Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: 12. I hate negotiations from Eldritch Exorcist, a Adventure novel by Hastum.

“Second class,” I murmured, entering the plane. “Cheap furball”.

But I had so ti to plan now. The fruntarii’s information-gathering ability was sorely lacking in the mundane world.

They were the best when it ca to anything magical and getting any hearsay, but technology was where the organization was stumped. Without any trustworthy agents from my branch in Brazil, all I could get was a couple of dia reports and so gossip about the upper circle's dealings in Brazil.

The man I was interested in was nad Francis. He was a typical mafioso but with so solid connections to the USA, SkyJet being one of them. His business was the usual, prostitution, human trafficking, drugs, and the like.

The problem was that his operation was big, and getting to know where he would be keeping the girl would be a pain. I could try to kidnap the guy, but barging into a mafia hideout and walking out alive might be challenging even for . A gun or two could be stopped, but I wasn't exactly bulletproof.

Also, they might have known sothing was coming as the smuggler in the USA went missing, but with an organization this size, I was hoping it wouldn’t cause too much alarm.

The place I was looking for would be sowhere they had absolute control, deep in their territory, where the girl could be kept without drawing much attention. My assumption would be a brothel where they keep the other trafficked girls from the USA and Europe for special clients, but I still needed confirmation.

I need to either get myself a ticket in or find that special client. And I had just the person in mind.

After landing, I left my stuff at a hotel and put on my working clothes for the day. Today, instead of a creepy kidnapper slash interrogator, I was a clean-cut, ordinary-looking dude. I was wearing a simple white shirt and slightly more elegant black trousers. The intense Brazilian sun gave an excuse to keep my reflective, dark glasses on at all tis, which I appreciated.

I made my way to the police bureau in Rio.

A short walk later, I entered a police precinct and made my way inside. Finding the right section was not an issue, thanks to a massive sign with an arrow and ‘inquiries about victims of human trafficking’ written on it in multiple languages.

I walked the corridor, looking at the walls. They were decorated with newspaper clippings of solved cases. In all of them, the sa woman could be seen being congratulated, given a dal, giving a speech, and in other forms of celebration. The people posing in the photos alongside the woman ranged from crying parents to city mayors and international political figures. All with anti-trafficking slogans attached, all called a massive success. Walking to the office made you feel like they could solve every case, like all of their actions ended in a win for the police.

The last piece of newspaper on the walls was an article titled 'From a victim of human trafficking, to its biggest nightmare.'

I finally got into a line of worried parents and sobbing relatives. It felt weird, like I was out of place, like a puzzle piece that did not fit, distorting the picture. Those were the monts when I was reminded of my peculiar condition.

I looked at the scene of sadness and tragedy and felt a bit empty. The other part of , the one that wasn’t hollow, felt sothing weird. It was envy, I think. Most of my life felt like I was looking from behind a veil, covering the world, making it gray and dull, dampening any emotion, only now lifting with the promise of a new world. Maybe soday I would cry for soone. That would be... sothing.

After a couple of hours, it was finally my turn. A pair of people left the office, apparently getting so bad news, judging by their faces.

I walked into the office. It was a typical police room with several thank-you letters and certificates decorating the walls. So tal cabinets were under the window, a whiteboard was on the right wall, and a big desk was in the middle of the room.

Behind the desk was the person I was looking for. She was a Brazilian woman in her thirties with a stern but friendly look on her face, dark brown hair in a tight ponytail, and a small scar on her chin, adding so danger to her overall professional look.

“Hello,” I said, closing the door behind .

“Welco… You don’t strike as a concerned family mber. So who are you, mister…” she paused, looking at inquisitively.

She knew her stuff. I had to give it to her. One look at and she knew there was sothing strange. “John,” I answered quickly. I really should’ve prepared a fake na.

“How original,” She said flatly, clearly not impressed by my on-the-spot na.

“Thank you. And yes, I'm not a concerned family mber. Hmmm, I guess you can think of as a contractor.”

“So a private investigator?”

“Sothing like that, yes. We can go with a private investigator.”

She nodded and tilted forward, placing both elbows on the desk between us. “Look, I don’t give information beyond what you can get from a normal police inquiry to private investigators, so if you think I can give so new leads, then I'm afraid I might disappoint you. So, which case do you want to ask about?”

“There is no case—not for now, at least, and I'm not here to ask for information but rather to trade for it.”

“Oh,” I could see interest surface in the woman's eyes. “What information and for what intel do you want to trade?”

“Do you know a man nad Francis?”

The interest disappeared imdiately. “Forget it. That man is untouchable, and no info will put him down, not in this city. He's too well-connected.”

“I know and I’m not looking to bring down the entire organisation, but I have info on his smuggling operation in the USA, so while you might not put him in jail, crippling him should be possible. You know that setting up a new network abroad will take ti and money.”

The woman sat there for a few seconds, her fingers clicking against the table, eyes stuck to the cold coffee in front of her. “Look, he’s a dangerous man. Are you sure you want to go into this? This can cost you and your family, even abroad, they aren’t really safe.”

“Oh, don’t worry. Worst case scenario, I'll just murder him.” Follow current ɴᴏᴠᴇʟs on novel※fire

“What?”

“Just a joke, don’t mind it. And I don’t have anyone to worry about back ho. Let's say this case matters to more than my own safety.” I said, putting so sincerity into my voice.

“Ok, and what do you want in return? I doubt you are willing to make an enemy like that for nothing.” She asked, tilting back in her chair.

“Info about his smuggling from the USA, especially recent shipnts or where he could be keeping anyone of high value from Arica. Also, a list of well-connected clients would be nice.”

She nodded at my request. “The clients are easy to do. As for the shipnts, it's not like we have the guy’s schedule. But there are a couple of locations where he keeps the high-value girls. A special offer for well-paying clients if you understand .”

“How do I get myself into one of those?” I asked, curious.

Support the creativity of authors by visiting for this novel and more.

“You need connections. And in high places at that.”

I leaned forward. “Don’t you have anyone to get in?”

“Is your info worth endangering any inside operatives, assuming we have any?”

“Hmmmm, I could burn down the place afterwards to destroy any evidence.”

“...”

“I'm joking again.” I smiled at her. “Then, how about the clients? Do you perhaps have anyone from the USA?”

“Well, there are a couple of people…”

“Sure, sure.” I pulled out a list from my pocket. “Here are a couple of details you can check to confirm the validity of my information.”

She took the list and looked at it with curiosity, raising her eyebrows in surprise, finally looking back at . “It seems legit at the first look, although we were already aware of so of it. Where did you ge-. You know what, don’t answer that.” She placed the list inside her desk. “I still have to confirm this is legit and gather the info from my side. Also, this can be so sort of setup, so if you don't want to give information to confirm your identity, then we need to check on our side if everything fits."

I just smiled and nodded. In my experience, things rarely went this smoothly, so this was a nice change of pace. “I don’t want to wait too long. I can't give you my identity, but I can give you so more intel to confirm I an business.”

“Fine, give a day to get my side settled. We can et tomorrow. There is a bar,” she said, writing an address on a sticky note. “et there around 8 p.m.”

“Then we have a deal.” I gave her a paper prepared by my broker. He specialized in information, so giving them enough to hook them but not enough to answer any questions was easy with his help.

“Try to look disheartened when walking out of my office. You never know who's on whose payroll.” She gave a warning and returned to her professional deanor.

I stilled my face into sothing like sadness and walked out of the police station.

I had so ti to burn, so I went for so good Brazilian coffee. As I sat in the coffee shop, I looked over the crowd. It was lunchti, and more and more people gathered, talking about mundane things, an annoying boss, a colleague acting strangely at work, or just complaining about the workload. It was white noise that was actually a bit relaxing, allowing my thoughts to wander as I engaged in so people-watching.

So people were clearly from a corporate background, so workers, a guy who looked like a perforr with paint on his face, and a cat. The cat, I’m pretty sure, looked right at . Even with everyone around walking and talking, we locked eyes from across the street. A mber of the local Fruntarii branch. Shit, they work fast. Am I on so list or sothing?

I sighed, finished my coffee in one big gulp, and got up after leaving the money. I went after the cat, following its steps. Any thought that it might be my imagination imdiately disappeared as the cat led through the city, clearly checking occasionally if I was following it. It was a gray common cat, and nothing stood out about it aside from the intelligence in its eyes.

After 15 minutes, we reached a less crowded part of the city and started andering through smaller alleys, with more and more stray cats peeking from here and there. We were probably getting closer to the branch headquarters. Finally, we arrived at an old church. It seed old but taken care of relatively well.

It was a small building in a style typical of Latin countries, with white walls turned a bit yellow by the passage of ti. A steep roof in the shape of a letter A, with smaller sections to the sides and a bell tower over what I assu would be the altar inside. Honestly, they should have hired so crows to fly into the distance, cawing ominously to complete the picture.

Brazilian Fruntarii branches were closer to the church. In the USA, in a typical capitalistic fashion, much of the exorcism and magic-related business was outsourced to private contractors. But here, the church still held a lot of sway.

The cat jumped inside through a small rectangular hole next to the old wooden doors. I opened them and walked inside. The interior was nothing surprising. There were wooden benches on both sides of the main aisle, an area for organs over the entrance, with the instrunt replaced by speakers, and a small, simple altar at the end of the aisle with a painting of Jesus and Mary on the wall behind.

Only a couple of people were on the benches. An old couple, so middle-aged won looking like housewives, and two altar boys in the first row. But I was not a fool. They all had so magic in them. Although they tried to hide it, my senses could still pick up so mana from them.

After I walked in, a priest arrived from a side entrance.

“Welco, son. What brings you here?” He asked in a calm and collected voice.

“Nothing special. I ca here to pray. Or am I not welco in the house of God?” I asked half-jokingly, giving the priest a smile.

“Not the likes of you,” answered one of the altar boys before the priest could speak.

“Mind your manners. He is a guest,” quickly scolded the priest. He was an older Brazilian man with a short, well-trimd beard, black hair, and a build that still showed so muscularity underneath the priestly robes.

“The hospitality of churches has really dropped recently, I see. I assu the cats want to see , so here I am. Let’s get this over with,” I said, though inwardly annoyed. I was hoping I could do my business and get out of here, leaving any discontent to be smoothed over by Q’Shar.

But they worked fast, alarmingly fast.

The priest nodded and gestured for to follow him. I prepared myself for casting just in case and went after him, followed by the altar boy—the rude one.

We went into the sacristy, and then the priest moved a bookshelf, revealing a hidden staircase. I moved my mana to my hands. The priest and altar boy stiffened a bit, probably sensing so energy starting to radiate from my hands, but we kept walking.

The stairs opened into a corridor with two doors on the sides and a larger one at the end, leading to a lavishly-decorated room. The room was similar to my broker’s office, with rugs everywhere and Egyptian thes here and there.

A massive gray feline with dark brown eyes lay in the middle. He had short hair with so actual muscle showing through, looking like he pumped so iron on the weekends. A few scars were visible underneath the fur. The creature was lying on an expensive-looking cat bed.

He lifted his head and looked in our direction.

“Welco, Mr. Samuel, Alhazred’s heir. It is a pleasure to host you. My na is Eman,” said the cat with a firm but sohow also lazy voice, as if he had just woken up.

“Pleasure to et you, Eman. I see you already know who I am, so why was I brought here?”

“Brought? From what I understand, you followed our cat out of your own free will. We did not ‘bring’ you anywhere. You ca here.”

Fuck’s sake, here it cos. This is why I hated negotiations, especially with Fruntarii. They always try to pull one over on you. “Right, so am I to assu this was a mistake, and I can go?”

“Well, since you are already here, we would like to ask what the purpose of your visit is.”

“Recreation. I need holidays from ti to ti,” I said, trying to think of an excuse to buy myself one day to finish the job and be done with this.

“Right, was the police station and a visit to the human trafficking representative also part of the vacation?”

Fuck, they are good. Worst case scenario. “I wanted to inquire about a friend. From what I understand, that is not getting in your way. Unless the police are also part of the Fruntarii?”

“No, but whatever you might do once you find that friend, I have a feeling it will be our business.”

“I can guarantee you my friend has nothing to do with our hidden world. It is a purely mortal matter that originated in the USA.” I explained, crossing my arms in front of my chest.

“But it is now in Brazil, where we have a say in any matter involving high-profile individuals, mortal or magical. And you are high-profile.”

We were running in circles. God, I hate politics. “Okay, that's a matter of interpretation, an interpretation I have no interest in debating. What is the point of being here? I can assure you there is nothing to be gained for you in my business. And you don’t have anyone strong enough to detain .”

At least not now. Going against the people in the church was possible, but if they got an entire clan to help them, I would be in trouble, especially without connected veins to call my God. I berated myself for not taking an idol of my patron with .

“Try us,” snapped the altar boy from behind .

“There's no need for that,” pacified the cat with so authority in his voice. “Let's not resort to sothing both of us would regret, shall we?”

“So, is the talk over?”

“The way I see this is you have sothing you want to do in our territory, and we might have sothing we want you to do for us.”

Here it cos. The deal with the devil in a cat’s form.

Before the cat explained, I could hear the altar boy gasp. “You surely won't allow him anywhere near Father Marco. His condition is bad as it is.”

“Silence!” said the cat, now annoyed.

Oh, so there was sothing they wanted from . That made this easier. I had so leverage. “What do you want?”

“Fine, let’s get to the point since the fine details and nuances of negotiations seem to be lost on you. We will stay away from your business as long as it is not against our interests, but in return, we would like you to check a case for us. "

“I have ti until tomorrow.”

“That's more than enough. From what we understand, you are quite knowledgeable about curses and possessions.”

Oh, this was getting interesting. “Yes.”

“Good, we have a case of, well… sothing.”

I tilted my head in confusion. “Sothing?”

“A curse that behaves like a possession."

You are reading Eldritch Exorcist 12. I hate negotiations on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

The Innkeeper cover
Trending now

The Innkeeper

lifesketcher ·Action

Inthedepthsofanewbornuniverse,acultivatortakesadvantageoftheabundantenergytorefinehimselfatreasure.Butafter14billionyearsofrefiningandquiteafewmore...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.