A VHS fever dream about grief, gods, and learning to trust Rabbit-Man.
Cherry Kills wants to be left alone. Unfortunately, her *Alternates*—an overprotective lug, a happy-go-lucky child, and a mute, man-sized rabbit—have other plans. They’ve haunted her since her father’s violent death, following her from grimy punk clubs to the TV-static halls of her apartment building. Cherry calls them hallucinations, symptoms of trauma—at least, that’s what her doctor says. But when the Alternates start *interacting* with the world around her, she realizes it might not be all in her head.
A mural breathes. Static-eyed creatures hunt. Glyphs bloom across Cherry’s skin, pulsing with energy tied to the goddess Isis and a ritual her father died trying to finish. As the veil between delusion and reality tears open, Cherry’s “imaginary friends” reveal a power that could either heal her grief, or consume her.
To survive, Cherry must reach back into a past she’s spent years trying to forget.