Parasited Penny Park [extra Quality] -
“They said we could stay,” his father whispered. “If we become part of them. No more rent. No more running. Just one big family.”
Seo-jun woke to a wet sound, like mud sliding off a shovel. His father’s cot was empty. The blanket was damp and moving. He found him in the carousel, kneeling before the central pipe, his mouth open wide. Pale tendrils emerged from his throat, waving gently. His eyes were milk-white, but he was smiling.
The plan was simple, elegant, and monstrous. Over three weeks, the parasites migrated. They clogged the pipes beneath Mr. Park’s building. They emerged from showerheads and toilet bowls in the penthouses. Residents woke with lesions on their thighs, worms coiling in their hair. The property value plummeted. Mr. Park begged the city to intervene, but the city said it was a “biological anomaly” and advised evacuation. parasited penny park
Then Mr. Park did exactly what Seo-jun predicted: he sold the entire block—including Penny Park—for a fraction of its worth. The buyer was a shell company that Seo-jun had registered using a forged ID and two months of his cleaning wages. The company’s sole asset was the deed to a rotting amusement park.
But sometimes, late at night, Seo-jun feels something move beneath his skin. A small, deliberate twitch in his forearm. A warmth in his chest that isn’t his own. And he remembers the last thing his father said, just before the tendrils closed over his lips: “They said we could stay,” his father whispered
“We don’t kill them,” Seo-jun told his family. “We just aim them.”
Their father wanted to burn the lagoon. Their mother wanted to leave. But Seo-jun saw opportunity. Mr. Park had been complaining about the smell from his penthouse. He threatened to bulldoze the park entirely, which meant the family would lose their shed, their shelter, their only piece of the city. No more running
Waiting for the next family to make a deal. If you meant a about a real place called "Penny Park" with parasitic infestations (ecological, social, or financial), please clarify the location or context, and I’ll gladly provide that instead.
