“I’m just worried you’d end up in some place like this,” he said, voice flat, opening his palms, “Talk of nightclubs, violent deliverance. You’re absorbing it, becoming something else.” Peter’s past continues to shape his future as he is accepted by The Lurk, the price a surrogate family and schizophrenic routine as his distinct personalities find their a life of duty, interspersed with microdosing, Nazi’s and sextacy. New friendships and rituals are formed as positivity expands, but so does violence, death and chaos, for cause and effect work differently here, positive action leads to negative consequence as internal and external forces weigh heavy on The Temple and The Lurk. As Peter takes The Temple to its final evolution, The Lurk can no longer ignore the weight of the state and institutions that are pulling the country apart. For Peter the attacks are personal, he’s been inquisitive, looking into places he shouldn’t, setting him on a collision course with invisible and all too visible foes.