A Dog and Her 12 Boys - Season One - GATELOCK PRIME

17 episodes
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Creator from RSS feed: RandyWritesProcedurally
Database Creators: RandyWritesProcedurallySynopsis:
đź•— New transmissions every weekday. A psychic dog. Twelve feral clone boys. Zombie factories, intergalactic death matches, and cat massacres. Cosmos leads her pack through apocalyptic dungeons, hunting artifacts while being hunted by a mysterious white cat. They die. They respawn. They keep fighting. Explicit violence, dark humor, and absolutely no guarantee anyone survives.
Language: English
Format: Audio Book
Continuity: Serial
Writing: AI
Voices: Machine generated
Narrator: First Person
Genres: Science fiction
Soundscape: Voices only
Not tagged: [Maturity] [Country of origin] [Transcript]
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Episodes:
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E17: Zombie Liquid - Submit. Never Submit
Mon, 27 Oct 2025 17:32:56 GMT
The shield was gone. Nerves raw. Thoughts naked. No veil. No mercy. The Necromancers didn’t descend the steps. They didn’t rush us. They didn’t need to. They were mountain and weather. They were pressure. They stayed at the altar, and the altar became a lever. The female rose first. Not a jump. A slow, patient float. Robes like oil. Bones like reeds under cloth. She circled the altar as if it were a black sun and she was a small, bright moon. Each loop widened. Each loop pushed. She sang one word. “Submit.” Not loud. Not dramatic. Precise. A surgeon’s scalpel of sound. She made another orbit. The word slid through marrow and memory. “Submit.” Right side zombie choir answered her, soft at first, almost reverent. submit… submit… submit… Their lips barely moved. Heads tilted in unison. Empty eyes locked on nothing. My boys buckled like wheat in a slow wind. Knees touched stone. Mouths slack. Eyes up. The song folded will into neat, apologetic packages. Behind her, the male did not rise. He took one knee on the top step and placed a palm against the altar. His fingers splayed as if pressing keys no one else could see. He did not sing a different song. He sang hers with her. Lower. Heavier. The kind of bass that lives under the floor. Their duet walked through our skulls. “Submit,” she breathed. SUBMIT, he rumbled. Left side zombie choir answered him. SUBMIT… SUBMIT… SUBMIT… The sound carried weight, like shovels striking coffins. Their jaws opened wider, voices growing more guttural, more impatient. The cathedral carried it. The pews hummed. The chains overhead chimed. The hanging dead swayed in sympathy, like metronomes of meat. Every curve of carved stone sharpened the note and returned it to us with interest. We stood inside an instrument built to play obedience. Right choir, soft but sharp: submit… submit… submit… Left choir, louder each time: SUBMIT… SUBMIT… SUBMIT… Half my boys went down at once. Faces to stone. Hands flat. Next came the strong ones who believed they were stronger than they were. Boy Four. Boy Six. Boy Ten. One by one, like candles exhaling themselves. The circle widened. “Submit.” SUBMIT. The word had teeth. It bit the corners of the mind where old fear lives. It bit again. And again. I smelled blood before I tasted it. Right choir hissed their word now, more force in it, less patience: submit submit submit submit Left choir barked theirs, voices cracking stone: SUBMIT SUBMIT SUBMIT SUBMIT Boy Eleven’s forehead touched the floor. Boy Twelve’s fingers trembled and spread in surrender. Boy Five offered his throat to nothing at all. They weren’t cowards. It wasn’t that. The song cheated. It came in wearing their own voices. Boy Two lasted longer. Rear guard habits. Stubborn spine. He dropped slow, like a tower deciding to kneel. Not collapse. Kneel. Finally only three were upright. Boy One. Boy Three. And me. Boy One’s breath gunned fast. Eyes wet. He shook his head. He clenched his jaw. He stayed up. Boy Three didn’t shake. He didn’t blink. He stared at me and waited. The kind of waiting that feels like a bridge with a train on it. He wore defiance like a tight coat. Too tight. Blood crept from his ears, threading his neck. Their chorus pressed harder. “Submit.” submit… submit… submit… SUBMIT. SUBMIT… SUBMIT… SUBMIT… My knees flexed. I didn’t fall. I won’t. I am a dog. Dogs submit only to love or death. This was neither. The female’s orbit widened again. She floated close enough to brush the hanging dead, then arced back. Every pass tightened the room. Every pass made gravity feel personal. I felt a thought that wasn’t mine try to put a leash on my boys. I felt the leash tug. I was upset. Upset is a small word, but it’ll do. I have other words. Most are impolite. None are polite enough for theft. She wasn’t taking their bodies. That would be simple. She was taking my lattice. My links. My boys. That is spitting on my paws. That is pulling my tail.
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E16: Zombie Liquid - The First Note
Wed, 22 Oct 2025 18:19:32 GMT
A Dog and Her 12 Boys season one. GATELOCK Prime – Episode 16: Zombie Liquid. The First Note. Boy Three moved first. Always did. I pulsed the formation through the lattice. Spread. Circle. Silence. The Necromancers continued their ritual, arms weaving deliberate patterns in the air above a tall, narrow altar between them. Male and female, orbiting one another with a slow, gliding step. Their feet barely touched the stone, yet each motion carried weight, as if the air thickened around them. They hadn’t noticed us. Or pretended not to. I tasted the air. Incense. Decay. Old stone. But beneath that, something patient. A predator’s patience, not prey. It didn’t care we were here. It knew we would stay. Cloak. Psychic shroud dropped over us like fog. The boys vanished from sight, from scent, from the cathedral’s awareness. I brushed the surface of the Necromancers’ minds—thin membranes stretched over deep, dark wells. I saw flickers of shape and sound I didn’t understand. No heavy psychic armor. No obvious weapons. Just… resonance. Formation. Advance. We entered the cathedral proper. The space swallowed sound in the wrong way—our boots made no echo, yet the faint, constant hum of the choir pressed into our bones. Bodies hung in the vaulted shadows, swaying from blackened hooks, their flesh waxy and half-mummified. Every sway made the overhead chains sing in a high, brittle note, blending into the drone below. The zombie choir flanked us on either side, each seated rigid in the ancient pews. No one looked up. No one blinked. Their mouths were open just enough to let the harmony leak out—a layered, endless note that rose and fell without a single breath. Lips cracked. Teeth black. Tongues stiff and gray. Yet the sound flowed steady, as if the air itself passed through them. The aisle stretched forward in a straight line, a black river of stone leading to the altar. Every step we took, the shadows seemed to bend inward, as if we were passing through the throat of some enormous thing. Positions. The boys spread out. Boy Three took point, rifle steady. Boy Seven drifted left, almost level with the first row of pews. Boy Five mirrored him on the right. The rest formed a containment ring just shy of the steps to the altar. No one broke formation. No one breathed loud. Drop cloak. The shroud peeled away from us like mist dissolving in sunlight. The Necromancers didn’t stop. The female’s long, narrow hands swept upward in a slow arc, fingers bent like claws catching invisible threads. Her hair was bound in a lattice of bone pins, each carved with the same repeating glyph that glowed faintly as she moved. Her robe was layered silk, black over white over black, but it clung wrong, folds that suggested extra limbs beneath. The male was thicker in frame, but the robe draped oddly over his torso. His shoulders were hunched forward, as if weighed down by the ribcage of some other creature. When the silk shifted, I saw his chest was split vertically, and inside was stone—not flesh. A slab of black granite carved into ribs, every edge etched with deep-cut markings. Shield formation. Prepare. The psychic barrier slid into place around us, a glassy dome humming low. The female stopped dancing. Her head tilted, not toward us, but toward the air above us, as if she saw something we couldn’t. Then she opened her mouth. The screech was a thin, needle-point sound, aimed with surgical precision. It bypassed flesh and went straight for thought. My skull rang like a cracked bell. The right side of the cathedral answered. Forty zombie throats opened wider. They repeated her cry perfectly, not just in sound, but in tone, in psychic flavor. It was her voice multiplied fortyfold, braided into a rope of noise. The walls trembled. Dust sifted down from the beams. Overhead, the hanging corpses swung violently, their chains grinding out sharp, metallic harmonics.
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E15: Zombie Liquid - The Overlook
Tue, 21 Oct 2025 20:03:42 GMT
Dog and Her 12 Boys. Seasoned one. GATELOCK prime. – Episode 15: The Overlook The sewer tunnel curved downward like a throat swallowing us whole. The artifact’s pulse had shifted, no longer the erratic ping of something hidden, but a steady rhythm that matched my heartbeat. Or maybe my heartbeat had matched it. Hard to tell anymore. Boy Six touched the wall as we descended. Stone. Carved stone. I felt his recognition through the lattice and concrete had given way to something older. Symbols etched into black rock, worn smooth by time and touch. Not human script. Not recent. The kind of markings that made your teeth ache just looking at them. The tunnel widened into a natural cavern. The air thickened, carrying weight and dampness that pressed against our skin like wet wool. Then the ledge, a narrow stone jutting over an impossible drop. We crouched in the shadows, looking down into a chamber that stole our breath. A cathedral. Not built—carved. Hollowed from living rock like someone had scooped out the earth’s heart and decorated it with nightmares. Impossible architecture stretched below us, all flowing curves and gravity-defying arches. No mortar. No seams. Just one continuous piece of stone shaped by will or madness. Suspended from the ceiling, hundreds of corpses swayed in perfect formation. Neither random nor chaotic. Flayed bodies hung like meat in a slaughterhouse, skin peeled back to expose glistening muscle and yellow fat. Some were mummified, leather-dark and shrunken. Others were fresh enough that blood still dripped from fingertips into brass bowls positioned beneath. Each body hung at a precise height, specific angle, creating geometric patterns that hurt to follow. They moved like wind chimes in a breeze that didn’t exist, their positions shifting with mathematical precision. Below them, arranged in neat rows like a church congregation, sat the zombie choir. Forty, maybe fifty figures in various stages of decay, all facing forward, all humming in perfect harmony. Their voices rose up to us, hauntingly beautiful, wrong in every frequency. At the altar, two figures stood with arms raised, conducting the choir with slow, deliberate gestures. Tall. Impossibly lean. Their robes hung from frames that seemed too long for human proportions, sleeves extending past where hands should end. Even from here, I could taste their psychic presence—cold, ancient, patient as stone. I studied the layout, tactical mind sorting through the musical madness. The suspended corpses weren’t just decoration, they were instruments. Resonance chambers. The cathedral’s acoustics were designed around them, creating amplification nodes throughout the space. Every surface, every curve, every hanging body served the sound. The artifact pulsed faintly, somewhere beyond this chamber. Whatever we were tracking lay deeper still, but these Necromancers stood between us and our prize. I pulsed the command: Formation. Descent. Silent. We moved down the hidden stone steps, each footfall calculated, controlled. The music grew louder as we descended, more hypnotic. Harmonies layered on harmonies, voices that should have been dead weaving melodies that made the air itself vibrate. Boy Six stumbled once, caught by the music’s pull. Boy Nine’s eyes glazed over for a moment before I pulsed a wake-up call through the lattice. The song wanted to drag us in, make us part of the performance. Not today. I crouched behind a pillar, studying the suspended corpses one last time. Each one positioned just so. Each one part of the greater instrument. Time to break the symphony. I growled low. The boys moved.
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E14: Zombie Liquid. The Cafeteria of the Damned
Mon, 20 Oct 2025 21:57:19 GMT
A Dog and Her 12 Boys. Season one. GATELOCK prime. – episode 14: Zombie Liquid. The Cafeteria of the Damned.. Then we reached it. The cafeteria. Wide. Warm. Tiled with flesh-pink floors. Full of Humans. Or what was left. Hairless. Fat. Wearing plastic aprons soaked in blood. Eating. Bowls of zombie stew. Slices of gray meat stacked like pancakes. Sandwiches made with arm meat and spinal jelly. A fountain of red ichor bubbled in the center. I dropped the cloak. They looked up. We smelled their fear before they made a sound. Then the first one screamed. We charged. Boy Three took the left flank, bashed a jaw with a cafeteria tray, then stabbed through the throat. Boy Two flipped a table and fired three shots point-blank into a cook’s chest. Boy Four dropkicked a diner into the stew fountain. He didn’t resurface. Blood hit the lights. The room flickered. Boy Eight, still limping, used a broken chair leg to rupture a knee. Boy Ten poured scalding stew onto two of them and ignited it. The smell was revolting. We liked it. One tried to run. Boy Five caught him with a meat hook and reeled him in like a fish. Then the floor shook. A low, sucking noise rose from the back of the room. The grease pit, an industrial drain clogged with decades of fat and meat, began to bubble. Chunks of congealed lard floated to the top and then fused into something with a shape. A slick, black, three-eyed thing clawed its way out, dripping fryer oil and human teeth. It shrieked like a boiling pig and whipped a chain of intestines across the tiles. Boy Nine slipped. Boy One dove and pulled him clear as the chain slapped the wall hard enough to leave a smear of bone shards. I barked once. The boys swarmed. Boy Six drove a bread knife into its eye. Boy Eleven leapt onto its back, stabbing with a steak fork until his arms went red to the elbow. The creature thrashed, vomiting a spray of rancid oil and chopped cartilage. Then Boy Seven had an idea. He ripped a tray of cafeteria bread rolls off the counter, dunked them into the puddle of leaking grease-monster juice, and started eating. The others followed. Boys sopped up the monster with bread, chewing like happy demons at Sunday Black Mass Communion. They ripped meat from its body and dragged it across baguettes and sandwich loaves. They stuffed rolls into the empty eye sockets and wounds like sponges. Every bite made the thing weaker, smaller, wetter. By the time it stopped moving, half of it was inside the boys and the rest was mopped up with sourdough. Thirty seconds. All dead. All consumed. We sat. And we ate. Our appetites were endless. They passed the zombie meat like it was a roast. Boy Seven found a skull-stew with some kind of garnish. Boy Twelve hoarded a plate of spinal pastries. I found something that looked like heart jerky. It crunched perfectly. We ate like kings. After the feast, we looted. The kitchen was full of gear, blades, masks, stimulant injectors. We took it all. In the corner, a treasure chest. Old-world lock. Boy Eleven picked it in six seconds. Inside: ration packs, stim packs, antique ammo — and a black card with a silver strip. No name. Just a skull icon. Chip intact. Cryptic-Cred. I froze. These were rare. Pre-fall. Still functional. Worth entire war-zones in trade. Can buy anything that still remembers cost. I wrapped it in a mental seal and stored it in my flank pack, away from their greasy, curious hands. None of them dared touch it. The artifact chimed in my head as if on cue. The back of the room housed a sewer hatch. It hissed when I approached. The boys looked at me. I opened it. The smell hit like a memory, rot, acid, burnt fur. But not bad. Not to us. Not to a dog and her twelve. We descended into the dark following the stronger artifact pulse.
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E13: Zombie Liquid: Bone Tunnel, Part Three
Mon, 20 Oct 2025 12:00:00 GMT
Trapped in a collapsing bone tunnel with her twelve boys, our canine protagonist faces their most desperate moment yet. The living bone walls close in, held back only by her psychic wedge—a shield of pure willpower that’s rapidly failing. After digging reveals nothing but endless bone, a new threat emerges: the walls begin emitting a devastating sonic hum that attacks their minds directly.
Key Moments
• The Trap Tightens: Air thick with decay, space reduced to a horse stall, two feet of digging revealing only more bone beneath them
• The Killing Frequency: A low hum from the bone walls that bleeds gums and rattles blood—a weaponized vibration
• Time Break: The dog unleashes a temporal growl, freezing time itself to buy precious moments to strategize
• Improvised Solution: Boy Twelve, guided through the time-frozen moment, constructs a sonic-psionic weapon using Boy Six’s hammer and a psionic interface palm
• The White Sun: Their jury-rigged device explodes with devastating force, shattering the bone prison into powder
• A New Trail: Freedom comes at a cost—bloody noses, ruptured eardrums, disorientation—but a new scent beckons: hot, meaty, charred. Their hunger drives them forward into the side corridor.
Status: The artifact still pulses below. The bone tunnel is behind them. But whatever awaits in that side corridor smells like food—and in the Bone Tunnel depths, nothing comes without a price.
Listener discretion is strongly advised.
This content is intended for mature audiences. If you are sensitive to graphic horror elements, violence, or intense psychological scenarios, please consider whether this content is appropriate for you.
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E12: Zombie Liquid - Bone Tunnel, Part Two
Fri, 17 Oct 2025 20:59:55 GMT
The hounds were done. River steamed. Cosmos’s hackles rose. Something armored waited ahead.
Round Four: Armored skeleton sentinels. Full plate, swords raised. Boy Ten threw firebomb—orange hell. They kept walking, on fire, armor popping. Boy One cracked visors, smashed skulls. Boy Seven clubbed legs, stomped helmets flat. Boy Twelve kicked one into bubbling river—didn’t float. Ash fell like snow.
Round Five: Fire-bellied giants. Ten feet tall, fire glowing inside ribcages, breathing sparks. One hurled flame bomb—fire rained down. Boy Three climbed the body mid-throw, drove bricks into neck. Boy Eleven shattered legs with two-handed maul. Boy Seven rammed crowbar through ribs—glowing organ exploded. Boy One wrenched skull clean off. Boy Six crushed kneecap, shoved firecracker into pelvic cavity—detonated in bone dust.
Tunnel went quiet. Panting. Bleeding. Worst was next.
The Bone Wall: Tunnel narrowed. Wall closed behind, trapping them. Walls moved—bone scraping bone, ribcage trap. Cosmos jammed psychic wedge between walls. Pure force. Invisible. Walls pushed back. She couldn’t hold it.
She barked in their minds: “Dig. All of you. Dig or die.”
They dug. Boy One held bone beam back with bare shoulder, screaming. Boy Three braced against wall, eyes locked forward.
Dig hit more bone. No way out.
Wedge failing. Cosmos’s vision went red. Tunnel moaned one last time. Like it was laughing.
“This can’t be how we die.”
Explicit: graphic violence, horror, claustrophobic tension.
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E11: Zombie Liquid - Bone Tunnel, Part One
Fri, 17 Oct 2025 20:22:34 GMT
The drain shaft opened like a wound. Cosmos and the boys climbed down a bone ladder wet with spinal grease into a tunnel beneath the siphon hall. Not a sewer for shit—a channel for bone waste, nerve scrap, psychic ash.
Walls pulsed white: skulls facing inward, femurs stacked like bricks, hands fused palm-to-palm across the ceiling. Air warm, sweet—fermented blood and soap. A yellow-silver-black river churned alongside the path. Ankle-deep in places. Boys gagged.
The bones shifted. They weren’t alone.
Round One: Thin skeletons with halberds. Tall, grinning, fast. Boy One shattered skulls. Boy Five used chain flail. Boy Eleven kicked joints sideways. Wave ended in bone dust.
Round Two: Seven-foot bone golems. Shoulders like coffins, ribs welded into armor. Boy Seven smashed spines with lead pipe. Boy Three cracked jaws with chair leg. They broke like heavy furniture. Too slow.
Round Three: Bone hounds. Direwolf frames, fast, brutal. Boy Three killed four—pipe low, footwork perfect. Boy Six caught one mid-leap, hammered ribcage. Boy Eleven tackled one into the fluid river, beat its skull against the edge.
Stampede broke. Bones scattered. Three rounds down. Not a scratch.
Explicit: graphic violence, horror, body horror.
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E10: Zombie Liquid - The Siphon Hall
Wed, 15 Oct 2025 19:18:35 GMT
The spiral stair leads down to a cathedral of bone and steel. Rows of spine-saw chairs hold bound corpses, tubes puncturing their spines to suck yellow-silver fluid into rivers that flow toward a dark trench.
The smell hits first—fermented marrow and burned sugar. Cosmos sneezes. The boys gag.
They kill the technicians fast. Then the floor tilts. Valves spin. The twin rivers surge across the hall, rising to thighs, then chests. Thick, sticky, dragging at boots.
Zombies break free in the current. Dead hands reach. Jaws close. The hall becomes a churned nightmare—bodies, tubes, metal, spinning in a slow vortex.
Boy Six fights with wrapped chest and trembling legs. Boy Nine rides the whirl like a killing wheel, jamming a femur through zombie skulls as they pass. Boy Eight—weakest, scared—dives to find the drain lever.
He pulls it. The fluid spirals down with soft plops, dragging the dead under.
When it’s over, they’re covered in marrow slime. The artifact pulses below. Down the drain. Down the stink hole.
“We go down.”
Explicit content: industrial body horror, drowning violence, graphic fluid immersion.
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E09: Zombie Liquid - The Grinder Wing
Wed, 15 Oct 2025 18:13:52 GMT
The artifact pulses below. Closer now.
The Grinder Wing opens like a rotten lung—massive chamber full of hooks, gears, hydraulic presses. Corpses slide on overhead chains into spinning drums with steel-and-bone teeth. Some bodies still twitch. Some scream without lungs.
Zombies shamble through the chaos. Guards in bone armor fight to control them. Cosmos throws a psychic shield and sends the boys in.
Thirteen kills in minutes. Guards shoved into grinders. Zombies fed to presses. Bodies dragged into gear-mouths. Blood mists the air.
Then Boy Eight gets caught—leg hooked by a conveyor chain, dragged toward the primary grinder. Boy Nine grabs his harness, holds him.
Cosmos launches a psychic EMP. Motors stutter. Gears freeze with a scream of tortured steel. Boy Eight drops free, inches from the teeth.
No new dead. Not today.
The artifact pulses stronger. They press deeper into the factory’s heart.
Explicit content: extreme industrial violence, graphic deaths, body horror in zombie processing facility.
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E08: Zombie Liquid - The Dripping Hall
Wed, 15 Oct 2025 17:46:03 GMT
The elevator doors open. A melting zombie runs past, skin dripping like wax, leaving trails of smoke.
This isn’t a building. It’s a factory. And it doesn’t process food or tech—it processes zombies.
Transparent tubes pulse with Z-NECTAR and GRAY SYRUP overhead. Conveyor belts carry body parts into coolers. Heads with tags. Legs hung like cured ham. Some zombies aren’t dead, just strapped into plasma siphons, harvested for whatever keeps this place running.
Cosmos bends a psychic field around the boys, makes them smell like rust and mold. The zombies shuffle past, oblivious.
But the human guards aren’t blind. Factory workers with burned-out eyes and skin uniforms patrol in pairs. The boys kill them quietly. One throat cut in the processor wing. One face crushed into a coolant tank. One fed into a shredder.
Two floors down, an artifact waits. Pulsing. Awake.
The boys tighten formation. They press deeper into the cathedral of undeath.
Explicit content: horror, industrial violence, zombie processing facility.
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E07: Where Is the Boss?
Wed, 15 Oct 2025 16:35:43 GMT
The blood has barely cooled when Cosmos senses it—something wrong in the room. Too big. Too quiet. Boss quiet.
Buried beneath the corpse of the god they already killed lies a shielded artifact… a black ring box that eats thought.
When Boy Three slips the ring on, the dungeon answers.
The wall melts. Lava spills. And from the fire crawls a god with the mind of a flamethrower and the voice of a melting teenager:
Graphic violence, gore, dark humor. Listener discretion advised.
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E06: Rats in the Blood
Wed, 15 Oct 2025 15:55:02 GMT
In the corpse-chamber of a slain god, sleep doesn’t last. The pack awakens to a nightmare — waves of mutant, hairless rats pouring from vents and flesh, swarming their camp in the dark.
No screaming. No panic.
Just war.
Boy Two rolls up with a blade before breathing. Boy Seven vaults into the swarm. Boy Eight loses a leg and keeps fighting. Boy Three saves my life without even looking at me.
Three waves. Dozens of rats — tusked, tumor-blind, chain-dragging, hunger-driven.
The boys don’t break. They butcher.
When it’s over, they eat.
Hot, raw, and silent.
This isn’t survival anymore.
It’s ritual.
Warning: Violence, gore, feral behavior. Listener discretion advised.
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E05: Loot and Quiet
Wed, 15 Oct 2025 14:04:49 GMT
A god-beast is dead, acid still steaming from its joints.
My boys and I don’t leave. Not yet. This room — this silent chamber between hell-floors — holds old alien war relics and the first breath of safety we’ve tasted in weeks.
They eat. They sleep. They dream.
But I don’t.
I keep one eye open.
Because this isn’t peace. This is the inhale before violence.
And the rats are coming.
Contains graphic imagery, violence, and disturbing themes. Not intended for sensitive listeners.
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E04: The Locked One
Wed, 15 Oct 2025 04:21:43 GMT
The chamber is wider than the last three floors combined. Gravity hiccups. Boys vomit and weep. The air whispers thoughts that don’t belong.
It’s waiting for them. Not a spider queen. Not a monster. A god.
“I taught the first murderer how to sharpen stone. I swallowed the third moon for sport.”
It calls itself the Thought That Bends. Claims it split empires with sighs and sundered gods. Warns that killing it will free something worse.
The boys don’t care. They circle it like wolves. Spear, axe, garrote, rebar. Each boy takes a piece.
Cosmos locks it down with a psychic clamp and watches her pack tear a god apart.
It wasn’t built to fight dogs.
Explicit content: extreme violence
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E03: The Spider Floor
Wed, 15 Oct 2025 03:38:26 GMT
Cosmos leads the Twelve through nine waves of escalating horror—brutes with acidic blood, clones with human faces begging for help, silkweavers with razor legs. Boys lose limbs. One loses his hand and keeps fighting with a spike through the stump.
Then the queen arrives. Six meters of armored nightmare that splits the floor beneath her weight.
The boys swarm. Fire. Acid. Psychic claws. When it’s over, they are soaked in gore.
But something below knows their names now. And it’s waiting.
Explicit content: extreme violence
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E02: Origin
Wed, 15 Oct 2025 02:36:10 GMT
Before the boys, before the missions, before GATELOCK PRIME—there was a puppy in a Russian lab who could see through walls.
Cosmos wasn’t created. She was carved. Broken in a psycho-child program that fed her star-shaped pills and videos of dying children. She escaped through blood and bone, following a signal she didn’t yet understand.
Artifacts.
Now she hunts them with twelve cloned boys connected through a psychic lattice.
Explicit content: violence, dark themes.
A Dog and Her 12 Boys — S1E01: Descent into Gatelock Prime
Wed, 15 Oct 2025 01:55:50 GMT
A psychic dog wakes. Twelve cloned boys follow her into the depths of an ancient industrial complex.
They don’t have names. They barely survive long enough to earn them. The cloning vats spin up replacements when they fall.
Cosmos leads her pack through GATELOCK PRIME, hunting artifacts in the ruins. The lattice connects their minds. The artifacts watch and wait.
This is where it begins.
** Explicit content warning: Violence, dark themes **
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