"Run Like A Girl "

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The sky looked dead. No stars, no moon—just a storm waiting to break. Thunder rolled far off, barely lighting the scene. In the middle of the forest, someone was running. Barefoot. Half-naked. Blood dripping down her legs. She wasn’t running for freedom. She was running for her life. Her dress—or what was left of it—hung in rags. The silk was torn apart days ago. Scars covered her body. Not scars of accidents—scars of punishment. Her skin told stories of every whip, every burn, every time someone forced themselves on her. She had been passed around like trash. For over a year and a half. Every single day. She wasn’t just raped—she was used. Again and again. By men who treated her like meat. Like a toy. Her body wasn’t hers anymore. It belonged to whoever wanted it. They would tie her up, inject her with drugs that made her forget—and then do it all over again the next day. She wouldn’t remember in the morning. That’s how they designed it. Memory-wiping drugs. Her pain didn’t even count as real to them. She was reset every day to be tortured from zero. The organization behind it called itself Project Leviathan. A hidden, dark group that called this abuse “research.” They recorded everything—how much she bled, how long she screamed, when she stopped reacting. She was a lab rat in human form. Sold. Starved. Beaten until she passed out. Then woken up to be violated again. She’d been forced to eat from the floor. Called names. Spit on in the streets as if her ruined body made it her fault. People were paid to insult her—to make her feel dirty. They called it part of the “conditioning.” Men stood in line to use her. She had lost count. Her periods stopped. Her body gave up. Her soul died. But one day, something cracked open inside her. She remembered. Everything. That night, she escaped. The men were after her now—searching in groups. Voices echoed behind her. One yelled, “She’s still unclaimed! Get her!” Another laughed and said, “I didn’t get my turn today.” They were hunting her like an animal. Not for science. Not for money. Just for fun. She kept running. Her feet were torn. Her leg bleeding. Her mind dizzy. The drugs were wearing off, and the pain was too real. It was like her body was breaking down. She had been injected with so many chemicals she couldn’t even scream properly. Her thoughts were foggy. Her muscles felt like they didn’t belong to her. But still, she ran. Then a gunshot. A sharp crack—and pain shot up her leg. She fell. Screamed. Crawled. One of the men found her. He looked like he hadn’t eaten in days, but it was lust, not hunger, in his eyes. He jumped on her, pressed his knees between her thighs, pinned her shoulders down. His mouth dripped spit onto her face. His hands tore at whatever cloth she had left. She struggled. Screamed. Kicked. But the drug made her weak. Still, something inside her refused to let go. She remembered her sister. Still in the facility. Still waiting. With whatever strength she had left, she bit the man’s neck—hard. He screamed. She twisted and kicked him between the legs. He fell back. She grabbed a rock nearby—the one her head had hit earlier—and smashed it into his face. Once. Twice. Until he stopped moving. She was covered in his blood now. And hers. She got up. Limping. Barely conscious. But she ran. She ran like a girl. And for once, that was her power. ---
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Thud
~ Thud ~
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The night was thick with fog, every sound magnified in the dense forest. Somewhere in the shadows, two gunshots cracked, sharp and cold. The bullets tore into the night without finding their true target. One man, drunk with excitement, had shot blindly at rustling leaves, thinking he had cornered the girl. He didn’t realize he’d just killed one of his own comrades—another predator who had been hunting with him. The shooter stepped forward, his boots sinking into the damp ground, crushing the body underfoot. He laughed, cruel and stupid, pressing down harder as if the corpse beneath was already a trophy. “You were a rare piece indeed, little bird,” he whispered, thinking the lifeless body was hers. But the weight beneath his boots didn’t feel right. He bent down to lift it, only to struggle. Frustrated, he switched on his laser light—and froze. The sight of his dead colleague staring blankly back at him sent a wave of rage through his veins. His laughter died, replaced with curses. With a furious snarl, he fired a signal flare—a crimson snake of light—into the sky, the message clear: “One of ours is down.” From another part of the forest, a second flare burst, signaling back: “Where is the girl?” Panicked and humiliated, the man dropped the dead body, muttering, “She escaped…” But before he could run, another shot rang out. The answer from his own director. His body dropped like a sack of meat, his last breath escaping in a gurgle. --- Somewhere close… she was watching. The girl, barely alive, crouched beneath a fallen log, gripping the blood-smeared gun she’d stolen from the man she had smashed with a rock. Her entire body trembled—half from fear, half from exhaustion. Her hands were shaking so hard the gun felt like it weighed a ton. Every inhale burned her ribs. Her skin was raw, torn in places, bruised black and purple. Her breath was shallow, broken by sobs she was trying to choke down. Her face was stained with dried blood—hers and theirs. Her lips were cracked, her tongue swollen from thirst. She hadn’t eaten in days. Leviathan had made sure of that. They wanted her weak before they hunted her, to test how long a “specimen” could survive on pure fear. --- Project Leviathan was hell made real. Inside the facility, she’d been nothing but a number. They called her “Subject 27.” They tested drugs on her—poisons that rotted the body from the inside. Injections that made her forget who she was, where she was, what had been done to her. They trained her like a dog, beat her like an animal, and when she screamed, they wrote it down like data. They carved symbols into her back with blades, branding her as “property.” They starved her until her bones cut through her skin. They forced her to clean floors with her bleeding hands, only to drag her to the cages afterward. Cages where men waited to take turns on her, laughing while she cried. She had been raped so many times that her body no longer recognized pain as pain—it was just normal. This was Leviathan’s “game.” They called it “testing resilience.” It was a sport for rich, powerful men who watched from behind cameras. Each hunt was entertainment. --- Back in the forest… Her tears dripped silently, mixing with the mud under her cheek. She kept repeating to herself: “Don’t breathe too loud. Don’t move. Don’t die.” The sound of snapping branches made her heart stop. Someone was close. Too close. She gripped the gun tighter, but her hands were slick with sweat and blood. Her vision was blurry. Her mind still played tricks—the drugs hadn’t fully worn off. Sometimes she saw shadows that weren’t there. Sometimes she heard screams that belonged to her but felt distant, like echoes of another life. The rustling grew louder. A voice—deep, guttural, inhuman—cut through the dark. “Found you, little bird…” She froze, her breath caught in her throat. Her heart thudded so loudly she thought they’d hear it. Then footsteps. Crunching leaves. The beam of a flashlight slicing through the fog. Her body wanted to give up. To just stop. But another voice, buried deep inside her, screamed louder: “Run. Run like a girl. Run or you’ll never see the sky again.” She whispered to herself .
This is what organizations do to you . You become living undead .
Hilarious isn't it ?
The footsteps were closing in. Leaves cracked under weight. Breathing. Heavy. Close. She gritted her teeth and raised the broken laser gun. She tried to switch it on—nothing. The lens had cracked when she used it to bash the man’s skull earlier. She cursed herself, but there was no time to mourn broken weapons. She lay in wait, pressing her back hard against the soaked log. Her finger rested on the trigger. Her other hand gripped the muddy bark, anchoring her shaking body. The thunder cracked like an omen. A flash of light. She saw his outline. Now. Eyes shut, she pulled the trigger. Once. Twice. She didn’t stop. The recoil jolted her, and her wrists burned, but she kept firing blindly until the clicks told her the magazine was empty. The man was down. One of the trained ones—dead. Another one she hit groaned in the dark, bleeding out. She waited. Two minutes. Breath shallow. Blood pounding in her ears. Her hands wouldn't stop shaking. Was it over? For now? She inched forward and saw what was left of the first man. Chest torn open. Jaw slack. Still twitching. It hit her. She killed one of them. She actually killed one of them. Tears came—but not from sadness. It was rage. Rage and release. She snapped. She screamed, her voice guttural and raw, and started beating the injured man. Her fists, her elbows, her knees. She let go of everything—every rape, every injection, every chain, every time they made her crawl like a dog. Her fists bled. His face caved in. Milgram’s experiment? He was no authority. She wasn’t obeying anymore. She was delivering judgment. She looted the dead man's body. Grabbed his gun. Ammunition. Knife. His bag. His jacket. She found a patch on his uniform. Elite Tier 3 – Experimental Hunter. She blinked. She had just killed a Leviathan hunter. Trained. Programmed. And she—Subject 27—was supposed to be a broken doll. A small, cracked smile formed on her lips. She wasn’t broken anymore. She ran again. Blood running down her thigh. Her feet slipping in mud. But her legs didn’t stop. She was fueled now. Fueled by the sick joy of surviving, by the hope that maybe, just maybe, she wasn’t going to die tonight. And for the first time in years, she whispered: “I don’t run to escape anymore. I run because I’ve already won.”
Project Leviathan began as a clandestine psychological research collaboration between Japan and private American biotech investors, under the guise of “rehabilitation for failed youth.” The founder—a respected PhD in psychology and neurology, publicly tied to Japan’s Ministry of Education—was secretly involved in occult rituals tied to ancient Eastern belief systems and modern satanic transhumanism. He went by the name “Sensei.” He believed in purging the soul to rebuild the perfect human. Not through love. Not through teaching. But through destruction. He collaborated with black-market scientists and hackers from the Dark Web, where they sold: Live human experiments (like red room streams) Drug trial footage Full body bio-data for private AI testing Psychological breakdown studies for elite investors The dark web gave them anonymity, profit, and cruelty. Every experiment was streamed to hidden buyers—people in government, military, corporations, even sick collectors. The more pain, the more views. Subject 27 (our girl) was kidnapped, chosen because of her rare neurological pattern, perfect for memory erasure and regeneration. She was fed experimental drugs, underwent muscle reconstruction using stem cell tech, had nano-chips implanted to monitor emotions, and was even exposed to fungal brain infections to test consciousness decay. She was trained in: Instinctual combat Reflex sharpening Cold weather survival Torture endurance Then they wiped her mind again and again. “Train, erase, test, repeat.” She even called the founder “Sensei”, just like she was conditioned to. Her daily schedule in the facility included: Cold exposure (ice baths for 3 hours) Forced starvation Lab room sexual abuse Drug-induced hallucination testing Controlled near-death experiences (oxygen cutoffs) Everything was recorded. Every scream timestamped. Every heartbeat stored. --- Why Japan? Why America? Japan provided the hidden island, obedient scientists, ritual background. America provided the tech, bio-weapons, and most importantly—funding. In exchange, America received “data” for warfare and surveillance: How long can a human resist mental collapse? Can we train killers through trauma? Can pain reset a personality? They called it: "Applied Behavioral Warfare."
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Now, in that forest, she was no longer a lab rat. She was cold. Wet. Covered in blood. Ribs bruised. Leg wounded. Memories broken like mirrors. But something inside her had cracked open. She was remembering the training they tried so hard to erase. Her hands didn’t shake when she held the gun now. Her feet didn’t trip on roots anymore. She was moving like a soldier—because they trained her like one. But they forgot one thing. They built her to survive—but never expected her to escape. Now she wasn’t just running. She was hunting.
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The night didn't give her mercy. She ran. Blood still stained her hands, breaths sharp like blades in her lungs. Behind her, Tier-1 operatives were closing in—men trained to kill, men who'd been deployed in black ops missions across nations. But they weren’t trained like her. She didn’t even know it yet, but she was their prototype. If war broke out tomorrow, she would be the first line of defense. Tier-1 would come after. She was what they called “Project Leviathan.” The organization made her perfect. A blend of science, ritual, and brutality. But they also erased her. Wiped memories, suppressed instinct, numbed her into a drugged, obedient subject. And she wasn't the only one. Her sister, the second specimen, still rotted inside the facility. When they captured her sibling and locked her away, they forgot to dose her for two days. That was enough. Withdrawal from “Zeracline”—the drug they injected daily to suppress brain waves and body control—ripped her open from the inside. Zeracline, a synthetic neuro-blocker, was meant to keep the body sedated, emotions neutralized, and pain perception warped. Normally, the body should be dosed every 24 hours to maintain equilibrium. But the delay, combined with starvation, pushed her into a full-blown psychotic break. Her body twisted on its own, spasms controlling her like a puppet possessed. She screamed without stopping. She tore her nails off clawing the walls. And on the third night—something snapped. Everything came back. The memories they thought were erased. She remembered her sister. And before the escape, the girl in the forest—who didn’t know she was "Leviathan" yet—had slipped her the key through the barred vent. Her sister hadn’t recognized her face, but something in her voice... it made her obey. A primal bond. She hadn’t seen her since. Now, as she reached the edge of the forest, she knew there was no going back. Behind her, footsteps and drone wings hummed in the night sky. The Indicator—a man who sat at the top of the chain, a hybrid of military tactician and sadist—was already planning her punishment. His thoughts were filthy, vile. He lit a cigar and ordered a thermal scan. A chopper had taken off 15 minutes ago. They wanted her alive. They needed to break her again. But she left footprints in both directions to throw them off. A trick she remembered from some buried past. A lesson from a man they made her call Sensei. Then, with the roaring river behind her—black, violent, monstrous—she prayed. And jumped. No hesitation. No fear. Just survival. The river wasn’t made for humans. It was ice-cold, the kind that numbs muscles in seconds. It swallowed her whole. Her boots dragged her down. Her soaked clothes pulled tight around her ribs. She fought to kick back up, hitting rocks, bleeding again, but alive. Above, a drone scanned one side of the cliff—too late. She was already gone.
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Author
Author
Greetings, to my beloved ones . I hope you like the chapter . This is my first time so please have some mercy . Any recommendations! . Thanks once again .
Author
Author
Well , first gear the song in lyrical form , you'd understand the meaning of choosing this song . There will be science and enigmatic rituals as l am a student of these subjects. Hope you enjoyed it . ❤️💞

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