Confronted on one side by revolutionaries and coerced into service by the Rulers on the other—Seneca walks the digital city of Delphi in search of clues. But when the leads dry up, he is forced into visiting the one place he had sworn he would never return to: the Church of the Trinity, the very place he is investigating. There is no one to trust. There is nowhere to escape. There is nothing for him but the upheaval of all he has ever known.
Paul Jenkins is a British comic book writer. He has had much success crossing over into the American comic book market. Primarily working for Marvel Comics, he has had a big part shaping the characters of the company over the past decade.
This read much better for me than the previous issue. I went back to believing in the potential the first issue pitched to me, with a character struggling to keep up with a world that played by different rules for bigger beings. And the cliff-hanger really had me wanting more, though it's hard to forgive JUST HOW ANNOYED I was with the last issue. Still, props for this issue for pulling me back into optimism after such disappointment. The art and the paneling looks slick.
(I'm experimenting with a personal way to rate comics in order to understand what I look for in the genre. This got 31.75/50)
This is a prime example why I give a comic at least 4 issues. The first issue started slow for me. But as the series progresses the story telling is intriguing.