"In a city, anything can - and will be - prey"
Humans claim they built cities for community, to be close to each other, to share resources, and because it's more efficient. But humans aren't the only things that think of cities as "more efficient."
In narrow alleys between buildings, in sub-basements long forgotten, in long-trodden sewers under busy streets, crouch hungry threats that have no name in our tongue, though we have a name in theirs. That name is "food."
In volume four of Terror Stories from the Territories, discover twelve unsettling tales of horrors lurking beneath the streets of every city, and between the tallest skyscrapers, as transcribed from the lost journals of Jack Harlowe, an enigmatic traveler, an adventurous man whose face is as trustworthy as his pen is eager, and an observer of the human condition we know as terror.
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