The boy’s flickering slowed. Stabilized. He blinked, solid and real, and whispered, “Papá?”
Inside the briefcase was not money, but a single feather. It shimmered with internal light, shifting from turquoise to gold. “A Phoenix feather,” she explained. “From the Aviario Central. My son… he swallowed one last week. Now he can’t stop flickering. He phases between our world and the Ember Void. The Cuerpos Grises took him to experiment on his instability.” kemono juanes
The night it all began, the rain was falling in thick, silver ropes. Juanes sat on the fire escape of his tiny apartment, licking coffee from a chipped mug, when a shadow detached itself from the steam vents below. A lizard-folk woman, scales the color of jade, trembling as she clutched a metal briefcase to her chest. The boy’s flickering slowed
The lizard mother opened the briefcase’s second compartment. Inside lay a small, fossilized claw. “This belonged to the first Kemono. The one who bridged beast and man. With it, you could… control the change. No more flickering between forms.” It shimmered with internal light, shifting from turquoise
The Cuerpos Grises had set up a lab in an old boiler room. When Juanes kicked the rusted door open, he saw the boy—no older than seven, with lizard scales like his mother and wide, terrified eyes. He was strapped to a table, half-solid, half-glowing ember. Two Gray Bodies hovered over him, their faces smooth as mannequins, needles of liquid starlight poised.
He wasn’t a detective, not exactly. He wasn’t a vigilante, though he carried a guitar case that held more than music. Juanes was a solucionador —a fixer for problems too strange for the regular police and too dangerous for the common citizen. And he had the ears of a puma, a tail that betrayed his every mood, and eyes like molten gold that saw lies as clearly as daylight.