Chapter Eight: God of the Gutter
The man Ely met in the outskirts of Pasig didn’t look like someone who once wore white vestments.
He looked like someone who clawed his way out of a shallow grave.
Levi Abrigo was a name erased from seminary records.7Please respect copyright.PENANAG0d2DF2kWW
No clear reason for dismissal.7Please respect copyright.PENANAW611Vnz9U3
No case filed.7Please respect copyright.PENANAe62B7fFrfj
No history left—just whispers.
But to Father Ely, whispers were louder than sermons.
He found Levi in a borrowed barbershop chair, smoking a half-lit cigarette while trimming the hair of a child who kept flinching. He never looked up. Not until Ely said the name.
“Emiliano.”
A pause.7Please respect copyright.PENANAvocykzWygI
A laugh.7Please respect copyright.PENANAPfpdlgXRjc
Then Levi turned slowly, revealing a scar just below his eye.
“He’s still playing priest?”
Levi didn’t believe in God anymore.
Not the one in scripture.7Please respect copyright.PENANAShQnqlaWYq
Not the one in stained glass.7Please respect copyright.PENANA4U4t7lA7eg
And especially not the one who “watched silently while a holy man taught us to sin.”
He wasn’t angry anymore, though. That was the terrifying part.
He was numb. Dangerous.7Please respect copyright.PENANAPmwJs7apoz
And far more useful than Ely expected.
“You wanna bring him down?” Levi asked. “You’ll need more than victims. You’ll need receipts. Movement. Dirt. Confessions.”
“He doesn’t just hurt them, Father,” he added. “He launders money. Pays silence. Manipulates succession. He’s not just a predator—he’s a kingpin in robes.”
“And I can show you where the bodies are buried.”
Literally?
Ely wasn’t sure yet.
That night, they broke into a private church residence—one Ely recognized as the “storage house” for church artifacts. A forgotten structure tucked behind the seminary, accessible only through an underground hall used during processions.
Inside, the air smelled like wax, rust, and mildew.7Please respect copyright.PENANATDpUGS3YuF
A single overhead bulb flickered above a locked cabinet.
Levi opened it with a crowbar.
Inside: VHS tapes.7Please respect copyright.PENANA01UFxOmig8
Labeled with years.7Please respect copyright.PENANA2Zpz9C4qs3
And names.
Choir practices.7Please respect copyright.PENANA8Wy2TUsVAe
Retreats.7Please respect copyright.PENANAGxsDKiWokO
Private counselings.7Please respect copyright.PENANAaB9GLvsDBm
And in the back, under a pile of mold-eaten folders—one marked “For Archives Only: San Gabriel Seminary”.
“He filmed them,” Ely whispered.
“Of course he did,” Levi spat. “You think men like Emiliano trust memory? No. They document their sins. So they can own the people in them.”
Ely stepped back, bile rising in his throat.
Levi stared at him.
“Still want to be the hero, Father?”
Ely didn’t answer.
He simply picked up the tape.
And walked out—into a night colder than any silence he’d ever known inside a chapel.
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