only watch as the last zombie—the
golden-masked one—made its final charge.The spear whistled
through the air. One stroke straight through the eye socket.The
body dropped. Silence. Smoke curled from the wounds. Blood pooled in
the cracks of the pavement. The scent of burnt meat and death clung
to the air. Zack barely noticed when his knees gave out. He hit
the ground, hands trembling, staring up at the figure standing among
the corpses. 


The
man stood still for a moment, then turned toward him. A voice, low
and steady:
"You hurt?"
Zack
swallowed hard, shook his head. "No. No, I—" His voice
cracked. He cleared his throat. "I’m okay."
The
man nodded, stepping closer. The spear in his hand still
dripped.
"What were you doing out here?"
Zack
exhaled, running a shaky hand through his hair. His fingers came back
sticky with sweat and blood. "We were hunting. For
zombies."
The man tilted his head slightly.
"Why?"
Zack licked his lips. "To sell them.
Rich people buy them for the NZFL."
A pause. The
spear rested on the man's shoulder.
"NZFL?"
Zack
forced himself to breathe slower, his pulse still hammering in his
ears. "National Zombie Fighting League." He swallowed
again. "They capture the strongest ones. Modify them. Use them
for bloodsport. It’s huge. Billion-dollar industry."The
man watched him. Expression unreadable."How much do they
pay you?"Zack hesitated. "Not much. A few thousand
per head, depending on quality."The man was quiet for a
moment. Then, his voice came slow, deliberate. "How much does
the winner get?"Zack’s throat felt dry. He wiped at his
face again. "Forty million. That’s the grand prize."Another
pause. The wind shifted, carrying the stench of burnt flesh and
blood.Zack hesitated, then swallowed hard. "Who—who are
you?"The man turned slightly."Rask."The
name landed heavy. Simple. Final.Rask watched him for a moment
longer. "Do you know the way back?"Zack blinked.
"Yeah. Yeah, I know."Rask nodded once. "Then
go."And with that, he turned, stepping over the bodies,
into the fog.Zack sat there, breath unsteady, staring after
him.







***







The
city bled neon.Slick lights smeared across rain-soaked streets,
the colors bending and twisting over potholes, over shattered glass,
over the bodies huddled beneath broken awnings. The storm hit in
thick, black sheets, a constant downpour against steel and
concrete.From the twelfth-floor balcony, it was just an endless
sprawl of crimson brake lights, flickering billboards, high-rise
slums stacked so close together they looked like tumors growing on
top of each other.The smell of burnt plastic and oil. The
distant hum of sirens. The wet clatter of rain against rusted
metal.William leaned against the railing, staring out at it
all. Arms crossed, shoulders tense. His fingers tapped absently
against his sleeve, the old cybernetic in his left wrist clicking
faintly—cheap black-market parts, barely functional.Rask
stood next to him, leaning against the balcony’s support beam. He
had one boot propped up against the wall, arms relaxed, watching the
world rot below them.The conversation had already
started."You’d pose as a zombie?" William’s voice
was low, steady.Rask exhaled. "My blood would probably
confirm it."William turned his head slightly, studying his
father. His jaw tightened. "Just because you were bitten doesn’t
mean you’re fully infected."Rask said nothing. Just held
out his hand. Turned his palm over. Let the light catch against the
skin.It was worse under the glow. The flesh was paler in
patches. Not gray, not black, but not right either. Veins looked too
dark, too sluggish. The knuckles were stiff, but the fingers—too
fast. Too precise. Too strong.William exhaled through his nose.
"Yeah. Since the attack, I noticed. Maybe you’ve got some kind
of immunity."Rask flexed his fingers once, testing the
joints. His voice was flat. "Why do you think I’m this
strong?"William frowned. "Because you were—"
he stopped. Exhaled. "Because you were fucking Tier-One Spec
Ops, Dad. One of the best. I don’t know, maybe your body
just—"Rask cut him off. "William." His voice
was calm, but heavy. "You know my strength and speed have gone
beyond what's possible."A pause. Rain ticked against the
rusted railing. William looked away, down at the streets below. A
drone buzzed past, red scanning lights flickering over a corpse
slumped in an alley. It didn’t stop. Nobody stopped for the dead
anymore.William exhaled. "And you want to fight in this
tournament? Pretend to be one of them? To help me?" His voice
was quieter now.Rask nodded once. "Better to die being
useful than to turn in slow motion."William’s throat
bobbed. His cybernetic hand clenched."Forty million
dollars," Rask continued. "Enough for you to take care of
your family."The words settled between them, heavy, final.
William dragged a hand through his damp hair, fingers raking against
his scalp. The distant glow of a malfunctioning holographic billboard
flickered in and out, painting his face in broken reds and blues. He
laughed, but it wasn’t real. Just a short breath."Jesus
Christ, Dad."Rask said nothing. The rain kept falling.


The
wind howled through the gaps in the walls. The apartment wasn’t
much. Cramped. Cracked concrete. A single flickering light in the
kitchen. The window by the bed had been sealed with a plastic tarp,
the real glass stolen months ago and never replaced.Most of the
furniture was salvaged junk. A couch missing one leg, propped up on
an old toolbox. A table covered in cheap takeout containers and empty
stim packets. The floor—cold metal, exposed wiring, damp in spots
from a leak no one would fix.A low, broken holo-screen buzzed
in the corner, muted ads glitching in and out. Women selling
cybernetic augmentations. Children with chrome spines playing in
artificial playgrounds. A news ticker looping the same warnings about
biohazard zones and drone-enforced curfews.On the balcony, the
rain came down in sheets, turning the city into a haze of neon smears
and wet concrete.Rask watched his son carefully."You'll
be able to save her." His voice was even. Steady. "You
won’t have to worry about anything for the rest of your
lives."William exhaled sharply, rubbing a hand down his
face. His cybernetic fingers clicked against his cheek."Yeah,"
he muttered. "But you’re gonna die."Rask snapped.
"You’d rather have a father who’s dead-alive?"William
hesitated. Then—a smirk."I don’t know. Could I use you
to win more championships?"Rask grunted. "Don’t be
greedy."A moment of silence.Then—both of them
laughed.The kind of laugh that felt out of place in a city like
this. Like it wasn’t supposed to happen here. Like it was borrowed
from somewhere better.William shook his head, sighing. His
breath fogged in the cold air. "Alright. We need a plan. I’ll
start looking into the process. We’ll need to figure out how to get
you in, what paperwork they’ll want. I think I know someone who can
make you look kinda legit." He frowned, glancing at Rask’s
face. "We’ll need to customize you. At least your face. Can’t
have people noticing you’re not fully turned yet."Rask
rolled his shoulders. "I can fight without a face."
"Yeah,
but they might not let you enter without the right… look. People
pay for the show."Rask just nodded.William
stretched, flexing his fingers, thinking. "I’ll also get a
home test kit. Just to be sure."Rask tilted his head
slightly. "You don’t think my blood will register?"William
shrugged. "Maybe it will. Maybe it won’t. But I’d rather we
find out here than at registration."The storm rolled on,
rain tapping against the rusted railing. Down below, a corpse lay
half-hidden under a collapsed neon sign, its glow still flickering
against wet pavement. A drone hovered past. Ignored it.Yup,
nobody stopped for the dead anymore.


The
door creaked. A small voice. Soft. Thin. Barely heard above the
rain."Grandpa?"William and Rask both turned.
She stood in the doorway to the balcony—small hands gripping the
frame, the glow of the city throwing long shadows across her frail
figure. The cold wind tugged at the loose sleeves of her too-big
shirt. Her bare feet pressed against the metal floor, toes curled
slightly, like she was always bracing against a chill.Her head
was smooth. No hair. No fuzz. Just pale, almost translucent skin
stretched over a delicate skull. Too delicate. She wasn’t
shivering, but she should’ve been. Her breathing was slow, too
controlled for a child her age. She stood a little too still. Moved a
little too carefully.But she smiled. Not wide, not bright, but
real. And in her hand, she clutched a toy. A plastic figure,
stiff-jointed, its head molded from stark white material—like
bleached bone, or something trying to look like it. The long beard
and hair were sculpted from the same hard plastic, frozen in place,
rigid. A red cross sat in the center of the face. No eyes. No mouth.
Just the symbol. The body was covered in gold. Not real gold—cheap
plastic, factory-painted metallic. The kind that chipped at the edges
after a few months, revealing the dull gray underneath. The arms were
stretched out in a T-pose, palms open. It was a zombie. One of the
most famous to ever fight in the NZFL.William exhaled through
his nose. Then smirked."Hey, you brought J Killer C with
you."The girl nodded. "J Killer C."She
held the figure against her chest, hugging it absently, fingers too
thin around its stiff plastic frame. Rask watched her. His face
didn’t change, but his shoulders shifted slightly, like something
tightened in his back.William cleared his throat. "Hey,
sweetheart. Shouldn’t you be sleeping?"She blinked up at
him. Then at Rask."Are you gonna be the champion?"The
rain ticked against the railing.Rask said nothing.William
sighed. "Who let you stay up this late, huh?"The girl
ignored him, stepping closer, holding up the toy."J Killer
C never lost," she said matter-of-factly. "He was the
best."William forced a chuckle. "That’s what they
say."She looked at Rask, waiting. The kind of patient,
expectant silence only kids can pull off. Rask didn’t look
away.Finally, he said, "J Killer C was never alive to
begin with."The girl tilted her head, like she was
thinking it over. Then frowned. "That doesn’t matter."William
sighed, rubbing a hand over his face. "Sweetheart—"She
turned back to Rask. "If you win, will they make a toy of you
too?"Rask blinked.


William
coughed. "Alright, come on. Back to bed."She didn’t
move. Just hugged the J Killer C toy closer.William hesitated,
then crouched to her level, dropping his voice. "Hey. If Grandpa
fights, he needs to rest too. That means you gotta rest, okay?"She
pouted. Then yawned, like her body had been waiting for
permission.William smiled. "I’ll tuck you in."She
looked at Rask one more time. Then nodded. William scooped her up
easily, carrying her inside. The J Killer C figure dangled from her
fingers, arms still open, still waiting.Rask stayed on the
balcony. He could still hear the city breathing. Somewhere, deep in
the sprawl, someone was still betting on the dead.The rain kept
falling.The city breathed below him. A lung full of rust and
exhaust, exhaling smoke through neon-streaked streets, through
alleyways lined with sleeping bodies. A million lives stacked on top
of each other, none of them ever looking down.Rask sat on the
edge of the balcony, elbows on his knees, hands loose between them.
Rain slid down his arms, his knuckles, his fingers. He flexed them,
slow. Made a fist. Released. Again. The strength was still there.
More than ever. His eyes drifted to the railing. Steel, old and
corroded at the bolts. A thing meant to keep people from falling.
Rask set his grip around one of the bars. Squeezed. The metal
groaned. He pressed harder, slow, steady, feeling the give, the
slight resistance before—


A
snap. The steel crushed in his palm like cheap plastic. Warped and
twisted, veins of rain cutting over its bent frame. Rask watched it
for a moment. Then let the mangled piece drop. It clattered
onto the balcony floor, bouncing once before rolling to a stop
against the wall. He rolled his shoulders. Stretched his neck until
he felt the pop. Stood. The rain blurred the city into colors
and shadows, light bleeding into the gutters, sirens humming
somewhere distant. What was he now?His nervous system still
felt like his own. But his body? He exhaled, testing the air. No
hunger, no sickness. Just something else. Something waiting. Maybe
William was right. Maybe it was immunity. Maybe it was something
worse. Either way, it wouldn’t matter soon.He turned back
toward the apartment. Time to move forward.


The
rain kept falling. Rask turned, stepping inside, leaving the city
behind him. Water dripped from his sleeves, from the edges of his
fingers, hitting the floor in soft, uneven taps.The apartment
was dim, lit only by the blue static hum of the holo-screen in the
corner. The flickering light made the walls look more cracked than
they were, made the shadows stretch longer than they should.William
reappeared from the hallway, running a hand through his damp hair. He
moved slower now, the tension drained out of his shoulders, his steps
lighter."She’s asleep," he muttered.Rask said
nothing. Just nodded.William sighed, rolling out his wrist,
cybernetics clicking faintly. "She didn’t wanna let go of that
damn toy. Had a death grip on it. You’d think she was holding onto
gold."Rask dried his hands against his pants. "Might
as well be."William snorted. "Yeah, well. They sell
those things like crazy. Full lines outside the toy shops every time
a new champ gets a model." He shook his head, staring at the
flickering screen in the corner. "Kids growing up with zombies
as action figures. Never thought I’d see that shit."Rask
moved toward the kitchen, grabbing an old rag from the counter. Dried
it over his face, then tossed it aside. "A corpse makes for an
easy role model. Never complains. Never talks back."William
huffed, shaking his head. "Yeah, well, let’s hope she doesn’t
start asking for zombie-themed birthday parties next year." He
exhaled, rubbing a hand down his face. His fingers lingered against
his temple, pressing lightly. The cybernetics in his wrist clicked
softly. "She really thinks you’re gonna be the next J Killer
C, you know?"Rask didn’t respond. Just ran a hand over
the stubble along his jaw.William crossed his arms, leaning
back against the table. His gaze flicked toward the crushed balcony
railing, lingering for a beat before he looked back at Rask."You
okay?"Rask just stared at him. "You ever ask me that
before?"William smirked. "Nope.""Then
don’t start now."A beat. Then William shook his head,
laughing under his breath. "Jesus. You never change." He
tapped the edge of the table. "Alright, then. Let’s move
forward."Rask glanced at the screen. "What’s
that?"William leaned forward, tapping the cracked
holo-screen to bring it back to life. A news ticker ran along the
bottom, flashing one of the top headlines:"Next of Kin
Deceased Transfer – New Regulation Changes for Zombie
Fighters"William raised an eyebrow. "Looks like the
government's doing their usual shit. Got more rules to pass if we’re
gonna get you officially ‘dead.’"Rask tilted his head,
watching the flashing text. "How do we make it
official?""Simple," William replied, his voice
quiet. "I’ve gotta make sure they see you as completely gone,
so they’ll transfer ownership. Right now, you’re still alive on
paper." He flicked his wrist, pulling up another feed. A list of
forms popped up on the screen. "This one’s the kicker. It's
called a Deceased Relative Ownership Transfer Form."Rask
crossed his arms, his gaze fixed on the screen. "What’s the
catch?"William scrolled through the digital document. "No
catch. But it's tricky. I’ll have to submit it with a fake cause of
death—something that doesn’t raise any flags. You know, like,
‘caught in an accident’ or ‘missing in action.’ The usual
government bullshit."Rask’s eyes narrowed. "And
what happens if they investigate?""They won't. Not
unless something’s off," William replied. "They just want
a corpse. They don’t care how we get it. They’re not gonna ask
questions unless we slip up."The air seemed to thicken
between them, a quiet tension settling. Rask ran a hand through his
hair, still processing. He’d always known what he was getting into.
But now, hearing it all laid out like this—he felt the weight of
it.A man. A father. A corpse.He stood there for a moment,
trying to absorb it, before shifting his gaze back to William. "And
once I’m ‘dead’ in their eyes?"William turned back
to the holo-screen, his fingers tapping over the interface. "Then
you’re officially a fighter. A piece of property. Legally, nothing
more than a dead man walking." He sighed. "But in that
world? That’s your ticket to the money."Rask’s jaw
clenched, his thoughts swirling.William looked at him, studying
his face for any sign of doubt. "This is what we’re doing,
Dad. If we’re gonna play the game, we do it right. That money?
Forty million." He shrugged. "It’s a chance to fix
everything. A one-time shot."Rask shook his head slowly, a
humorless smile tugging at the corner of his lips. "Yeah. Fix
everything. In a world that’s already rotting."William
exhaled, glancing out the window toward the sprawling city. The
flickering lights from the distant high-rises felt distant, almost
like another world."We all got our parts to play,"
William said, voice low. "You’re the one who decided to get
into this."Rask didn’t answer. He stepped back from the
screen, eyes scanning the dark apartment. The rain outside had
softened, but it still felt like everything around him was
drowned."I’ll handle the paperwork," William
continued, standing up. "Get it done tomorrow. Once we submit
it, everything falls into place."He paused, a serious look
crossing his face. "But just know, once we start, there’s no
turning back."Rask nodded once, silent. His hand
instinctively reached out to the edge of the table, steadying
himself. Everything felt like it was slipping further into chaos, yet
still, he moved forward. What else was there to do?"Let’s
make it count," Rask muttered, his voice barely above a whisper.


Then
William sighed, tilting his head toward Rask. "You ever think
about how fucked up this is?"Rask didn’t answer.William
let out a dry laugh, shaking his head. "I mean—what kind of
world even lets this be a thing? Signing your own dad over as a
goddamn corpse just so he can get punched to death for a prize
pool?"Rask exhaled through his nose. Scoffed. "The
law says I gotta be dead before I’m allowed to get my ass beat for
sport. Makes sense."William gave a humorless smirk. "Yeah,
well. People tried entering themselves voluntarily at first. Broke
assholes willing to officially die just to get a shot at the money.
Government shut that shit down fast. Can’t have living people
signing up to be property."Rask huffed, running a hand
down his face. He flexed his fingers again, feeling the faint tension
in the joints, the lingering, unnatural strength beneath the surface.
He stared at his palm, the skin paling in patches, veins still
sluggish.Already dead on paper. Maybe already dead in truth.


William
tapped the corner of the holo-screen, the cracks running jagged
across the display like spiderwebs. The flickering blue hum wavered
for a second before stabilizing, and then the feed refreshed. The
NZFL logo glitched across the screen—bold, blood-red letters
against a dark backdrop. The broadcast kicked in mid-segment."—AND
DOWN HE GOES! That’s another knockout, folks! The crowd is losing
their minds!"The footage cut to a wide shot of the
stadium—a colossal, neon-lit coliseum packed with thousands of
screaming fans. Spotlights raked across the pit floor, illuminating
the carnage.A fighter-zombie lay sprawled on the ground, its
cybernetic limbs twitching, fluids leaking from a massive crater
where its face used to be. Across from it, the victor—a monstrous,
custom-made behemoth—lifted both arms in triumph. It was a
grotesque masterpiece of wealth and cruelty: a towering, bio-enhanced
corpse reinforced with thick exoskeletal plating, metal spikes
jutting from its shoulders like a living war machine. Its skull had
been modified into a gleaming chrome death mask, expression frozen in
an eternal, twisted grin.The commentators’ voices overlapped,
electric with excitement."This is why he’s the reigning
champ, ladies and gentlemen! Give it up for KRAKEN!"The
camera zoomed in on Kraken, its cybernetic mouth opening to let out a
deep, synthesized roar. It was barely human anymore—just a vessel
for violence, a trophy of the absurd sport that kept the world
entertained.William exhaled, shaking his head.Rask
watched over his shoulder, arms crossed. "People actually pay to
watch this shit?"William scoffed. "They don’t just
pay. They worship it."The screen cut to a row of VIP
seats, high above the pit. A group of executives in sleek suits
clinked glasses, toasting to the carnage below. Their smiles were too
white, too perfect. The rich ones. The owners. The ones who never got
their hands dirty.The segment continued, showing slow-motion
replays of Kraken’s latest kill. The defeated zombie had been a
former champion—now just another highlight in an endless reel of
destruction. The final blow played in excruciating detail: Kraken
lunging forward, its clawed hand punching straight through its
opponent’s reinforced chest plate, gripping the spinal column, then
yanking. The crowd roared as the corpse collapsed in pieces.A
neon overlay splashed across the screen."KRAKEN REMAINS
UNDEFEATED. CURRENT ODDS FOR CHALLENGERS: 120 TO 1."William
let out a dry laugh. "Yeah, no shit."Rask said
nothing. Just kept watching as the next segment rolled in—a
behind-the-scenes feature. A glimpse into the NZFL’s creation
process.The footage cut to a high-tech lab, glossy white floors
reflecting the overhead surgical lights. Technicians in sterile suits
adjusted dials, tapped at holo-screens, fine-tuned the implants being
fused into dead flesh. Rows of motionless fighters stood upright in
containment pods, blank eyes staring, muscles twitching under
artificial stimulation.A voiceover played."At
NeuroTech, we push the limits of what’s possible. Every year, our
fighters grow stronger, faster—ensuring the most exhilarating
matches for our loyal fans. Through cutting-edge bio-cybernetic
enhancements and the latest in neuromuscular stimulation, we create
warriors capable of surviving even the most brutal encounters.
Because at NZFL…"The screen glitched, cutting to a
close-up of one of the zombies in mid-surgery. Its eyes were open. It
was awake.The voiceover continued."—we don’t
just build fighters. We build legends."Rask exhaled
sharply. "That’s a hell of a sales pitch."William
clenched his jaw. "Yeah. And you’re about to step into that
meat grinder."


The
news feed faded back to the studio—two well-dressed hosts sitting
in a sleek, high-tech newsroom. One of them leaned forward, eyes
gleaming."And speaking of new legends—up next, we break
down the Top Five Challengers lined up for next season. Could we
finally see someone take down Kraken? Stay tuned."The feed
glitched, then cut to commercial.William ran a hand down his
face, sighing. "Well. No pressure, huh?"Rask just
stared at the screen, expression unreadable. The glow of the
holo-cast reflected in his eyes—just more ghosts in a city already
filled with them.


The
holo-screen flickered again, the next segment loading. The smooth,
artificial voice of a news anchor filled the apartment, cutting
through the low hum of the rain."While the NZFL remains
the premier destination for sanctioned undead combat, authorities
continue to crack down on the growing black market of illegal fight
rings. Despite increased security measures and stricter licensing
requirements, the underground industry remains alive and well—both
here and abroad."The screen shifted to a shaky drone
feed—grainy night-vision footage of a warehouse, its interior
barely visible through the thick plumes of smoke rising from what had
once been a fighting pit. Bodies littered the ground. Some whole.
Some torn apart. The feed zoomed in on a motionless zombie, its torso
cracked open, ribs peeled back like a broken cage. Its head twitched,
mouth opening and closing in small, mindless gasps. It wasn’t fully
dead yet."Officials believe this particular ring was
responsible for smuggling and modifying dozens of stolen combat
units, many of which were never recovered. Their exact origins remain
unknown, though authorities suspect international trafficking may be
at play."William exhaled through his nose. "You see
this shit?"Rask said nothing, watching as the footage
switched to a different angle—crowds of people scattering in the
dark, neon masks and cheap cybernetics catching the glow of police
drones sweeping overhead. A voice in the background yelled something
indistinct before the feed cut out."Despite growing
concern, the public demand for these unsanctioned fights continues to
rise. Officials warn that without proper oversight, the risks of
underground matches far outweigh their entertainment value."Rask
smirked. "Sounds like bad press for the competition."William
scoffed. "Yeah, no shit." He rubbed a hand down his face,
then turned to Rask. "What, you thinking of joining one of these
fucking things?"Rask shrugged. "Try an underground
fight first. Get a feel for it."William exhaled, dragging
a hand through his hair. "But you’ve fought them before. Hell,
you’ve been out there killing these things for years. What’s
different now?"Rask tilted his head slightly. "I’ve
been fighting to survive. That’s not the same as fighting to put on
a show."William narrowed his eyes. "You think they
care about ‘showmanship’ in a meat locker full of gamblers?"Rask
shrugged. "Doesn’t matter if they care or not. What matters is
reading the crowd. NZFL isn’t just about killing—it's about
making them want to watch. The more they want to watch, the more bets
roll in. The more bets roll in, the more valuable you are. That’s
what keeps you alive."William scoffed. "So you’re
not testing if you can fight. You’re testing if you can sell
it."Rask nodded. "Exactly."William let out
a breath, rubbing his temples. "And you think the government
really gives a shit about this? You’ve seen NZFL matches. They’re
just as bad.""Not the same," Rask said, shaking
his head. "NZFL is controlled. Branded. The owners profit off
every body that drops in that ring. Illegal fights cut into that. No
house take, no sponsorships, no corporate oversight—just raw
betting money moving where they can’t skim off the top."William
clenched his jaw. "So all this ‘moral outrage’ about
underground fights?""Just them protecting their
investment," Rask muttered. "They don’t give a damn about
safety. They give a damn about losing control."William let
out a dry laugh. "Goddamn racket."Rask leaned against
the table, stretching his hands. The strength was still there,
sitting under his skin like a coiled wire. "Yeah. And I’m
about to buy in."







***







The
rain had stopped by the time they reached the shop.It wasn’t
much to look at. One of those half-legal, half-condemned spots wedged
between two neon-lit liquor depots, its front shutter covered in old
graffiti tags and half-ripped posters for fights that had already
come and gone. The kind of place that didn’t exist on a map but had
a line out the door when the right people needed something done. The
sign overhead blinked weakly, a dead pixel cutting through the middle
of the name.MENDES MODS.William glanced at Rask. “You
sure about this?”Rask exhaled. “Stop asking me. I’m doing
this for you. For my granddaughter. Especially for my
granddaughter.”William raised an eyebrow. “Dad, you never
learned when to shut up, did you? ‘For you and my granddaughter’
almost got to me—”Rask cut him off. “I’m
hyperhonest.”William smirked. “Yeah, I know.”


Inside,
the air was heavy with sweat and solder fumes. The whole place reeked
of burnt plastic and hot metal, the way all good underground mod
shops did. The walls were covered in old bio-augment schematics,
printed blueprints curling at the edges from years of neglect. A
single ceiling fan rattled overhead, barely pushing the heat
around.Mendes sat behind the counter, arms crossed, a cigarette
burning between his fingers. His left eye had been swapped for a
bulky, outdated optic implant—probably military surplus from a war
nobody talked about anymore. The cybernetic was too big for his face,
protruding slightly from the socket, wires snaking down into his
cheekbone. He looked like he’d been built in pieces, and not by
choice.When he saw William, his lip curled. “The fuck do you
want?”William grinned. “Good to see you too, buddy.”Mendes
took a slow drag, exhaling through his nose. “I don’t do charity
work.”William gestured to Rask. “Yeah, yeah. That’s why
we brought cash.”Mendes finally gave Rask a once-over.
Squinted. Tilted his head.“You looking for
augments?”“No.”Mendes narrowed his good eye. “Then
what?”William tapped the counter. “I need you to make him
look like a dead fighter. Cover his face, full modifications.
Everything.”Mendes’ expression darkened slightly.
“Underground fights?”Rask’s voice was flat. “Something
like that.”Mendes leaned back, cracking his neck. “Yeah,
sure. You want ‘em to think he’s been dead for years, or you want
the premium ‘fresh kill’ look?”William crossed his arms.
“He needs to... pass for NZFL.”Mendes snorted. “Yeah, no
shit. You think I’m stupid?” He flicked his cigarette into a
nearby tray. “A guy like him walks in asking for full corpse mods,
and you expect me to believe it’s just for some back-alley blood
pit? Get the fuck outta here.”William shrugged. “Does it
matter?”Mendes smirked. “Only if you want it done
right.”He looked at Rask again, his head tilting slightly,
taking in the unnatural paleness, the stiff edges of his movements.
“Skin tone’s already off. You got some kind of blood
condition?”“Something like that.”Mendes exhaled.
“Lucky you. Less work for me.” He tapped his temple. “We’ll
have to do a layer peel. Get you looking a little more sunken, more
post-mortem. No deep augments, but I can hit you with subdermal
pigmentation, drop your temperature a few degrees. I can dull your
pupils, tweak your muscle rigidity—make it look like rigor mortis
is still wearing off.”William nodded. “But we need full
face coverage. Can’t have people noticing he’s still got too much
expression.”Mendes snorted. “So, classic full-mask? You
want old-school gladiator or something more cyber?”“Something
that makes people think twice before stepping in the ring with
him.”Mendes grinned. “Yeah, I got just the thing.”He
cracked his knuckles, then frowned. “Disguising the blood is the
real problem. NZFL does blood tests. What I got? It’s gotta be
continuously resubstituted.”William exhaled. “That’s a
bitch.”Rask just nodded, playing along, but knowing full well
he wouldn’t need it.Mendes stretched his arms, rolling his
shoulders. “Alright. I can do it. Might take a few hours. You got
somewhere to be?”William smirked. “Not unless you’re
planning on killing us.”Mendes grinned, flashing silver
teeth. “Not today.” He gestured toward the back room.


“Come
on, big guy. Let’s get you looking like a corpse.”Rask
followed, stepping through the door, into the dark.


The
back room was a mess.Cables ran across the floor like veins,
spilling out from old machinery held together with electrical tape
and sheer willpower. The air was thick with the smell of hot metal,
disinfectant, and something more chemical—burnt synthetic flesh,
maybe. The walls were covered in makeshift shelves stacked with
bio-mod parts: old cybernetic arms, replacement lenses, dermal
plating panels that still had dried blood on them from whoever had
them last.Mendes gestured toward a rusted, leather-padded chair
in the center of the room. It looked like a cross between a dentist's
chair and an execution seat. Straps dangled loosely from the
armrests.“Sit.”Rask didn’t hesitate. He lowered
himself into the chair, the padding groaning under his weight. Mendes
adjusted a few settings on the control panel next to him, the ancient
interface flickering with green text.“You’re in luck,”
Mendes muttered. “Most of this work is skin-deep. No limb
replacements, no neural augmentation. That means less downtime. But
it’s still gonna hurt like hell.”Rask exhaled through his
nose. “Just get it done.”Mendes grinned. “Yeah, you’re
the kind of guy who doesn’t scream, aren’t you? Let’s test that
theory.”He snapped on a pair of heavy rubber gloves and
grabbed a syringe the size of a small knife. The liquid inside was
black—not quite oil, not quite ink. It shimmered slightly under the
fluorescent light.“This,” Mendes explained, holding it up,
“is gonna make you look nice and rotten. We’re killing your
circulation—temporarily. It’s a synthetic blood thinner that
sinks into the tissue, makes you look like you’ve been dead for a
couple of days. Your veins are gonna turn black, your skin’s gonna
go pale, and best of all—” he tapped the side of the syringe,
watching the liquid slosh—“it’s gonna burn.”Rask didn’t
flinch. Mendes grinned and jammed the needle straight into his
neck.The burn started immediately, spreading out like liquid
fire under his skin. It moved fast—crawling through his veins,
twisting through his arms, his chest, his legs. The pain was sharp at
first, then deep, an aching rot that settled in his muscles like they
were turning into dried-out husks. His fingers twitched
involuntarily.William watched from the corner, arms
crossed.“Jesus,” he muttered.Rask exhaled, slow.
“That all you got?”Mendes chuckled. “Cocky bastard.”He
grabbed a scalpel.“Next up—layer peel.”Mendes
adjusted the chair, tilting Rask back. He worked fast, slicing the
surface of the skin across Rask’s forehead, his cheekbones, the
sides of his neck. The blade barely broke the surface, but when
Mendes peeled, the skin lifted in delicate sheets. Not deep enough to
scar, just enough to roughen, to give it that uneven, half-decayed
texture. The synthetic blood treatment helped—already, the peeled
areas were turning sickly pale, patches of deep black veins showing
through.Mendes clicked his tongue. “Looking deader by the
second.”The real pain started when he pulled out the
cauterizer. It looked like a welding tool—small, handheld, glowing
at the tip. He pressed it to the edges of the peeled skin, sealing it
with a thin layer of synthetic reinforcement. Every touch sent a
white-hot shock of agony racing through Rask’s skull. The smell of
burning flesh filled the room. Still, he didn’t move.Mendes
whistled. “Man, you’re a tough bastard.”William shook his
head. “You have no idea.”Mendes grabbed a set of metal
clamps, twisting them between his fingers. “Alright. Time to mess
with your eyes.”He pried Rask’s eyelids open and inserted
two thin, cold strips of film directly onto his sclera. They
dissolved instantly, seeping into the whites of his eyes.“You’re
gonna love this part,” Mendes muttered. “This stuff fogs out your
pupils—makes ‘em look half-clouded, like a real corpse. But,
bonus feature—it enhances low-light vision. You’ll see better in
the dark.”Rask blinked as the effect kicked in. His vision
shifted, sharpening at the edges. The light in the room dimmed
slightly, but he could still make out every detail.“Better?”
Mendes asked.Rask nodded once.Mendes cracked his
knuckles. “Alright, now for the real fun—let’s get your body
moving like a corpse.”He pulled out a set of metallic
implants the size of quarters. “Subdermal actuators,” he
explained. “We install these along key muscle groups, and they add
just the right amount of stiffness to your movement. Not enough to
slow you down, but enough to make it look like rigor mortis is still
wearing off. You’ll have to adjust your gait, though—stiff at
first, loose when you’re fighting. Otherwise, you’ll look too
alive.”He pressed the first implant into the side of Rask’s
shoulder. The metal clamps dug in, locking beneath the muscle.The
pain was electric—sharp, immediate. Mendes wasn’t using
anesthetic. He moved down Rask’s arms, embedding the actuators in
key joints—elbows, wrists, the base of the spine. Each one sent
another bolt of agony through his system, but Rask remained
still.Mendes stepped back. “Alright, big guy. Move your arm.”


Rask
lifted his arm. The stiffness was there—a subtle delay, a slight
resistance, like his body was moving just a fraction of a second too
late.Mendes watched, nodding in approval. "Good. That
lag’s just enough for the entry test," he explained, rolling
his shoulders. "NZFL makes all new fighters go through motion
scans when they first sign up. They wanna see if the body's fresh—how
stiff, how decayed. This little trick makes you look like you just
turned. Once you’re in, you can move however the hell you
want."William exhaled. "So, first fight, we keep it
stiff. Then we loosen up.""Exactly," Mendes
said, cracking his knuckles. "You fight too smooth at sign-up,
they’ll start asking questions. But if you fight too stiff in the
ring, you’re dead. Find the balance."He stepped back and
grabbed the final piece—the mask.It was metallic, a deep,
burned red, its surface smooth but sculpted with sharp, exaggerated
ridges, almost organic in the way it curved around the face. The brow
jutted forward slightly, shadowing the already hollowed-out eye
slits. The mouthpiece was expressionless, its edges contoured like
something meant to intimidate, something meant to resemble a face
that wasn’t human, but wasn’t fully a beast either. The design
wasn’t just armor—it was a statement.Mendes held it up. "I
don’t do subtle."He fit it onto Rask’s face, locking
it into place with a sharp metallic click. The red gleamed under the
overhead lights, the polished sheen of the mask contrasting against
the rough, corpse-like texture Mendes had worked into his
skin.William’s expression tightened. "Jesus."Mendes
let out a breath, wiping his hands on a rag. "Well. Hope you
don’t get torn apart in your first fight." He leaned against
the counter, arms crossed. "You’re not the first guy to try
and fake it. Some idiot’s always trying to slip past as a fresh
turn, hoping to make it big." His eyes darkened slightly. "They
always die first round."William tensed. "Always?"Mendes
exhaled through his nose. "Let’s just say… sometimes I think
the NZFL lets ‘em pass on purpose. Just for the entertainment
value. Just to watch them get slaughtered."The words
lingered in the air.Rask adjusted his grip, flexing his
fingers, testing the implants again. The pain was still there,
burning under his skin, but it was distant now. Fading.


He
turned to William."Let’s sign me up."







Mendes
rolled his shoulders, lighting another cigarette. "Alright,
listen up. Signing him up is the easy part. Making him look like a
proper zombie fighter under your control? That’s where things get
tricky."William frowned. "I figured once he’s in,
it wouldn’t matter."Mendes shook his head. "Nope.
You’re his ‘master’ now, which means the NZFL expects him to
act like the rest of them—mindless unless they’re in the pit. You
ever seen a zombie outside the ring? They don’t just wander around.
They follow their handlers like trained dogs. They don’t attack
unless commanded. That’s what the neuro-chip does. No independent
thought, no instincts beyond fight mode. Just meat waiting for
orders."William glanced at Rask. "So what do I
do?"Mendes took a drag, then gestured toward Rask. "You’re
gonna need to make it look like you’re in control, even without a
chip. The easiest way? Short, firm commands. No conversation, no
hesitation. You tell him to walk, he walks. Stop, he stops. You don’t
act like his son—you act like his owner."William
swallowed hard. "And how does he know what to do?"Mendes
smirked. "Because you’re gonna teach him." He turned to
Rask. "Time to practice being obedient, big guy."Rask
rolled his shoulders, saying nothing.Mendes gestured to the
other side of the room. "Alright, ‘master,’ tell your
fighter to go stand by that wall."William sighed, rubbing
the back of his neck. Then, stiffly: "Move."Rask took
a slow step forward. He moved a little too naturally at first—his
usual controlled, deliberate movements—but then he caught himself,
adjusting his gait into something more mechanical. Less human.Mendes
clicked his tongue. "Too smooth. You’re still moving like a
man. Give it that slight hesitation. Like your body is only reacting,
not deciding."Rask tried again. This time, he inserted a
small, unnatural delay after the command. Just a half-second pause
before his body obeyed, just enough to mimic the faint resistance of
a brain overridden by programming.Mendes nodded. "Better.
Now stop."William cleared his throat. "Stop."Rask
halted mid-step. Too clean. Too controlled.Mendes shook his
head. "No, no. Don’t stop like a person. Stagger a little.
Like your body just got its wires cut off."Rask adjusted,
adding a small hitch to his step before stopping completely. Mendes
grinned. "That’s it. That’s how they move when they’re not
fighting. Looks right."William exhaled. "Jesus. This
is insane."Mendes shrugged. "You think that’s bad?
Wait ‘til you have to walk him through the NZFL entrance like this.
Everyone’s watching. If you slip up, if he moves too human—game
over. They’ll scan his blood, find out he’s still got brain
function, and you’ll both be kicked out, maybe in a body
bag."William clenched his jaw. "Why not just control
him with a tablet? Press some buttons like the actual handlers
do?"Mendes exhaled a thin stream of smoke, shaking his
head. "You do that when he’s in the arena and you need him to
come to you. But when he’s walking right next to you? Way more
practical to use voice commands. Less obvious. Less delay. The big
guys running this shit don’t want handlers fumbling with a screen
when they’re just moving their fighters from one place to another.
They expect you to keep him in line with your voice, like the others
do."William ran a hand through his hair. "So I just
keep it simple. Short words. No full sentences. No
hesitations."Mendes nodded. "Exactly. And
remember—when he moves, it should always look like he has to. Not
like he wants to."Rask stayed silent, his expression
unreadable.Mendes smirked. "Alright, let’s keep going.
We’re not done training your pet yet."


Mendes
tapped the edge of the table, thinking. “Alright. The blood test’s
one thing. But the real problem? The NZFL doesn’t just check for
the parasite. Like I said, they scan for brain function. That’s how
they catch fakes.”William stiffened. “Shit.”Mendes
nodded. “Yeah. Your dad’s got a pulse, and worse—he’s still
thinking. That’s a red flag. Even if his blood slides through, if
their neural scan picks up activity, it’s over.”Rask
exhaled slowly. “So how do we fool them?”Mendes leaned
back, flicking ash onto the floor. “Most of the zombies in the
NZFL? They’ve got their frontal lobes burned out. Not completely
gone—just reduced. Enough to erase free will, but keep them
functional. Fight-ready.”William grimaced. “We’re not
frying his brain.”Mendes chuckled. “No shit. But we can
mimic the effect.”He turned toward Rask. “You ever heard of
‘cognitive dampening?’”Rask’s brow furrowed.
“Explain.”Mendes tapped his temple. “Low-level
electroshock. Short pulses. Just enough to slow your brainwaves. Not
enough to knock you out, not enough to turn you into a drooling
idiot—just enough to make the scanners think you’re halfway
gone.”William frowned. “That exists?”“Hell yeah.
Illegal as fuck, but so’s everything else we’re doing. The
black-market body mod scene’s full of it. Some people get it
installed voluntarily—high-end gamblers, corporate stooges who need
to stay ‘calm under pressure.’ Keeps emotions from spiking. Slows
reaction times. On a scanner? Looks just like a recently turned
zombie.”William exhaled. “And you have one of
these?”Mendes grinned. “Probably.”Rask rolled his
shoulders. “How painful?”Mendes shrugged. “That depends.
If we calibrate it right, it’ll just feel like being a little
drunk. Slow. Hazy. But if we overdo it? Head full of static, motor
functions delayed, nausea. You’ll be functional, but fighting’s
gonna feel like moving through mud.”Rask considered this.
“Would I be able to control it?”Mendes nodded. “Yeah.
It’d be linked to a small trigger in your glove or your belt. Flick
it on for inspections, flick it off when you need to fight.”William
crossed his arms. “And if the NZFL decides to test him in the
middle of a match?”Mendes smirked. “Then you make sure the
fight’s over before they get the chance.”Rask exhaled,
rubbing his fingers together. “Do it.”


Mendes
pushed off the table. “Alright. I’ll get the dampener. You focus
on getting used to moving like a dead man.” He turned to William.
“And you? Start practicing your role. If you don’t sell this,
none of it matters.”William gritted his teeth. “I got
it.”Mendes smirked. “Good. Then let’s make your old man a
corpse worth betting on. But we have to talk about my payment...”


Mendes
leaned back against the workbench, arms crossed, watching William as
if deciding how much of a mistake this was. Smoke curled from the
cigarette in his fingers, the ember glowing faintly in the dim
light."I’m not an idiot. Your old man’s already kitted
out, which means the work’s done. And if the work’s done, that
tells me one thing—you sure as hell didn’t pay for it, right?"
Mendes finally said.William’s jaw tightened. "Because
you know I’ll get it."Mendes scoffed, shaking his head.
"Bullshit. You don’t have shit. Even if you scrape together
every favor, every stolen credit, you wouldn’t cover half of what
this costs. Custom work like this? It’s not just slapping metal on
meat. You want him to pass inspection? To walk into NZFL registration
and have them believe it?" Mendes jabbed a finger toward Rask.
"That takes real fucking work. He’s got a shot because of me,
and you kept your mouth shut while I made it happen."William
swallowed. "So what do you want?"Mendes exhaled
smoke, eyeing him. "I don’t do charity, kid. But I do
bet."Silence stretched between them. Rask stayed still.
Watching. Waiting.William clenched his fists. "You want a
cut of the prize money."Mendes smirked. "Damn right I
do. Forty million? If your old man’s crazy enough to do this, I
want my share."


William
exhaled through his nose. "How much?"Mendes tapped
the ash from his cigarette, considering. "Ten percent."William
stared. "Four million?!"Mendes grinned. "Man,
you’re greedy, aren’t you? Thirty-six isn’t enough? I think
it’s a fair amount."William’s fingers twitched at his
sides. His gut told him to argue. His brain told him to shut the fuck
up. Mendes held all the leverage. Without him, Rask wouldn’t even
make it past the front door of the NZFL.Rask broke the silence.
"So you think I can win."Mendes raised an eyebrow. "I
think most guys who try this get their heads torn off before the
first round’s even done." He leaned forward. "You know
how many fighters try to fake being undead? NZFL lets ‘em slip
through all the time. Just to watch them die." His grin widened.
"I think that’s funny."William’s stomach
clenched. "So why bet on us?"Mendes tilted his head.
"Because he’s different. The way he handles pain. I think
there’s something going on you two aren’t telling me about."
He flicked his cigarette toward Rask. "And I wanna see how far
he goes."William looked at Rask. His father said nothing,
face unreadable. His body, already altered, already somewhere between
man and machine, sat still as a corpse.William exhaled.
"Fine."Mendes smirked, holding out his hand. "Then
we got a deal."William hesitated. This was it. If Rask
lost, if he died in the ring, Mendes wouldn’t just laugh it
off—he’d still come collecting. And when men like Mendes came
collecting, they didn’t take excuses.
He shook Mendes’
hand.


"You
heard him," William muttered to Rask. "If you lose, it’s
not just your life on the line."Rask didn’t
turn.William exhaled sharply. "If this guy doesn’t get
his money, I’m the one who pays. And you know how that goes. It
won’t just be me. It’ll be my daughter, too."Rask’s
shoulders tensed.William ran a hand down his face. "You
have to win."Now Rask turned. His face was calm,
unreadable—but something heavy sat behind his eyes."I
know," he said.William’s throat felt dry. "Do
you?"Rask stepped closer, his voice lower, but steady. "I
do."The room was silent except for the hum of the city
outside. Rain against metal.William swallowed. "Thank you,
Dad."







Back
in William’s apartment, the air hung heavy with the aftermath of
what they’d just done. The holo-screen flickered in the corner,
static humming between advertisements for cybernetic enhancements and
news reports about the latest NZFL match. Outside, the rain had
softened to a slow drizzle, neon reflections bleeding across the
cracked pavement below.William dropped onto the couch, running
a hand down his face. “Alright. NZFL registration’s next. That’s
the big one. No second chances if we screw it up.”Rask stood
near the window, stretching his shoulders, rolling his neck. He could
still feel the stiffness Mendes had worked into him—just enough to
make it look real, just enough to sell the illusion.“I need
to fight first,” he said.William frowned. “You mean the
underground rings?”


Rask
nodded.William exhaled sharply. “Jesus, Dad. You just got
through one hell of a procedure, and you already want to jump into a
pit?”Rask turned to face him. “The NZFL isn’t the only
risk. If I can’t sell this in a smaller fight, how the hell am I
supposed to pull it off in front of an entire arena?”William
leaned back against the couch, rubbing the bridge of his nose. “I
get it. But what if it’s a waste? What if you take a hit that costs
you your shot at the real money? Mendes already said the NZFL lets
some fakes slip through just to see them get ripped apart. You don’t
need to go risking yourself for scraps.”Rask smirked, just
slightly. “No. We need practice.” He tilted his head, his tone
almost amused as he looked at William. “Master… and his
well-trained dog.”William scoffed. “Right. You’re loving
this.”Rask shrugged. “Not exactly, but I gotta find
amusement somewhere.”William drummed his fingers against the
armrest. “Alright. Let’s say we do this. You get through a few
rounds, test how well you pass as one of them. Then what?”Rask’s
smirk faded. “Then I start paying Mendes.”William sat up
straighter, frowning. “That I start paying Mendes.”Rask
shook his head. “I suggested this whole thing. If someone owes him,
it’s me.”William clenched his jaw, staring at his father.
“Yeah? And if you get torn apart in the ring, who the hell do you
think he’s coming after?”Rask didn’t answer right away.
His expression was unreadable beneath the metallic sheen of his mask.
But when he finally spoke, his voice was steady. “Then I better not
lose.”William let out a sharp breath, shaking his head.
“Jesus, you make everything sound so damn simple.”Rask
shrugged. “Simple doesn’t mean easy.”


William
pushed himself to his feet. “Fine. Let’s find you a fight.”Rask
nodded once, turning back to the window. The city sprawled before
him—ugly, glowing, alive. Somewhere in that mess, there was a pit
waiting.And he intended to walk in like he belonged.





The
underground venue stank of sweat, stale beer, and something
metallic—blood, oil, maybe both. The air carried a damp weight, a
mixture of body heat and the lingering scent of fights that had ended
but never really left. Flickering neon signs barely lit the cracked
concrete walls, their glow warping in puddles left from a leak no one
had ever bothered to fix. The place had no windows. It wasn’t built
to let anything out. It was built to contain violence. To let it
fester.William shoved the heavy metal door open, stepping
inside with steady confidence. Rask followed, his gait precise,
controlled—but not too controlled. His mask caught the neon light,
a deep, burnished red with sharp ridges sculpted into its surface.
The way the dim glow played off the metal gave it an unsettling
depth—his hollowed-out eye slits swallowed the light, the
mouthpiece stiff, expressionless. It was more than a disguise. It was
a warning. A presence. Something made to be looked at and
feared.William kept his voice low as they moved through the
crowd. “Found this place through a guy who owes me. Took a few
calls, but I got you a fight.”Rask, ever the roleplayer,
didn’t react.William smirked. “Your opponent? Big bastard.
Fat, fights without a shirt, covered in open wounds. Thinks looking
like a rotten slab of meat gives him an edge. His owner’s some
Russian strip club owner—imports dancers, runs a few places on the
east side. Mean son of a bitch.”They passed a group of
handlers leaning against the bar, laughing about something crude.
Nearby, one of the pit workers was using a rusted hook to drag out
the remains of the last fight’s loser—a headless zombie, still
twitching. The thing’s severed head had landed a few feet away, its
jaw snapping mindlessly at the air, still trying to bite something
that wasn’t there. One of the workers booted it toward the side
hatch like a soccer ball. The metal door slammed shut behind it, and
the crowd let out a cheer.William glanced back at Rask. “This
is where I’d normally say ‘keep your head straight,’ but you’re
supposed to be a mindless corpse, so I guess that works in our
favor.”Rask tilted his head, the motion slow,
unnatural—exactly right.William chuckled. “Yeah. Just don’t
make me look bad.”They reached the edge of the pit. The night
was just getting started.
[to be continued...]



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Home by Thiago DesantLet It Happen Here And Now by Thiago DesantSo Near by Thiago Desant
You Can Sleep Now by Thiago DesantWetlands by Thiago DesantWetlands by Thiago Desant
Let It Happen Here And Now by Thiago Desant
You Can Sleep Now by Thiago DesantSierra EP by Thiago Desant
Let It Happen Here And Now by Thiago Desant
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A soul breaking apart,
Each crack a map of the heart
A bloom of broken light,
Shattered just right,
Screaming a symphony
From the wreckage I seem to be
&#60;img width="6144" height="6144" width_o="6144" height_o="6144" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/a286cf18e12228581b1906d30b9e8a9e99148dd33f847cb1cd0334dda9e21f97/IMG_20241222_115711148smll.jpg" data-mid="1390798" border="0" /&#62;
Somewhere in Echo Park
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Yeah... do not buy it

&#60;img width="6144" height="6144" width_o="6144" height_o="6144" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/7bbdcc4b9de905987b30f77e113175191ec00194b69c71c93be045d129ad0e9c/IMG_20241222_115532961_HDR.jpg" data-mid="1390799" border="0" /&#62;&#60;img width="6144" height="6144" width_o="6144" height_o="6144" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/bfe4905dba87300edf35ba0e4bbd318bd713fc35c3e501968cb66e94f5374b24/IMG_20241222_121544136.jpg" data-mid="1390801" border="0" /&#62;
Silver Lake
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Acoustic/Electronic Minimalist Emotional JourneyAcoustic/Electronic Minimalist Emotional Journey by Thiago Desant






Orchestral and Synth-Driven&#38;nbsp; for Drama

Orchestral and Synth-Driven  for Drama by Thiago Desant

Glitchy &#38;amp; Epic Electronic Sci-Fi Action
Glitchy &#38;amp; Epic Electronic Sci-Fi Action by Thiago Desant
Racing Project Snippets by Thiago Desant




Organic Sci-Fi Mystical Drama Soundscapes

Organic Sci-Fi Mystical Drama Soundscapes by Thiago Desant

Futuristic Moods and Electronic Dystopia

Futuristic Moods and Electronic Dystopia by Thiago Desant

Experimental Horror with Electronic Elements

Experimental Horror with Electronic Elements by Thiago Desant

Haunting Memories and Decaying Soundscapes

Haunting Memories and Decaying Soundscapes by Thiago Desant

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TRACKS

1The Galactic Empire by Phantoms VS Fire

2
Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant
3Seeds by Aural Palaces

4
Home by Thiago Desant

5Modern Monsters I &#38;amp; II by Phantoms Vs Fire

6Wetlands by Thiago Desant



7Xylem by Phantoms Vs Fire

8Currents by Phantoms VS Fire

9Modern Monsters I &#38;amp; II by Phantoms Vs Fire

10Currents by Phantoms VS Fire

11Let It Happen Here And Now by Thiago Desant

12Wetlands by Thiago Desant

13Wetlands by Thiago Desant

14Modern Monsters I &#38;amp; II by Phantoms Vs Fire

15Let It Happen Here And Now by Thiago Desant

16Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant

17Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant

18Aural Palaces by Thiago Desant

19Currents by Phantoms VS Fire
20Sierra EP by Thiago Desant
21Currents by Phantoms VS Fire

22Wetlands by Thiago Desant

23You Can Sleep Now by Thiago Desant


24You Can Sleep Now by Phantoms Vs Fire
25Aural Palaces by Thiago Desant
</description>
		
		<excerpt>Tracks:  Scroll down to listen to the tracks  Loading... TRACKS  1The Galactic Empire by Phantoms VS Fire  2 Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant 3Seeds by Aural...</excerpt>

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Thiago Desant is a composer, visual artist, and filmmaker.Film / TV / Video Game work inquiries.
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  Dream Worlds
The God of the Dead
  Blake, Nature and Perception 



&#38;nbsp;Aural Palaces&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp;Vermilion Dandelion






Blake, Nature and Perception


 









&#60;img width="600" height="600" width_o="600" height_o="600" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/12d114cf0f41288f43a15c92dd6e9eecf6c1210e89f9cba515c532e012a235c7/ap01iXb2222.png" data-mid="1372542" border="0" data-scale="11"/&#62;
Aural Palaces - Game Concept

 



Listen to the full album while you read by pressing play here  or enjoy snippets embedded throughout the text.

Aural Palaces by Thiago Desant



"Aural Palaces" is a narrative-driven game about an astronaut, during a mission to explore a distant planet, collides with a mysterious chrome orb and transforms into a swarm of moths, maintaining a vague human shape. The game explores themes of identity, memory, and survival as he navigates a surreal landscape.



&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/9f7d86ecf1d6dc99deb010b8bbbbce4e5aa4f57a6b671ffc9bd2584651f2bf84/01a.jpg" data-mid="1373105" border="0" /&#62;
“The moths arrange themselves in the semblance of a man, a spectral silhouette created from the fragments of the once-living spaceman. In this strange metamorphosis, the astronaut explores the unfamiliar existence of being a collective consciousness of delicate wings and ephemeral whispers. The desert stretches infinitely, and the once-solid boundaries of self dissolve into the intangible dance of moth-like particles.”  


&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/fd6a8770f3b32ba0ac21a03c8fca2132d47fc8d56555491f6065ad00fab3ea73/TheMothMan.gif" data-mid="1372541" border="0" /&#62;


The astronaut, now a mothman, explores an alien desert where realities intersect. He faces challenges and seeks answers about his new existence. The goal is to create an immersive story set in a fantastical environment, focusing on the protagonist's internal perceptions.

Aural Palaces by Thiago Desant


Vision and Inspiration


&#60;img width="1000" height="563" width_o="1000" height_o="563" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/6aac92954c0bf556a29c6973e6c49734659cc7249228639b90b1401de741fdbf/00000_a0.jpg" data-mid="1372523" border="0" /&#62;

“Within, the tumultuous waves do roar,
In my mind, insist that I am an astronaut.
Hypersonic, astronomic flight,
A swift life met its fate.
A gleaming orb emerged before my craft,
Too fast to alter course,
I met it in a clash,
My spacecraft and I transmuted,
Into a fiery cascade.

  




 "A Californian diner, situated in the middle of a desert on an alien planet, surrounded by enormous creatures that have an amusing appearance." &#38;nbsp;Is the Mothman hallucinating? Are you?
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Blending familiar elements with the fantastical, creating an intriguing and dreamy atmosphere. An imaginative and otherworldly environment.




An intersection of realities. Real time dreaming of ghost fauna.
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The fears and hopes of the Mothman take shape as various creatures, each communicating through different languages that the player 'learns' by collecting items in abandoned temples. These manifestations of the Mothman's inner world are both beautiful and haunting, representing the spectrum of his emotions and aspirations. As the player navigates the game, they encounter these creatures in diverse environments, each speaking in a unique dialect or using symbolic gestures. 



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I know I'm not alive, yet somehow, still living.
Defined by the ghosts of repetition, memories anchor me persisting.”

  





The astronaut wonders if his memories are scattered and fragmented within each moth, or if these memories are suspended in the air, in space, in the ether.



He perceives the world encoded through hisses, pops, and the fluttering of tiny wings.











Aural Palaces by Thiago Desant
The gameplay draws inspiration from atmospheric puzzle-platformer games, where the player solves puzzles and navigates through a visually stunning and desolate world.



&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/fcb9f05a87d7170971bf9d5871dce12d00426185a4136a3521d533a376177e28/29.jpg" data-mid="1372514" border="0" /&#62;

 The alien dream flora moves at the same speed as the fauna. Creatures resembling giant mushrooms are present everywhere. 


 

The swarm of moths feeds on particles thrown into the air by these creatures.




Aural Palaces by Thiago Desant
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"Aural Palaces" is an atmospheric puzzle-platformer that explores the existential journey of an astronaut transformed into a swarm of moths after colliding with a mysterious chrome orb.


  



 

People in protective suits can be seen across different realities, generally appearing while controlling large sound emitters and enormous loud 
speakers. The manipulation of these sounds by the player can open portals to other realities.


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An emotionally charged game that emphasizes exploration and an intuitive connection through visuals and music. It evokes introspection and a powerful emotional impact, guiding players through its world using visual cues and a haunting soundtrack to tell a compelling story.


&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/12393ae62d6e573e1fc3ab74f63bbf35d61e1907c2124526ec6fee0fe9904f69/20.jpg" data-mid="1372513" border="0" /&#62;

Players navigate a surreal desert landscape filled with otherworldly creatures and parallel realities, solving puzzles and uncovering the story of their new existence.
  










 Places, people, plants, and animals from different realities seem to interact within this intersection, where various worlds influence each other. The reality this Mothman now perceives appears to be an interface between universes.




Aural Palaces by Thiago Desant
Key Features

Transformation Mechanic: Play as a swarm of moths that can take on different shapes to solve puzzles and navigate the environment.&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/421808aa658511bf59e0dbfb5b8c5fe8e94a089bab8321436a599dedabf2da74/11.jpg" data-mid="1372355" border="0" /&#62;World-Building: Explore a desert landscape with strange flora, mysterious structures, and parallel realities.&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/f1109febc1efca9209295fb7770d36d1b59cbbf02c88855f8bd21cdab7293f7c/21.jpg" data-mid="1372360" border="0" /&#62;Narrative: Uncover the protagonist’s backstory and the implications of his transformation through environmental storytelling and interactive elements.&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/32cde11fb7125568bca006b1ab3ff688f71ac63fb3cf334d68cf4966fc025f19/30.jpg" data-mid="1372512" border="0" /&#62;Sound Design: Experience a rich auditory landscape with an original soundtrack and ambient sounds that enhance the game's atmosphere.&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/8db89b511453fc5979a54ccc2b1bde3cfbf265873f4a8811f84ef102b4803778/25.jpg" data-mid="1372372" border="0" /&#62;Aural Palaces by Thiago Desant



Enormous, harmless monsters attract the attention of people and communicate telepathically with the moths that comprise the Mothman's form. These colossal beings, with their gentle demeanor and captivating presence, draw crowds who are both fascinated and comforted by their size and grace. 



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Despite their intimidating appearance, the monsters exude an aura of peace and benevolence. Through a silent, mental connection, they interact with the multitude of moths that form the Mothman's body, sharing thoughts and information.&#38;nbsp;



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This telepathic bond allows the Mothman to gain unique insights and guidance from these gentle giants. The harmonious relationship between the monsters and the moths highlights the interconnectedness of all creatures within this extraordinary world.


Aural Palaces by Thiago Desant


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In his new form, the astronaut explores his existence as a collective consciousness of delicate wings and whispers. The desert stretches infinitely, and the once-solid boundaries of self dissolve into the intangible dance of moth-like particles.

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Giant monsters composed of plants and sand emerge from the ground, taking shape before the Mothman's eyes. These colossal beings, with bodies interwoven from vines, leaves, and grains of sand, rise slowly, forming intricate and terrifying figures. As they stand tall, their plant-like appendages sway with an eerie grace, and their sand-covered exteriors shimmer under the alien sun. The air crackles with a strange energy as these formidable creatures prepare to confront the Mothman.


Aural Palaces by Thiago Desant

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One of the unique abilities of the Mothman is his capacity to multiply into several "Mothmen." Since he is composed of a large swarm of moths, he can disperse and reform into multiple distinct entities. Each Mothman retains a part of the original's consciousness, allowing them to work independently or together to solve puzzles and navigate the environment. This ability not only enhances his versatility but also adds a strategic element to the gameplay, as players can utilize multiple Mothmen to tackle complex challenges and explore different areas simultaneously.



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 The glass and crystal Aural Palaces dance upon the ground, seemingly existing outside of all other realities. These ethereal structures, shimmering with an otherworldly light, float and shift, defying the conventional laws of physics.




Aural Palaces by Thiago Desant


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 

Within these magnificent palaces, the Mothman discovers fragments of his past. The walls are adorned with translucent panels that display scenes from his life, each one more vivid and detailed than the last. As he explores these luminous halls, the Mothman gains the ability to recreate these memories, rewriting his past with newfound clarity and understanding. The palaces become a sanctuary where he can reshape his history, blending reality and imagination to forge a new path forward.



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 Small islands in the middle of the desert landscape with vibrant vegetation dot the landscape, each one a miniature paradise brimming with colorful flora. These enchanted isles serve as portals to the Mothman's memories, allowing him to revisit past explorations on different planets he once visited.

Aural Palaces by Thiago Desant


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As he steps onto each island, the vivid hues of the plants and flowers trigger recollections of distant worlds, filled with strange landscapes and unique life forms. The islands become a living archive of his adventures, where he can wander through his past, reliving the excitement and wonder of his interstellar journeys. Each step on these islands reconnects him with the essence of his explorations, offering moments of nostalgia and insight.



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 

The chrome orb seems to follow him throughout the game, observing his every move. This gleaming orb hovers silently, its reflective surface capturing the surrounding environment in a distorted mirror-like sheen. Occasionally, the sphere provides assistance, emitting a soft hum before revealing hidden paths, solving intricate puzzles, or neutralizing potential threats.

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Its presence is both enigmatic and comforting, a silent guardian that watches over the Mothman as he navigates the complex and often perilous landscapes of the game. The chrome sphere's assistance is unpredictable, but its aid is always timely, suggesting a deeper connection between it and the Mothman's journey.

Aural Palaces by Thiago Desant

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Areas where the game shifts to black and white indicate zones where the Mothman can follow an alternate version of himself. This spectral doppelgänger appears to have traversed these places before, leaving behind subtle clues and echoes of past actions. In these monochromatic realms, the absence of color heightens the sense of mystery and nostalgia. The Mothman trails this shadowy figure, uncovering remnants of previous journeys and decisions. 



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Each step taken in these grayscale environments reveals more about the Mothman’s alternate self's experiences, offering insights and guiding him through challenges that once seemed insurmountable. These encounters with his other self blur the lines between past and present, reality and illusion, deepening the enigma of his quest.



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“Crashing into a mysterious orb, an astronaut transformed into a swarm of moths on an alien desert. Memories fluttered in each wing, creating a spectral silhouette. The ethereal swarm hovered, embracing the haunting beauty of cosmic existence. In the vast emptiness, the moth-being sought elusive answers within the celestial tapestry.”

  

Aural Palaces by Thiago Desant
Amidst this surreal experience, he pondered the paradox of hearing footsteps without feet. Upon confirming his moth-formed existence, the audible illusion ceased.

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The writing on the ship and the device the Mothman carries seem visually similar to katakana.


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As a mere collection of winged insects, his footsteps' echo dissolved into silence, leaving the fluttering moths to hover above the ground, embracing the mysterious quiet of his ethereal journey.”



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Colorful light-emitting pianos allow him to communicate with the fauna and flora. Each key pressed produces not only a musical note but also a burst of vibrant light that resonates with the surrounding environment. The melodies create a bridge between the Mothman and the natural world, enabling a unique form of interaction with the plants and creatures around him. 



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The flora responds by blooming in rhythmic patterns, while the fauna gathers, drawn by the harmonious sounds and glowing hues. These musical exchanges unlock secrets of the ecosystem, revealing hidden paths, uncovering resources, and fostering a deeper connection with the living world. The pianos become powerful tools of communication, harmonizing the essence of nature with the spirit of the Mothman’s journey.


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Strange Creatures and Constructions:

Constructions with giant golden glass panels and glowing pyramids. Pianos with flashing neon lights where sequences of sounds must be hit.

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Abandoned temples offer a rich environment where the player can collect items and interact with the surroundings. These ancient structures, shrouded in mystery and overgrown with vegetation, are scattered throughout the landscape. Each temple, with its crumbling walls and faded carvings, holds remnants of a forgotten civilization. 



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As the player explores these eerie sanctuaries, they uncover hidden treasures and powerful artifacts that aid in their journey. The environment within the temples is highly interactive; players can solve puzzles, unlock secret chambers, and activate ancient mechanisms. These abandoned temples provide a deep sense of exploration and discovery, adding layers of intrigue and history to the game.




  


The Tentacle Cult



Tentacled creatures are being worshipped by people, including figures in red hoods. These otherworldly beings, with their sinuous appendages and pulsating bodies, inspire a mix of awe and fear among their followers. 

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The worshippers, clad in ceremonial attire, perform intricate rituals and chants, their eyes filled with reverence. Among them stands a prominent figure in a red hood, whose presence commands respect and authority. 



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This enigmatic leader guides the ceremonies, orchestrating the congregation’s devotions with precise, deliberate gestures. The tentacled creatures respond to the worship with subtle movements, as if acknowledging the homage paid to them. The atmosphere is charged with an eerie energy, as the line between the divine and the monstrous blurs in this surreal display of veneration.



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Torus-shaped flying discs seem to protect certain regions within the Mothman's monochromatic world of memories. These hovering guardians patrol the grayscale landscape, their sleek, circular forms emitting a faint, otherworldly glow. As they glide silently through the air, they project an aura of safety and vigilance, warding off potential threats and preserving the sanctity of these memory-laden areas. 


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The regions under their watch remain untouched by time and external influence, allowing the Mothman to explore his past without interference. These protective discs ensure that the delicate fabric of his memories remains intact, providing a secure environment for reflection and discovery within this enigmatic, monochrome realm.



&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/85763308d3689874a8454372c2fe2a61ab26c4fbf29bc10a835fa67e6f1721c6/34.jpg" data-mid="1372662" border="0" /&#62;

My intention with “Aural Palaces" is to offer a unique blend of narrative depth, visual beauty, and auditory immersion, inviting players to explore a world where identity and reality blur into an unforgettable experience.
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


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  Vermilion Dandelion



Listen to the full album while you read by pressing play here  or enjoy snippets embedded throughout the text.Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant






“Breaking news tonight: Chaos has erupted following a BioKroppTek space mission that returned from Mars one month ago and inadvertently brought an extraterrestrial parasite back to Earth.This parasite, upon arrival, infected a group of employees, fusing them into a single, grotesque entity that appears to call itself the Swamp King.&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/ea7049dad2ab9f08688d7249b6ea5e757976009b7a12d30e79df06c4b2cb69b5/r01-80-moshed-07-27-22-35-10-423.gif" data-mid="1372999" border="0" data-scale="89"/&#62;The parasite rapidly spread through BioKroppTek, the Swiss multinational food and drink processing conglomerate, and appears to have leaked from the corporation's headquarters, now rapidly multiplying and spreading across the planet.Stay tuned for more updates on this developing story.”

 
Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant




&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/60c0fa1bf037f60ef1a62fb414a1081ec975aa04aa2ea5807ea07b4726ff1521/HANDS.gif" data-mid="1372907" border="0" /&#62;
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Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant



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Spreading rapidly through BioKroppTek—a corporation that controlled vital resources like water, food, and medicine—the parasite quickly led to societal collapse.
&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/c93726c79eab915f247fb5b6821847ad107db67a0813e600a3ebfe2fd57e9579/00000_a0bc.jpg" data-mid="1373111" border="0" /&#62;
The Swamp King, driven by a primal hunger, aims to consume all living beings on Earth. Amidst this turmoil, two modified dogs, Vermilion and Dandelion, embark on a perilous journey to return home.


Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant


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Miraculously immune to the parasite and carrying the cure within them, they communicate through a wound-like opening in their necks, from which small, viscous tendrils emerge—a testament to their incomplete infection.

&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/3929bb31a28ff5204e14a28294748d3aae9a638e2d6c81d0aa2669e8da92a268/r01-46b.jpg" data-mid="1372935" border="0" /&#62;

Faces and bodies intertwined with various organic materials such as moss, flowers, vines, mushrooms, and worm-like appendages.

Blending human features with organic, plant, fungal, or insect elements.




&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/0d6061fe442661cd0057886f8cba229be4c6aaf75090aa8a7b5e7c6eb069c58e/Default_wide_shot_Foggy_misty_-moshed-07-28-15-23-20-024.gif" data-mid="1373112" border="0" /&#62;
Vermilion and Dandelion were once cherished pets, living peacefully with Laura and her daughter Kate. During a period, the dogs went to stay with Harry, Laura's ex-husband and Kate's father.
 &#60;img width="1024" height="576" width_o="1024" height_o="576" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/16246b5a86c1a81d8ffdd85281a0b9bd3b730dc2efd1d8b6e1c56d84649d888c/43adf42f-b228-46bd-8d83-756fd0-moshed-07-26-16-42-12-458.gif" data-mid="1372917" border="0" /&#62;
As the extraterrestrial parasite spread rapidly across the globe, infecting countless individuals, Harry too fell victim and transformed into a Khymera.
&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/9592dc1909cedd0c8075d336c9810b3689d698a3096dffdd83e63c361d5c6e7e/scient.jpg" data-mid="1372916" border="0" /&#62;&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/9bc79bfbfca8895e2963d63c636192f425cb6fd871fde850b4250217f26a79ce/r01-13.jpg" data-mid="1372933" border="0" /&#62;
Vermilion and Dandelion managed to escape, but now they were alone in a world descending into chaos.Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant

&#60;img width="1024" height="576" width_o="1024" height_o="576" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/3ec6f4c0543aaf6b26fb731ee4f2b4de034282c543b1c262d46d8947246d4cc9/SKing.jpg" data-mid="1372918" border="0" /&#62;
The Swamp King, a monstrous fusion of machinery and biology, resides in a tank of nutritive fluid at BioKroppTek's headquarters, sustained by liquefied humans.
&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/d77d4ca0206bf6167a007f4f6646e11cfa76a2dd6ab46a4bd5ecc4f4d1765f46/r01-78.jpg" data-mid="1372919" border="0" /&#62;
 Vermilion and Dandelion must navigate this treacherous landscape, determined to reunite with Laura and Kate.
&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/a46ea9a34453a516385e0355b6b62f07cd3a099725628389a54f908102f12105/r01-28.jpg" data-mid="1372942" border="0" /&#62;&#60;img width="1024" height="576" width_o="1024" height_o="576" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/8529e2a953f64406e2c23534182f293c9a4843e7648c75cd703cb9b2192e4a8c/r01-19.jpg" data-mid="1372920" border="0" /&#62;Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant



Seeking refuge and transportation, Vermilion and Dandelion venture into the abandoned subway system. Aboard a derelict train, they are plagued by nightmarish hallucinations induced by the parasite.
 &#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/37f2131fce12dd613032d7a309b9b954ea48bf48d15bba4159f77838deebd427/r01-29.jpg" data-mid="1372921" border="0" /&#62;
Distorted memories of their home, visions of monstrous beings, mutated versions of themselves, and ghostly images of BioKroppTek scientists haunt them.

&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/ed9f0c417e6c02ac38528eb2c981e4bcb85f218c67e8f3ffc1f4ab8e1f8d5e24/r01-67.jpg" data-mid="1372938" border="0" /&#62;

 &#60;img width="1024" height="576" width_o="1024" height_o="576" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/a726b3e02acf7f957824ad4626e36d3d635f023d214c6c038e3fdfb59d087c01/r01-58-moshed-07-26-17-54-25-981.gif" data-mid="1372926" border="0" /&#62;
The parasite's signal disrupts the subway's systems, causing malfunctions and heightening the danger.


&#60;img width="1024" height="576" width_o="1024" height_o="576" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/d96a13cace7cc73513aa08d535b9aa3c99454fc976cef46bc0e56fae7d7cfcea/r01-3.jpg" data-mid="1372922" border="0" /&#62;&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/cb92e5672e34ca230d1ad11d7634f50ee470fc72c044bad3888e335a9e701a88/r01-6x-moshed-07-26-21-15-46-882.gif" data-mid="1372945" border="0" /&#62;

In a rare moment of calm, Vermilion reflects on his life before the outbreak. He recalls the joy of living with Laura and Kate, strengthening his resolve to find them.
&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/0c0940701623f3e60d4cd7dfd33a83068f518aa526e05ec0efb2b97cc1bfa99d/r01-56x.jpg" data-mid="1372923" border="0" /&#62;
 This introspective episode delves into Vermilion's sense of identity and purpose, reinforcing his bond with Dandelion, who shares his longing for their former life.Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant

The dogs stumble upon a resistance group battling BioKroppTek. Initially wary, the resistance tests Vermilion and Dandelion, discovering their unique immunity and the cure they carry.




&#60;img width="1024" height="576" width_o="1024" height_o="576" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/94833b534a0cf1a6c1c2c631c94d5177f5121c51ec22d0f7e6e9429396ae4567/r01-18.jpg" data-mid="1372924" border="0" /&#62;

Though the resistance pleads for their help, the dogs are initially focused solely on reuniting with Laura and Kate.



&#60;img width="1024" height="576" width_o="1024" height_o="576" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/26b5ccd2696fd07988947855da8e985ecabf3a9b9a1634845b95d0bf43aa08af/r01-15.jpg" data-mid="1372925" border="0" /&#62;

Determined to find Laura and Kate, Vermilion and Dandelion return to their former home. There, they face a heartbreaking discovery: Laura and Kate have transformed into aggressive Khymeras.

&#60;img width="1920" height="1080" width_o="1920" height_o="1080" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/ca68c3e08dd837a34de34f929c86ae61534f826abe801a09ee117cdb6b389a29/PvsF_30-moshed-07-26-18-07-39-885.gif" data-mid="1372928" border="0" /&#62;Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant

Trapped in their car, a stack of missing posters for the dogs lies on the back seat, a poignant reminder of their love. This moment of profound loss spurs Vermilion and Dandelion to reconsider their priorities.



&#60;img width="1024" height="576" width_o="1024" height_o="576" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/b560db45cbe4ad15a3a893db683ae70f43be852b77b3a1224771a6313038400e/r01-4.jpg" data-mid="1372929" border="0" /&#62;

Fueled by a desire for vengeance and hope, Vermilion and Dandelion join the resistance to take down the Swamp King. The mission leads them to BioKroppTek's heavily fortified main facility, where the parasite is mass-produced.



&#60;img width="1024" height="576" width_o="1024" height_o="576" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/b6d50244a65ba2795b9423d81925d992b8fe86061260558616ce59c75e9f5638/r01-1x-moshed-07-26-18-41-00-039.jpg" data-mid="1372931" border="0" /&#62;

Battling through an army of Khymeras and navigating a maze of illusions and cybernetic traps, they inch closer to their goal. The parasite's energy signal wreaks havoc on the facility's defenses, adding to the chaos.


&#60;img width="1024" height="576" width_o="1024" height_o="576" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/988d1811356ee9545b70bfc4dc9f32f2354a802cccd9282a10e1f49513b875a4/49334528-24e1-4490-a092-00116d-moshed-07-26-18-45-06-211.gif" data-mid="1372932" border="0" /&#62;Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant

Finally, in the presence of the Swamp King, Vermilion and Dandelion face their final challenge.
&#60;img width="1024" height="576" width_o="1024" height_o="576" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/e8d224839f60c0a262a691eac18b428168ce5bbc72e09c847d78c76530bfa5ad/r01-11.jpg" data-mid="1372936" border="0" /&#62;&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/2044046eb50dc7ae257e59239de2d03a33a1b4305ddc639fb366a443fad70263/r01-20.jpg" data-mid="1372937" border="0" /&#62;
&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/fe939ced79857d325d679bd6cad358afb42d0d5d54d54389b03aff17ba0c45ca/r01-64.jpg" data-mid="1372939" border="0" /&#62;Tired and desperate, Dandelion realizes that the only way to defeat the Swamp King is through self-sacrifice.Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant





Communicating his plan to Vermilion, Dandelion leaps into the Swamp King's tank. The Swamp King, sensing the presence, instinctively consumes Dandelion.
&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/fe872b30afd2307bca8cf89eeee0ab736eb407878c0d3f8f8e3e5b7e76c18cdb/r01-77-moshed-07-26-19-26-33-347.gif" data-mid="1372940" border="0" /&#62;
As Dandelion's immunity and the cure work from within, the Swamp King begins to disintegrate, halting the parasite's spread.Vermilion Dandelion by Thiago Desant&#60;img width="1536" height="864" width_o="1536" height_o="864" src_o="https://cortex.persona.co/t/original/i/d5227202760f1b1589c42bd05583b3de85e0df3b57adf1b0f4d541048e47487f/r01-66.jpg" data-mid="1372943" border="0" /&#62;As the world starts to heal from the Khymera crisis, the resistance, now led by Vermilion's former companions, focuses on curing the infected and rebuilding society.







Thiago Desant is a composer, visual artist, and filmmaker.


Film / TV / Video Game work inquiriestrdesant@gmail.com



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