To kill. That was the monsterâs first thought as he became self-aware.
Magic shaped him from nothing. Otherworldly energies assembled his raw particles into the shape of an unliving being. He had no parents, no past of his own, for he was a putrid four-legged horror with festering flesh, cold black scales, sharp claws, and cruel fangs. His jaws could break stones like reeds and unleash poison anathema to the living.
The undead had no name, though he knew what he was: a Festering Gator, the perfect mixture of reptilian cruelty and zombie resilience. He did not need a name, for his purpose was simple.
To eat, to kill, to rule.
You have been created by Dismaker Labs. We hope you have a pleasant stay in the new world we have created.
Information flooded the creatureâs mind as he exited his dungeon. He had been created by the Trimurti System to participate in a worldwide contest of strength with only one rule: whoever reached level 100 first would rule this planet.
The dungeon birthed him at level 20, so he had many kills to go. The System told him that planet Earth was already home to many creatures worth experience points, with none tastier than its dominant species: man.
Some humans wielded powerful equipment, but most were weak. Their skin was soft, and they possessed neither claws nor fangs. They would be easy prey. Within minutes he had learned all he needed to kill them.
It took days of travel from his dungeon to the nearest manhive. He crossed the dry desert of his dark birth to the brilliant Mediterranean coast. The sight of buildings and houses ripe for annihilation welcomed him.
You have arrived in: Tunis, Tunisia.
Driven by an instinct embedded into his very bones, the monster walked up a paved road in search of prey. He salivated from the smell of sweet human flesh nearby.
A small creature was sitting in his path.
âBegone!â it said with a squeaky female voice.
The fur ball was so small compared to the Festering Gator that he almost didnât notice her. The creature looked vaguely similar to feline monsters from his dungeon, but tiny, young, frail. Her yellow fur stood out from the black road, as did her orange eyes.
âIâm Misha! Iâm a cat!â The creature wagged her tail and looked up at the Festering Gator with foolish bravery. âI can only let friends in! Evil beasties must stay outside! Go away, and I wonât hurt you!â
The Festering Gator lowered the two black abysses that served as his eyes. Confusion filled his empty heart. He didnât understand what he saw.
That critter, that vermin, did not fear him.
The thought filled the Festering Gator with rage. How could this small, inferior creature fail to recognize his might? He, the future Overgod of all creation? He wouldnât let that stand! He roared at the female furball and lunged at her with all his might.
Instead of cowering, the tiny creature leaped at him. âIâll hit you!â
The Festering Gator never saw the swipe that slew him.
The paw moved faster than sound and shattered his skull to pieces. The blow propelled his body off the road with cataclysmic strength, his steel-strong bones cracking from the impact. The magic that animated him evaporated from his carcass in an instant.
âAwwâ¦why didnât you turn away?â Misha whispered with a sad, sad look. She had just wanted to scare him off. She didnât take pleasure in swiping anyone except the screens. Not all beasties were bad, the good Imam said; some became good friends of man. âIâm sorryâ¦â
She poked the beastie and waited for him to wake up again. He didnât. The smell of rot attracted a swarm of flies, one of them brave enough to approach Misha.
âOh, a fly!â Misha couldnât help herself. She tried to catch the bug, but it was quicker and flew away. âGet back here!â
Misha chased after the fly, leaving the beastieâs corpse behind.
Misha caught the fly, much to her joy.
Misha was a good cat, so she tried to be happy, even when she visited Aya, which always made her a little sad. She patrolled the road to protect humans from evil birdies and beasties each morning. She never complained. Not even once!
But Misha couldnât swipe the evil screen, no matter how hard she tried.
You can undergo metamorphosis intoâ
âSneak attack!â Misha jumped at the nasty blue box. She went through it and scratched the road instead. The ground shook from the power of her mighty paws.
You have denied metamorphosis for the second time. You will not gain new Perks or better base stats, but your growth rates will be increased.
âGet back here!â Misha challenged the screen as it ran away. âCome back and die to me!â
The evil screen treacherously hid away from her, which made Misha madâ¦for a few minutes until a leaf in the wind distracted her. Mishaâs anger only lasted as long as her brief attention span allowed it.
Today would be a great day. Angelo and Sami had returned from the city of Sousse with new shinies! Misha would meet with them at the hungry place near the sea, and they would gorge themselves on fish.
Tunis was a big gray human city, crowded and dirty, but the Sidi Bou Said district was small. The white stone houses shone under the sunlight. The air from the sea tasted salty and the good Muezzin called people to the prayers from atop his tower. Humans drank tea around tables near the coffee shops. Not all of them were smiling, so Misha decided to cheer them up.
âGood day!â Misha greeted people as she ran along the walkway. âPeace be with you!â
Her presence caused the humans to smile back, as they always did when a cat passed by. It made them feel safe. It had only been a month since the skies opened and the evil birdies attacked. Even if cats like Misha had cleaned up the streets and kept Tunis safe, humans still feared for their life.
They could only die once, after all.
Misha reached the restaurant by the sea. It was high up on a cliff, so high that they could see one of Tunisâ dungeons from there: the Brass Tower of Carthage. It was the shiniest litter in all of Tunisia, a tall arrow of metal pointing at the skies near the waters. Don Le Minet, the lion sultan of cats, ruled Tunis from there after eating the previous Boss. Misha had been there many times. The Animafia Guild always called for her to kill strong beasties who wandered too close to the city.
As she walked inside the restaurant, Misha noticed a human family sitting around a table under the watchful eye of their feline protector. Two old manlings ate cake, while their daughter laughed at something her cat whispered in her ear. It reminded Misha of Aya.
Aya was the best owner ever. She fed Misha, dressed her up with ribbons, and groomed her fur. Aya was always smiling, always laughing. Aya was asleep for now, but Misha would wait for her to wake up.
âMisha!â Sami barked at her from their usual table. âOver here!â
âSami, Angelo!â Misha ran to her friends as fast as the wind. The human waiters had set cushions just for them near the cliffâs edge, with tiny stones so they could sharpen their claws. Sami and Angelo were already waiting for Misha alongside a new friend she didnât know.
Sami was a good hound, a big brown molossus with kind eyes and a smelly snout. Cats and dogs went along well in the Animafia Guild. Doggies cheered cats to make them stronger, strong enough to swipe even the meanest birdie. Don Le Minet always sent Sami on the toughest missions outside the city, and he never complained.
Angelo was a black cat with brown streaks, sour outside, and a sweetie inside. He always tried to play it cool, except with his human, who he called âMinionâ and rubbed the legs all the time. The System gave him jet black wings after he reached level 7, and one day, he would grow into a big black sphinx. It happened to old Wejdene at level 25!
As for the new friend, he was a big tiger with two long fangs that reached as low as the floor; a ferocious smilodon!
âHello!â Misha greeted the newcomer the moment she landed on her cushion. âIâm Misha! Whatâs your name?â
âChad.â The smilodon puffed his chest. âSmilo Chad.â
âHis real name is Baboo,â Angelo said.
âShut up, Angelo,â Smilo Baboo-Chad replied angrily. âYouâre just jealous of my sabertooth swagger!â
âMisha, how good to smell you again!â Sami licked Misha behind the ears, which she liked very much. âI missed you so much.â
âMe, too, Sami!â
Angelo ignored his new friend and greeted Misha instead. âHello, kiddie.â
âIâm four months old!â Misha defended her clawiness. âIâm strong, and I have teeth!â
She roared to prove it, loud enough to spook Smilo Baboo-Chad.
âNobody denies that part,â Angelo replied calmly. Misha was the highest level animal in the city behind Don Le Minet and the Koala, because she swiped evil beasties left and right. She wouldnât let any of them near a human ever again. âBut youâre still the youngest of us, so I get to call you kiddie.â
Misha grumbled, but she didnât have the heart to stay mad at her friend for long. Especially not when they brought a new shiny: an oil lamp of red glass, with pretty pictures of flames on its surface. It let out a sweet-smelling mist on the table.
âCheck this out, Misha,â Sami said with pride. âWe found it in Sousseâs Jinn Court dungeon.â
âWhat does it do? What does it do?â Misha asked with excitement. Magical shinies fascinated her. âCan it summon a genie like in ? Can I make a wish?â
âUnfortunately no,â Sami replied. âBut it can disperse illusions and darkness.â
Misha tried her best not to look disappointed. She had hoped to wish Aya could wake up. Then she would have wished for the poor people of Tunis to become wealthy and, finally, for a sea of sweet milk!
The human waiter, Mohammed, arrived with the snackies: freshly cut fish and yummy lamb couscous! Misha licked her lips, and Sami gnawed on the meat, but Angelo stared at the platter with incomprehension.
âWhereâs my sushi, Mohammed?â he asked the waiter, pointing at sliced fish with his paw.
âThis is sushi,â Mohammed grunted. âA sashimi slice.â
âSushis have rice in them!â Angelo slammed the platter with his paw and sent a fish flying in the air. Smilo Baboo-Chad tried to catch it midair, but the food bounced off his long fang. âWhereâs my sushi, Mohammed? Have you forgotten the rules? We keep the streets clean of monsters, and in return, you feed us, love us, house us, and fulfill all our whims! Youâre disrespecting me, Mohammed!â
âI canât make nigiri without rice,â Mohammed replied calmly. Mohammed was never afraid of anything. âWe donât produce rice in Tunisia, we mostly import it. In case you havenât noticed, the worldwide supply chain is kinda broken right now.â
âThe supply chain?â Angelo hissed. âWhere is it? I will give its links a good tug!â
Mohammedâs lips curled. âSometimes I wonder why we bother with this arrangement.â
âLook, letâs be objective here.â Angelo smirked smugly. âThe System gifted us with advanced claw proficiency, incredible agility, the ability to slay all birds, and lives. All at level one! Meanwhile, it turned you into a clever cook. Itâs just the way things are meant to be.â
âYour Tamer owner gave you nine lives,â Mohammed replied with a tired voice.
âExactly,â Angelo said with a nod. âHe exists to improve my comfortable existence.â
âThen find rice for me, and I will cook you nigiri,â Mohammed said before serving another feline client. Angelo glared at him but didnât find a clever retort.
Recommended Level: 10.
Mohammed needs rice to make yummy food. Find riceâ
âSneak attack!â Misha swiped the screen, to no avail.
Dismaker Labs wishes you a happy apocalypse!
The screen vanished and Misha sulked.
âI will get you next time,â she swore. âNext time!â
âYou know you canât harm it, right?â Angelo asked. âTry all you want, you wonât get rid of the screens.â
âI hate the screens,â Misha complained. âItâs because of them Aya got hurt. I hate them more than pointers, and they keep pointing at me!â
Sami and Angelo exchanged a glance. In the background, Smilo Baboo-Chad was struggling to eat his fish without getting it stuck between his fangs.
âYouâre still visiting Aya?â Sami asked, a sad look on his snouty face.
âEach day,â Misha replied with a proud nod. âI canât wait for her to wake up.â
âLook, Mishaâ¦â Angelo cleared his throat. âI donât want to be the one to say this, butâ¦I donât think Aya will ever wake up. Itâs been a month.â
âShe will,â Misha insisted. âThe Imam said it, and the Imam never lies!â
âYes, butâ¦â Angelo winced as Sami stepped on his tail for some reason. âOuch!â
âSo, where do you come from?â Misha asked her new friend. âAre you from Tunis? Or Djerba?â
âIâm from Sousse,â said Smilo Baboo-Chad after finally swallowing his fish. âIâll probably move to Tunis long-term as my cityâs ambassador.â
âHeâs Souspicious,â Angelo said with a laugh. Nobody ever laughed at his puns, but Misha always nodded in approval so he wouldnât feel alone.
âOh, do you have a lion sultan?â Misha pressed her new friend for details. She couldnât help herself. She was too curious!
âWe donât have a Guildmaster, no,â Smilo Baboo-Chad explained. âOur dungeon is tougher than yours. It mostly produces jinns, ghouls, and elementals. Not birdies like yours.â
âSo, the locals are like, ten levels behind us,â Sami explained. âThey couldnât rack up experience early like we did.â
âOoohâ¦â Misha whispered. She thought all cats had become strong on the first day when big birds emerged from the Tower of Carthage and the Wind Palace in the Medina. It had made them strong enough to protect humansâ¦most of them. âAre humans safe in Sousse?â
âSort of,â Smilo Baboo-Chad answered. âWeâve got a loose confederation of parties taking care of themselves. Humans, dogs, catsâ¦even turtles and ferals formed groups in Sousse. Problem is, none of them can agree on anything.â
âYou see, Misha, when Don Le Minet stormed the Tower of Carthage with the other zoo animals, it allowed him to create the Animafia and organize us,â Angelo explained. âThe humans came to us begging for protection.â
Misha knew that story by heart, but politely let her friend tell it again. Don Le Minet had been a mighty lion at Tunisâ Zoo, and the System made him the strongest feline of all times. He gathered a great clowder of cats and slaughtered all the birdies for levels before making the city his territory.
âWe cats were so powerful after slaughtering the birdies that it simply made sense for us to handle monsters while humans took care of the food and cuddling.â Angelo glared at Mohammed and shouted at him. âWhich theyâre doing a poor job at it!â
âWhatever,â the waiter replied.
âSo, Don Le Minet agreed to take care of dungeon stuff and let the human council of Imams manage the city,â Sami explained. âBut the people of Sousse never managed to organize without a Guild. Itâs complete chaos.â
âThat would change if we could clear the dungeon, but we can barely maintain truce zones between our parties,â Smilo Baboo-Chad said. âThatâs why we asked for reinforcements from you guys.â
âWe met Baboo while cleaning up the second floor,â Angelo explained. Smilo Baboo-Chad scowled at the name. âBut the third was too tough for our group. We would need at least ten high-level parties to reach the Boss.â
âOr the right animal.â Sami scowled. âThereâs rumors that the Don intends to send the Koala to clean up.â
Misha held her breath in terror. âHe canât!â
âHe can,â Angelo replied with a shrug. âBut yeah, the Koala is more likely to collapse the dungeon than conquer the place.â
The Koalaâhis true name was Sleepy, but nobody dared to speak itâwas the most powerful creature in the entire Animafia behind Don Le Minet. Misha remembered him vaguely from the time Aya brought her to the zoo, before the dungeons. The guardians let Aya touch the Koala, but he preferred to munch plants rather than get out of his cage. He was new and shy.
But that was before.
The System made cats better and lions nobler, but it turned the Koala into a . Within the first hour of his metamorphosis, he had eaten all of the zooâs hippopotamuses, half the alligators, and one of the bears. Nobody knew how Don Le Minet managed to reason with him; or at least, none survived to tell the tale.
âThatâs why I think we should move to Egypt,â Angelo declared. âLess headaches this way.â
âHere we go again.â Sami rolled his eyes. âI wondered when you would bring it up today.â
âYou canât understand, you werenât worshiped as a god,â Angelo replied. âThe Egyptians, they us cats. They would have rice for sushi.â
âEgypt is too far away,â Smilo Baboo-Chad said with a shrug. âWe would have to swim or walk through Algeria to reach the place.â
âLibya,â Sami said. Sami could always tell left from right, because he was smart. âItâs Libya between Tunisia and Egypt.â
âSame, itâs sand.â
The conversation fizzled out afterward, and the food platter shrank to nothing. But before she finished everything, Misha slipped a fishtail into a waiterâs pocket as he passed by.
âWhy did you do that?â Smilo Baboo-Chad asked in confusion.
âItâs my tip,â Misha explained with pride. âThe good Imam says, So I tip everyone!â
âDonât you tip waiters in Sousse?â Sami asked. âI always leave them a bone.â
âI let them rub my belly,â Smilo Baboo-Chad admitted. âBut I swipe them if they take too long.â
âYou should teach humans never to expect anything,â Angelo grumbled. âIt builds character.â
The group separated after many licks and tearful barks, but they promised to meet again tonight after their respective errands were completed. Misha wouldnât miss her own for anything; not even for her friends.
She was going to visit Aya.
Aya slept in the south of Tunis, beyond the great lake. Misha had to run around it to avoid arriving wet. When she reached the doors of Ayaâs new home, she found Habib at the entrance with sweet flowers in his arms.
Habib was a good Imam, an old human with long white robes and a kind smile of crooked teeth. Before the dungeons, he gave money to the poor, fed cats, and prayed for everyone. Now he healed the sick with spells, cleaned up beds with his broom, and took care of Aya in Mishaâs absence.
âHello, Mister Habib!â Misha greeted the good Imam. âHas Aya woken up today?â
âIâm afraid not,â the good Imam replied. His voice was soothing and wise, but his words saddened Misha a little. âAllah be merciful, I know she is thankful for your visits.â
âI wish I could come more often,â Misha complained. She would rather be at Ayaâs side at all times, but she had promised to defend the city and needed to fulfill her vow.
âAllah tasks no soul beyond its capacity,â said the good Imam. âYou have already exceeded many in faith and kindness. Aya is always with you, my child, even if you cannot see her yet.â
Mishaâs head perked up with hope. âShe is? Right now?â
âYes, she is. And one day, Allah will lift the veil from your eyes and will be able to hold her again.â The good Imam petted Misha behind the ears. âNow go. She is waiting for you.â
Misha nodded and entered the Jellaz Cemetery.
She walked among the flowers and bed of stones, until she found Ayaâs. Her owner slept between her parents, under a white soft slab covered in flowers. The good Imam had written words on its hard surface. It had taken Misha many days to learn how to read them.
2014-2022.
Peace be upon her, the day she was born, and the day she died, and the day she will be raised up alive.
Misha sat in front of Ayaâs bed. So many words formed in her mind. She wanted to tell Aya about her day, about her new friend, about the new words she had learned and all the food she had eatenâ¦
But she couldnât. The words came out on their own.
âIâm sorry.â
That sentence felt sore in her mouth. Misha had uttered it so many times, but she could never get used to it. These words were like a curse, one she would have to live with for the rest of her life.
âIâm sorry, Aya,â Misha apologized with a small, little voice. âIâm sorry I let that birdie into our home. Iâm sorry I hid under the bed whenâ¦whenâ¦â
Misha couldnât say it. It hurt to remember that cruel night, when the screens showed up and filled the world with sorrow. Misha had tried to make it a happier place, as did all her friendsâ¦yet someone would always be missing.
âI swear, I havenât let another evil birdie or beastie hurt anyone else since.â It soothed Mishaâs guilt, but only a little. She always gave them a chance to turn away from evil before swiping them, because Aya would have wanted it. Aya wanted everyone to become her friend. âNot one!â
Aya didnât answer. Aya didnât wake up. She didnât play with Misha or pet her, didnât put a ribbon on her head or bring her treats under the table. Misha wouldnât lick her owner, wouldnât rub her legs, or run after her. Once she did all of those things, but that felt like a long time ago.
âI miss you,â Misha whispered.
One day, the righteous would return. The Imam had said so. In the end times, good Allah would wake up Aya from her slumber, and they would be together again.
Until that day, Misha would keep visiting her ownerâs bed of stone.
For Misha was a good cat.