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Showing posts from August, 2020

Another victim in Johannesburg!

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Surprise, surprise. Another woman is a victim of the crime-filled streets of Johannesburg. Adelaide Zungu never imagined that a stroll down her own street would equate to a life or death situation but such is the reality for women in Johannesburg; constantly looking over their shoulders, contemplating to cross the road at the first sight of a suspicious character or fleeing the vicinity.    Despite following her intuition of fleeing Adelaide runs into an ambush. Her story is a horrid tale of an innocent civilian, alone and outnumbered like a gazelle separated from its herd. Fight or flight becomes the name of the game as she digs deep within herself to beat the odds. Adelaide fights with all her strength until a small window of victory appears; a victory that’s immediately snatched away by the rage-filled psychopath who smashes a brick into her head and attempts to beat her to death.   Her life is eventually spared by the mystic Mistress Inka and so the empowering journey of he

A fine line between justice and revenge

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Who’s to decide what true peace and balance is? Society tends to believe that an arbitrary line exists between cold-hearted revenge and dignified justice but who are we to dictate the extent of a victim’s trauma? Who are we to dismiss Adelaide's brand of justice?   Adelaide Zungu’s second life has granted her the opportunity to protect women. Thanks to a mystic Mistress Inka, she now has the ability to close the power gap on her perpetrators; the power to ignore the arbitrary line between justice and revenge. Read Slasher Issue #1 The midpoint of Issue #1 ensues when a powerful Mistress Inka wills Adelaide back to life through a unique bond of power, favour and blinding loyalty. From this moment forward she begins her journey of moral self-discovery and justice; A journey that eventually leads to her morally bankrupt perpetrators. In the confrontational climax of Issue #1, a miraging Mistress Inka strongly urges her to channel her repressed trauma instead of ignoring it... “Pen