“They say the winner writes history. Me? I write headlines.”
Blood on the mat. Cheers drowning in the distance. A few smashed bodies. And a few broken egos. That’s the price for a little excitement in a stagnant federation.
They wanted a warm body to toss in the ring. A number on a booking sheet. A clown to dance for the crowd. And they got Kenny. Oh, they got more than they were ready for.
A couple days pass. He is in a motel that smells like ashtrays and regret. Cheap TV on, phone in hand. Headlines still buzzing. But nothing about the Wildcard__.
Kenny pulled out a burner phone… burner, because he liked fire. That cracked him up for a second. He turned it over in his hand, thumb hovering for just a beat before slamming down on the big red record button.
The screen blinked alive. And the moment it did, he was on.
“Ronin Rumble?” he barked at the lens, pacing the grimy motel floor like a caged animal. “I was the rumble.”
The phone wobbled in his grip, framing him in jolts and half-angles, like chaos trying to film itself.
“Security tried to stop me. Where are they now? Probably still gluing the turnbuckle back together. Yakuza’s lookin’ for me? Cute. I left ‘em nothin’ but smoke and skid marks. And the cops? Man, they’re out here chasin’ shadows.”
He leaned in close, wide-eyed, grinning like a man who’d just set his own rules on fire.
“You can’t arrest fire. You can’t cuff a riot. You can’t hold a dancing flame.”
A match appeared between his fingers like magic. It hissed to life on the motel wall. Smoke curled straight into the camera.
“They’re all waitin’ around for their next feud, their next storyline, their next soft little promo package. But Kenny? Kenny is the package deal. I’m the red ink in your police report. I’m the static in your headset that says, ‘We’ve lost control.’”
He dropped the match, letting it die on the stained carpet at his feet, adding in with the mysterious stains.
“You wanna be legends? Icons? You’re just stunt doubles. You wanna beat me? First you gotta find me. But I’m not a man anymore. I’m a spark. A time bomb that is ready to explode.”
He leaned in again, quieter now, that mad preacher calm settling over him.
“And every damn time I show up, something burns.”
Then he tapped the phone’s screen slowly. Once. Twice. Three times.
“Tick... tick... tick…”
Click.
The video ended.
A few button presses later, it was everywhere. A grainy upload to a knockoff social site. A reposted version on a slanted news feed. A mirrored link shared in a buried thread on the dark web titled simply: “He’s Back.”
The world had a hole in it. Valora Salinas—gone. Silenced. The firebrand heroine reduced to a name people whispered when the lights flickered.
But nature abhors a vacuum. And into that void stepped Kenny.
Not with banners. Not with speeches. But with smoke, sparks, and destruction.
To the average viewer, he was just a madman with a grudge and a camera. But those who really watched… the ones who paused the video frame-by-frame, who listened to the rhythm of his speech like decoding scripture—they knew. There was a message buried beneath the manic grin and broken furniture.
He wasn’t trying to save anyone. He was trying to wake them up.
“Give ‘em something to hate,” Kenny had once told a friend. “And the brave ones? They’ll know how to listen.”
He wasn't playing the hero. Heroes ended up blacklisted. Disappeared. Tortured under the brightest lights of the biggest prisons.
No, Kenny had chosen a different mask: Nuisance. Menace. Villain.
But it was a performance, and the ones with eyes underneath the surface knew it. He’s playing the part so loud, it makes the quiet ones ask why.
The burner phone snapped and tossed aside like it owed him money. It was time to leave the comfort of the shitty motel, as its comfort wouldn’t last when the pigs or wolves came knocking.
—
Kenny sat atop the rusted radio tower like a gargoyle in streetwear, legs swinging in the salt-bitten wind. From this high up, the wharf unfolded below him like a living drama. Workers unloading crates they weren’t paid enough to question, men in sleek black suits watching everything too carefully, and shadows that moved against the tide.
The pier stank of illicit dealings. Too many wolves circling the same meat. Too many glances passed like currency. He didn’t need binoculars to read the signs—this was Yakuza turf, and they were busy tonight. Not subtle, either. But wolves never had to be subtle when they thought they owned the forest.
Then something shifted.
A figure stepped from the alley, slipping into the warehouse without so much as a whisper, and Kenny nearly choked. That silhouette. That gait. That goddamn vampire, Chuluun Bold. The Mongolian mauler, the blood-drinking myth, the Federation’s former double champion.
Dealing with the Yakuza? That was new. Kenny narrowed his eyes. Not a honeymoon, not the start of a beautiful partnership. This stank of desperation. Leverage. Chains.
The gears turned behind Kenny’s eyes. Maybe the rumble wasn’t on the level. Maybe Chuluun didn’t lose both his titles by accident. He’d looked off, more wounded animal than apex predator. Bruised and slow, like something had clipped his wings before the match even began. A setup?
Kenny clicked his tongue and leaned back, letting the night wind tousle his hair. So the big bad was tangled up with the suits now. And here he thought things were cooling down after the rumble.
Time to stay out of sight, out of mind.
Kenny stayed perched atop the rusted radio tower, legs swinging idly like a child over a creek, a mischievous grin tugging at his lips. Below, the pier danced in neon and secrecy. Yakuza muscle posturing near crates they pretended were seafood, smuggling arms, drugs, or something worse. He chewed on the silence like it was taffy, letting it stretch.
Then… something else moved.
Across the bay, atop a squat building just behind the shipyard warehouse, two figures emerged from the shadows. Kenny leaned forward, narrowing his eyes. One he recognized immediately from the electric crackle left in his wake. Lightning Man, cape draped, golden visor glowing faintly under the starlight. The other, shrouded in darker garb, moved with quiet, trained precision. Takuma Sato. Former Federation darling, now a question mark wrapped in a black ops riddle.
Kenny’s grin widened.
So the golden boy and the ninja were also watching the wharf rats skitter. That made things juicier than he could’ve hoped. Were they here to stop the Yakuza? Or to ensure things went smoothly? The Federation had dirty hands, sure, but Lightning Man always seemed so squeaky-clean. Too clean. Maybe this was how he stayed that way, letting others mop the blood for him.
Sato lifted a pair of binoculars to his shadowed face. Kenny froze, not out of fear, but anticipation. But their gaze never turned skyward. They were watching Chuluun just like him, their attention glued to the Mongolian Vampire locked in terse negotiation with a grinning mid-tier Yakuza underboss.
Then, like a spark vanishing in the wind, both Lightning Man and Sato disappeared, slipping into the darkness like they were never there.
Kenny exhaled.
“Oh-ho-ho,” he whispered to no one, fingers drumming the metal beside him. “Looks like I stumbled into a damn episode. Federation heavies, Yakuza deals, and ol’ Chuluun getting played like a broken fiddle.”
He leaned back again, watching the chaos brew, a solitary ember among giants and ghosts.
Kenny’s foot stopped swinging.
There, a shout, muffled behind corrugated steel. Then came the pop. Sharp, unmistakable. A gunshot. The sound bounced off the water like a broken bell.
Movement. Warehouse door flung open like a kicked anthill. A man staggered out, clutching his side. Another chased him, definitely Yakuza. But then came something else. Something Kenny couldn’t name.
A blur. Wrong proportions. It vaulted from the open door, hit the ground in a twitching roll, and skittered off toward the alleys on too many limbs. Pale skin glistening. Something like a mask on its face… no, not a mask. A muzzle.
Chuluun emerged last. Slow. Deliberate. His coat was torn at the shoulder, and something blacker than blood oozed down his sleeve. His eyes scanned the pier like floodlights, and for one terrifying moment…
He looked up.
Right at the tower.
Right at Kenny.
Kenny didn’t move.
Didn’t blink.
Didn’t breathe.
He’d stared into the eyes of death matches, barbed wire baptisms, fire-lit street fights in Yokohama, but this wasn’t performance. This wasn’t kayfabe. Chuluun’s gaze held no theatrics. It was ancient. Cold. Intelligent. Hungry.
Then…
The Mongolian Vampire turned away.
Just like that.
He stepped over the wounded Yakuza man, who whimpered something wet into the boards, and vanished back into the warehouse like a curtain being drawn.
Kenny let the breath slip out of his lungs. His fingers ached, he’d been gripping the steel frame of the tower hard enough to leave dents. He wiped his palms on his jeans. He leaned forward again, heart jackhammering with manic curiosity, but whatever that pale-skinned blur was? It was long gone. Probably halfway to the gutters of Osaka by now.
Whatever it was, it didn’t have the silhouette of a human.
Didn’t move like one either.
And Chuluun, that stitched-up bloodsucker, wasn’t acting like a man cleaning up a mess. He was protecting something. Or someone. The question is why. And why not reveal his location to the Yakuza? He knew the blood sucker saw him, it wasn’t like Chuluun’s gaze missed him.
"Secrets, secrets,” he muttered. “They always crawl out in pairs.”
He pulled out a stick of gum, chewed. Thought.
Lightning Man and Sato were here. Chuluun was bleeding but calm. The Yakuza were in panic. And something inhuman just broke the masquerade by sprinting out into the streets with a goddamn muzzle.
He patted his pocket, knife still there. Just in case. Then he slipped down the ladder, slow, quiet, one rung at a time. Back to the alleys. Back to the city.
And maybe… maybe he’d visit the Federation's PR office tomorrow. Ask some annoying questions. Stir the pot.
After all, he was just a tag team jobber with too much time and not enough fear.
—
Kenny returned to the same sleazy motel, although a different room vacated by some druggy. Enough to where he could listen to anyone entering his old room, or causing a ruckus. He opened his phone, idly scrolling.
The card dropped for Saturday Night Showdown. Four matches. No belts. No ceremony. Just fists, egos, and bad decisions with entrance music. And there he was, Kenny. Slotted neatly into the chaos like a spark in a powder keg.
Not alone this time. Management, in their infinite sense of humor, paired him with Oswald, the waddling menace, Mister Penguin himself. They even gave it a name. Fire and Ice. Adorable. Like this was a cartoon. Like the people backstage didn’t know which of them was which.
Spoiler: Kenny was the fire.
And across the ring? Shingo Hara and Kami Nakada. Federation darlings. Lovers in lycra. One of them walking around with a belt like it still meant something. Shingo, the man who outlasted Chuluun Bold in a match that turned bones to gravel. Gritty. Real. But now he was stepping into a ring with a guy who didn’t care about gold, respect, or narrative arcs.
It was champion and partner vs. champion and partner. A little dance of symmetry. A little soap opera rhythm. Kenny saw the game for what it was: a filler match. Something to plug the gap before the next main event. A volatile slot. Perfect for someone unstable.
He didn’t care if Shingo’s ribs were still bruised from that war with the vampire. Didn’t care if Oswald had a “strategy.” Didn’t care what the fans wanted.
Kenny was the match in the fireworks box.
And they’d all find out what burned first. The lovers, the show… or the federation dumb enough to tag him in.