When you ain't got nothing to lose, you ain't got nothing to be scared about, but all that's changed now. My original thoughts are the same:Īs we ride down on this goddamned place, ready to kill or be killed, I feel something I ain't felt in a long time. Gus's slow loss of innocence breaks my heart, and the story unravels in such a great place, I'm so glad to be re-reading this. The pacing ticks along nicely and I'm really getting into the plot. However, Jepperd and Gus seem to be sharing the same dreams, so it looks like there may be something a bit paranormal to all of this. Or it may just be his father's mad rambling. After hypnotizing Gus he finds out more about Gus' father, and he and Abbot lead a team back to the cabin he grew up in hoping to find clues to how Gus was made.Īpparently, there's also some prophecy regarding Gus. Meanwhile, the main doctor at the facility holding Gus is convinced he's the key to saving humanity. The army itself is made up of some weird hillbilly cult that worships (or something?) these hybrid children. Jepperd has decided to rescue Gus, and along with two women he helped save from that nasty pimp in the first volume, is raising an army to storm the facility. Gus is stuck in the facility and meets a few other hybrid children like himself for the first time.
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