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DCU: Split Chapter 237: night of death

Novel: DCU: Split Author: Booggie Updated:
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Now reading: Chapter 237: night of death from DCU: Split, a Action novel by Booggie.

Thurston Moody took a long drag from his cigarette and exhaled slowly into the night air. The harbor stretched before him beneath a forest of cranes and floodlights, shipping containers stacked high enough to blot out portions of the skyline. Workers moved steadily through the organized chaos, loading cargo, securing manifests, and preparing vehicles for departure. To an outside observer it would have looked like any other busy Gotham dockyard. Thurston knew better. Every container being loaded tonight represented years of work. Years of bribes, favors, blackmail, and carefully cultivated relationships. Entire supply chains were being uprooted and moved elsewhere. It irritated him more than he cared to admit.

Beside him, one of his lieutenants watched the operation with a troubled expression. "Boss, we really gotta do this? We haven't been found out yet. We can ride this wave out."

Thurston lowered the cigarette from his lips and sneered. "Quiet, you fool." His gaze swept across the dockyard as workers hurried to finish their assignnts. "The Court is falling apart. Batman's breathing down everyone's neck. Half the city is hunting Court mbers and the other half won't stop talking about them. The smart move is getting out before soone decides to make us their next problem." He flicked ash onto the pavent and shook his head. "Sha, though. Gotham was perfect for the trade."

A scream suddenly echoed across the harbor.

The sound was distant enough that several workers initially ignored it, assuming it was an argunt or accident sowhere deeper in the yard. Thurston frowned and turned toward the noise. A few seconds later another scream followed. This one lasted longer. There was a raw panic in it that made conversations nearby falter. n stopped carrying crates. Others looked up from paperwork. Even the engines seed quieter as attention shifted toward the darkness between the rows of containers.

"What are they looking at?" Thurston muttered.

One of his guards started jogging toward the disturbance. The man disappeared around a stack of containers and was imdiately swallowed by darkness. Several seconds passed. Then a pair of gunshots cracked through the harbor.

Silence followed.

Not normal silence.

The wrong kind of silence.

The sort of silence that felt heavy. Expectant. Like the entire dockyard was holding its breath.

A man suddenly appeared from around the corner of a container. One of Thurston's enforcers. Blood soaked the front of his shirt and his eyes looked ready to burst from their sockets. He stumbled forward desperately.

"Boss!"

The man never finished.

Sothing seized him from behind.

For a brief instant Thurston saw a gray hand clamp around the man's shoulder. Then the enforcer vanished backward into the darkness. His scream echoed across the harbor before cutting off so abruptly it sounded as though soone had simply switched it off.

The dockyard froze. Every pair of eyes stared toward the shadows between the containers.

Then the floodlights began exploding.

Glass rained from above as one light after another burst apart. Entire sections of the harbor vanished into darkness. Panic spread imdiately. Workers shouted over one another. So ran for cover. Others drew weapons. Orders were barked from every direction, none of them coherent enough to restore control.

Then the killing started.

A burst of gunfire erupted sowhere nearby and ended almost as quickly as it began. A body hit the pavent. Another scream followed. Then another. Then another. Each one seed closer than the last. Thurston turned and saw one of his ard enforcers stagger into the open. A dagger protruded from the man's throat. He managed two more steps before collapsing face-first onto the concrete, dead before he landed.

Sothing moved atop one of the shipping containers.

It crossed the distance so quickly Thurston almost convinced himself he imagined it.

Then another shape appeared.

And another.

Gray skin.

Dark armor.

Glowing eyes.

The lieutenant beside him had gone pale.

"Talons."

The word ca out as barely a whisper. Thurston felt his stomach drop, "No."

One of the Talons landed in the middle of a cluster of ard n nearly fifty feet away. The slaughter was imdiate. One man lost his head before he could raise his weapon. Another was impaled straight through the chest. A third managed a single shot before a blade opened him from shoulder to stomach. The Talon never slowed down. It simply moved on to the next victim.

More appeared.

They seed to erge from everywhere at once. From rooftops. From atop containers. From shadows that should have been empty monts before. The dockyard transford into a slaughterhouse. n fired wildly into the darkness, but every muzzle flash only illuminated more death. Wherever the Talons appeared, bodies followed.

Thurston ran.

Years of confidence evaporated instantly. Years of power, wealth, and influence suddenly ant absolutely nothing. He wasn't a respected businessman anymore. He wasn't a Court associate. He wasn't a man protected by connections and money.

He was prey.

His car sat parked near the edge of the harbor. If he could reach it, he could get away. His shaking hand dug into his pocket and produced his phone. He dialed Kane imdiately while sprinting across the pavent.

The line began ringing.

"Pick up."

He glanced behind him.

A Talon was walking toward him.

Not running.

Walking.

Its pace was calm. Patient. Like a predator that already knew exactly how this would end.

"ANSWER THE PHONE!"

The ringing continued.

No answer.

The car was getting closer.

Twenty yards.

Fifteen.

Ten.

He could make it.

Sothing slamd into his leg.

Pain exploded through his body.

Thurston scread as a dagger punched completely through his thigh and embedded itself deep into the pavent beneath him. His leg folded instantly. Montum carried him forward and he crashed face-first onto the concrete. The phone flew from his hand and skidded away across the ground. The call disconnected.

"No!"

He clawed toward it instinctively before realizing it didn't matter. Behind him ca the sound of footsteps.

Slow.

Steady.

Unhurried.

The Talon wasn't chasing him.

It didn't need to, gods why why WHY!

Thurston dragged himself toward the car. Every movent sent agony shooting through his pinned leg. His fingers stretched desperately toward the door handle.

"I'm part of the Court!"

The words burst from him.

The footsteps continued.

"I'm part of the Court!"

Nothing.

"You can't kill !"

Still nothing, the Talon stepped into view.

Gray skin stretched over an inhuman fra. Black armor covered its body. Its glowing eyes reflected the harbor lights without the slightest hint of emotion. Looking at it felt like looking at death itself.

Thurston's fingers finally touched the car door handle.

Relief surged through him.

Then another dagger struck.

The blade punched through his forearm and pinned it directly to the vehicle. Bone cracked. Thurston howled in pain. The Talon stopped directly in front of him and simply stared down.

Watching.

Waiting.

As though it wanted him to understand.

Tears stread down Thurston's face.

"I helped the Court."

No response.

"I paid my dues."

Nothing.

"You can't do this."

The Talon slowly raised its sword.

And finally Thurston understood.

This wasn't a mistake. The Talons hadn't gone rogue. The Court hadn't lost control. Sowhere, soone had made a decision. Soone had looked at everything Thurston Moody had done for them and decided he was expendable.

That realization hurt more than the dagger.

"No…"

His voice cracked.

"No, no, no…"

The sword continued rising.

The harbor around him had gone strangely quiet. The screaming had mostly stopped. The gunfire had ended. Bodies lay scattered between the containers while the few survivors had either fled or died. The entire operation he had spent years building had been erased in less than fifteen minutes.

The last thing Thurston Moody heard was the sound of his own screams echoing across the water.

****

Manuel Escabado knew sothing was wrong long before the attack began.

He sat at the head of a long dining table carved from dark oak, a glass of whiskey resting loosely in one hand while several captains delivered reports. Around him, trusted lieutenants discussed shipnts, territory disputes, and the lingering fallout from the recent violence that had swept through Gotham. Ard n stood at the walls, and security caras monitored every hallway leading into the estate. It should have felt secure. Instead, Manuel had spent the entire evening with a knot in his stomach.

Normally these etings brought him comfort. Business was predictable. Violence was predictable. Even betrayal, given enough ti, was predictable. The last few weeks had been anything but. The Court of Owls was being dragged into the light, Batman was tearing apart operations across Gotham, and the Underpass seed to have its fingers in every major developnt. Powerful people were dying, alliances were shifting, and nobody seed to know what tomorrow would look like.

"…the Burnley route is still viable," one of his captains was saying. "Though we'll need additional drivers if we're going to maintain current shipping volus."

The man stopped mid-sentence.

His head turned slightly toward the doorway.

A frown appeared on his face.

"Did anyone hear that?"

Conversation died imdiately. Several people around the table glanced at one another before listening. For a few monts the room remained completely still.

Then a gunshot echoed sowhere inside the estate.

Every person in the room straightened.

A second shot followed several seconds later.

Then a third.

The sounds were distant but unmistakable.

One of the guards near the entrance imdiately reached for his radio.

"North wing, report."

Static answered him.

The guard's expression hardened.

"North wing, report."

Nothing.

A slow unease settled over the room.

The captain pushed away from the table and stood. "Probably so idiot discharged a weapon," he said, though he sounded unconvinced even to himself.

Then ca the screaming. The sound tore through the manor.

It wasn't shouting. It wasn't an argunt. It was the kind of scream that ripped itself from a man's throat when survival instincts took over. Everyone in the room recognized it instantly because everyone present had heard it before. n involved in organized cri eventually beca familiar with that sound.

The scream cut off abruptly.

Another began.

Then another.

They were getting closer.

Manuel set his whiskey down.

Nobody spoke.

Nobody joked.

The captain drew his pistol and moved toward the doorway. Two guards followed him. Their footsteps seed unnaturally loud against the growing silence that had settled over the estate.

The captain stepped into the hallway. A heartbeat later sothing slamd into the wall outside.

The guards jerked backward in surprise.

A body slid into view.

One of the estate's security n. His throat had been opened from ear to ear. The corpse hit the carpet and didn't move.

For a second nobody reacted. Then gunfire erupted from sowhere farther down the hall.

The muzzle flashes illuminated gray figures moving through the darkness.

Talons.

The realization struck several people at once.

The first guard in the hallway fired an entire magazine before a sword punched through his chest. The blade erged from his back in a spray of blood. The Talon didn't even pause as the man collapsed. It simply continued advancing.

Another Talon appeared from the opposite direction.

Then another.

The hallway beca a killing ground.

n who had survived gang wars and cartel conflicts suddenly found themselves facing sothing entirely different. Bullets struck the attackers repeatedly. Flesh tore. Bone shattered. Yet the Talons kept moving. They advanced through gunfire the way normal people walked through rain.

The room exploded into chaos.

Chairs overturned followed by Weapons being drawn.

Manuel remained where he was for only a mont before survival instincts took over.

"Move!" he roared. "Get out of here!"

Unlike many of his n, Manuel didn't freeze.

He ran.

***

Kane was halfway through reviewing financial reports when his secure phone began vibrating across his desk. He considered ignoring it for a mont, but the feeling in his gut told him better. The last few weeks had turned into a steady erosion of control—Court mbers dying, arrests piling up, Batman tightening his grip on the city, and internal factions growing more unstable with every passing day. Nothing ca as routine anymore. Every interruption ant damage.

He answered sharply. "What?"

The hesitation on the other end was imdiate, and that alone made him sit up straighter. "Sir, we have a situation," the voice said cautiously.

Kane exhaled through his nose. "Everyone has a situation. Be specific."

"We've received confird reports of Talon deploynts across multiple locations."

For a mont, Kane didn't respond at all. His hand slowly lowered from his desk, and his entire posture changed. That sentence didn't belong in reality. The Talons were not sothing that simply "deployed." They were controlled, regulated, bound to Court authorization protocols that required multiple layers of approval. Nothing about tonight should have allowed movent.

"Say that again," he said quietly.

"Confird Talon deploynts, sir. Multiple sites."

Kane stood up so quickly his chair shifted backward slightly. "Well I know that!" He hissed, "I ordered them."

A pause followed. "Not all of the ones we are seeing sir."

The answer made his expression harden instantly. "What do you an! Speak clearly."

Kane began pacing the length of his office as the report continued. "Three confird incidents so far," the man said.

"List them," Kane ordered.

"The first was Thurston Moody's harbor operation. Multiple casualties. Total collapse of the site."

Kane stopped walking for a mont, his eyes narrowing slightly. Thurston wasn't just another na on a list—he was a supporter. A reliable one. Soone aligned with his faction.

"Next."

"Olivia Otus."

That made no imdiate sense in isolation, but Kane's mind was already connecting it. Escabado wasn't Court, but operations tied to him often intersected with Court logistics. That ant overlap. That ant risk.

"And the third?" Kane asked.

"Kill was killed too sir."

The na landed differently. He didn't move this ti. He simply stood still and listened to the silence that followed it.

Kull was not collateral. He was aligned. Publicly aligned. Politically aligned. One of his supporters in recent internal disputes. One of the voices that had helped stabilize his position during Maria's rising influence.

Kane slowly returned to his desk and sat down, though his attention never left the call. The pattern was becoming too clean, too deliberate. Thurstun, Kull, Olivia.

"Are there more?" he asked.

"We don't know yet, sir."

Of course they didn't.

Kane ended the call without another word and leaned back slightly, staring toward the glass wall of his office where Gotham stretched beneath him. The city lights looked calm from this distance, almost indifferent, but his thoughts were anything but calm. Sothing inside the Court had shifted—sothing precise, intentional, and protected by legitimacy.

His expression tightened as he replayed recent events in his mind. Every fracture, every accusation, every unexpected move that had seed like opportunism now began to resemble sothing else entirely. Not chaos. Not coincidence.

Direction.

"No," he said quietly to himself, though the word didn't sound certain anymore. He stood again, moving toward the window as if proximity to the city might clarify what he was seeing. Instead, it only reinforced the realization forming in his mind.

"Maria, Rebecca." He swore, "I need to get to the lab."

****

Rebecca grinned in delight, "Looks like Kane sent so out too." She looked at Maria, "He will probably be headed this way."

Maria grinned, "Good."

A/N: tried to go for a horror the for this one not sure it landed

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