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Skatingjesus Andaroos Chronicles Chapter 3l [DIRECT]
He dropped in. The MegaDitch was a gauntlet of sacred obstacles: the Staircase of Schisms (twelve steps, each representing a different heresy), the Handrail of Hanging Priests (a smooth, 40-foot rail guarded by the echoes of those who doubted too loudly), and finally, the Loop of Eternal Return —a full pipe that bent space-time into a Mobius strip.
“You have the right to remain rad.”
I. The Concrete Wasteland of Echo Park The sky above Andaroos bled a sickly orange. Not from sunset—but from the Glitch , a perpetual data-storm that had frozen the city’s atmosphere between 5:47 PM and 5:48 PM for the last three years. SkatingJesus rolled to a stop at the lip of the Echo Park MegaDitch, a decommissioned neural-waterway now used as a proving ground for fallen deities and sponsored punks. SkatingJesus Andaroos Chronicles Chapter 3l
His board hummed. Not wheels on concrete—but shrieked with the frequency of a thousand deleted prayers. This was no ordinary deck. It was the , forged from a splinter of the True Cross and recycled aerospace carbon fiber. On its grip tape, a faint ichor glow spelled out: HEEL FLIP FOR SALVATION .
SkatingJesus held up his broken board. “Almost dying is just the universe’s way of spotting you. Now help me find a new deck. I’m thinking something with a little more resurrection pop.” He dropped in
The MegaDitch filled with gray sludge—the physical form of doom-scrolling. SkatingJesus lost his edge. His board wobbled. He bailed hard, shoulder-first into the Staircase of Schisms, cracking two ribs and one of the Ten Commandments (the one about graven images, ironically). As he lay in the sludge, the ghosts of forgotten prophets gathered—Ezekiel on rollerblades, Jeremiah with a broken scooter. They whispered: Why do you still skate? No one believes anymore. The last church became a vape lounge.
SkatingJesus laughed, spitting up a little light. “You think I do this for belief? I do it because the grind is the only honest prayer. When you slide metal on concrete, the universe makes a sound. And that sound says: I was here. I fell. I got up. ” The Concrete Wasteland of Echo Park The sky
As SkatingJesus carved down, the Static Priests began their chant: a low-frequency denial of reality, causing the concrete to ripple like old VHS tracking. His wheels left trails of molten grace. Each push was a psalm. Each powerslide, a rebuttal.
SkatingJesus smiled, revealing teeth filed into miniature church spires. “I don’t pay to skate. I skate to unpay .”
Andaroos watched from above, clutching his holy hot dog (mustard as prophecy). “He’s going to try the Christ Air 360 into the loop, isn’t he?” Halfway through the handrail, SkatingJesus hesitated. For the first time in twelve eternities, doubt infected his bearings. A memory surfaced: his previous incarnation, nailed not to a cross but to a billboard for a soda brand. The betrayal of mass production. The moment they turned his blood into a limited-edition flavor.