SOMETHING IS KILLING THE CHILDREN #43 (BOOM! STUDIOS)

Erica Slaughter is a complex individual. Growing up in the Order of St. George is anything but normal. The same can be said for one of her mentors, Jessica. On a case, the two struggle to find common ground. This doesn’t help with a rising body count.

SOMETHING IS KILLING THE CHILDREN #43 by James Tynion lV, Werther Dell’edera Miquel Muerto and Andworld Design (BOOM! STUDIOS) continues on a look at Erica’s early days.

Let’s take a closer look at what unfolds now.

SOMETHING IS KILLING THE CHILDREN #43 by James Tynion lV, Werther Dell’edera Miquel Muerto and Andworld Design (BOOM! STUDIOS)

*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***

Tynion plays up to his strengths for this chapter. Using his “slow burn” methods, the uneasiness between Erica and Jessica is brewing. Jessica’s simple flirting with a bartender pushes Erica to move on her own. This results in a confrontation with the monster’s victim. The dialogue shows Erica’s frantic search for answers. Being her early days, she is much more hopeful and warm to conversation. This is a very big contrast of who she becomes.

The story shifts to the town’s discovery of another attack. Jessica’s coldness to Erica is very clear. Readers can easily pick up on the tension. The writing does tip off some possible clues about Jessica’s reasoning. It doesn’t wait to shift attention. Once on Erica, pacing speeds up a few events. Tynion provides a few different looks to the pair heading to close. The more intriguing story is now Jessica. Her actions in the final page elude to more mistrust. How this pair looks to function as a unit is anyone’s guess at this stage. I have no doubt Tynion is cooking something up for a monster finish for this tale.

Dell’edera and Muerto construct a deep look into the fractures in Jessica and Erica. The simple flirting plays off Erica’s budding doubt. This provides some awkward interactions. The conversation with Aaron feels very wholesome (as far as monster hunting goes). This quickly disappears when Erica sees a victim. The mannerisms on display raise the horror level as Erica strives to get help for the girl.

This moves events to a flashback sequence for Jessica. Muerto’s coloring gives a perfect dream state to his moment. It doesn’t hide the terror. Even as readers get a steady look at the fallen friend, Jessica’s sadness never breaks. This plays into more friction in the present. The art locks in on the clashing of hunters. Both get solid time to build their tales. Jessica’s proves to be the stronger of the two. The closing pages indicate her self-doubts as the case seems to be slipping further away. This is classic SIKTC. Another stellar job with constructing the case.

OVERALL GRADE: 9

The peek in Erica’s early time shows off the growing fractures of mentor and student. Tynon draws out the brooding clashes with the writing. Dell’edera and Muerto delve into the old wounds to draw out Jessica’s current dilemma. SITKC never falters on delivering its dramatic points through emotional landscapes.

Let me know your thoughts on SIKTC #43 in the comments below. Thanks for reading!