When the meerkats of the plains cast off their jackal oppressors, freedom seemed certain and hope unshakable. Led by the wise Surro, the clans dreamed of unity, justice, and a life where every burrow could share in the earth's abundance.
But seasons pass, and dreams bend. Promises give way to power, councils turn into cliques, and a new order rises. Polished on the outside, rotten beneath. Guards march, orators chant, banners flutter, and the clans still queue in faith, still vote for change, still endure hunger, while their rulers grow ever fatter.
In this darkly allegorical fable, the rise of the Meerkat Mafia charts the journey from liberation to betrayal, from unity to decay. Written in the tradition of Orwell's Animal Farm, it is a story of hope twisted, of memory smothered, and of courage whispered quietly in the dark.
Tragic, unsettling, and uncomfortably familiar, Meerkat Mafia asks: how long can a people believe in promises when season after season they remain poor, and those they trust grow richer?