They tried to kill her, but they failed. Now the five boys that tortured, abused, and tormented her have debts in her ledger, and she's coming to collect. And her vengeance will be absolute. And it will be glorious. The blood-soaked revenge story continues...
A new dark horror series from the creators of Where Monsters Lie Kyle Starks (Those Not Afraid) and Piotr Kowalski (Let This One Be a Devil) that’s perfect for fans of The Crow, revenge horror and violent, well-deserved retribution.
I have less of a stomach for such violence these days, largely because I've been exposed to so much of it in comics as the last ten years have had a lot of similar projects, often with a horror angle to them. Starks continues to move things forward in a way that keeps it engaging even as it works through a familiar pattern, while Kowalski's artwork is just fantastic as always. He's always managed to create such a rough and tense work with stories like this so that it feels just as grimy and awful as it should. And seeing Tee, as bad off as she is, bringing these men who tortured her to their end hits a sweet spot with the look and color design of it all. It's good, and it's executed well, but it's leaving me more and more uncomfortable. Read Full Review
Plot
Tee/Dogshit begins her revenge by targeting Kicking Boy, abruptly ending his football career.
Laughing Boy and Ruthless Boy begin to suspect Dogshit's return. Ruthless Boy is worried, but Laughing Boy continues with his normal life and confronts her. Artistic Boy is at his macabre art exhibition, and no one knows anything about him.
This episode is full of action and extreme violence, where this victim's revenge is epic. The priest who saved her is her mentor, training her as an assassin and helping her with this plan of retaliation.
She has her sights set on Fifth Boy, whose whereabouts are unknown; he remains the leader of them all.
Art
It features many textures that give it an in more