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Now reading: Chapter 1037 1037: The Seven Plague Gods (1) from God Ash: Remnants of the fallen., a Action novel by DemonsandI.

Cain left the eting room with Hunter trailing just a step behind, Steve lingering near the door with that unsettling mask grin, and the rest of their council dispersing to their tasks. Outside, the City of Monsters waited like a coiled serpent, streets slick with recent rain, faint mist curling off the stones, and the quiet hum of distant engines echoing faintly.

They moved without haste, each step deliberate. Cain's mind wasn't on the damp cold or the city lights—it was on the ga, the invisible currents beneath every footfall. Every alley, every doorway could be a line in the pattern he was beginning to draw.

Hunter broke the silence first. "Do you truly trust Steve on this?"

Cain's eyes flicked to the masked figure, who was fiddling with a small device, wires and tubes bending in ways that shouldn't have been possible. "Trust isn't the point. Control is. He knows how to disrupt patterns. That's all we need for now."

Hunter's jaw tightened. "Disrupt or distract. There's a difference."

Cain didn't answer. Words were a luxury; observation was not. The subtle way the shadows clung to Steve's movents, the slight shiver of the city air as they passed under a flickering lantern—Cain cataloged it all.

Susan appeared at his side without sound, eyes sharp. "You're quiet tonight," she said.

Cain allowed a brief glance. "The city talks, Susan. I'm listening."

She frowned. "And what does it say?"

Cain didn't reply. Not yet. He could sense it—sothing small, deliberate, moving just beyond the edges of vision. The phantom had returned. Not a follower this ti, Cain realized, but a signal. A warning.

"Hunter," Cain finally said, voice low, "take the northwest alleys. Quiet. Observe, but do not engage unless necessary. Draw out patterns. Expose the watchers."

Hunter inclined his head, already calculating. "Understood."

Cain turned to Susan. "You'll make yourself seen. A spark in the night. They'll notice, but only what I allow them to see. Nothing more."

Her lips curved, almost imperceptibly. "As you command."

Steve's laugh hissed from behind his mask. "And I suppose I get to play the trickster, yes?"

Cain didn't even glance back. "You push the pieces into the right positions. Do not be clever for the sake of cleverness. Make them move willingly."

The streets narrowed as they approached the old warehouse district. Rusted iron gates, shuttered windows, and the faint sll of oil and decay filled the air. Cain's senses sharpened; he could hear the scuff of a boot two alleys over, the low whisper of a wind tunnel forming between buildings.

"Here," Cain said, halting in the shadows. "We begin."

A faint movent caught his eye—shadow bending unnaturally, lingering at the corner of an abandoned building. He tensed. The phantom again. They were testing. Probing.

Cain's hand flicked to the small blade at his belt, not yet drawing it. "Let them watch. Let them think they understand. But they are only seeing what I choose to show them."

Susan leaned close. "And when they step wrong?"

Cain's eyes were already on the phantom, lips curling faintly. "Then we close the throat."

And in the silence that followed, the city held its breath. Sowhere, unseen, the first pieces began to shift.

***

Cain waited. The phantom lingered at the edge of his vision, a shadow that might have been a corner of a building, a trick of the light—or sothing alive. He didn't move, didn't signal. Patience was a weapon sharper than steel, and every second it took for the watcher to act was a second closer to the trap.

Susan shifted slightly beside him, the faint rustle of her cloak echoing in the narrow alley. Cain felt it but ignored it, focused on the subtle pulse of the city—the rhythm of movent, the whispered currents of the unseen.

Then, a figure slipped across the street ahead, just a shadow among shadows. It paused, lifted a hand as if to signal soone, then lted back into the darkness. Cain exhaled slowly. Predictable.

"Hunter," Cain said, his voice barely above the hiss of the night air, "observe the western flank. Docunt everything. No engagent. Let them show themselves."

Hunter moved without hesitation, his form already disappearing into the alley network Cain had studied for weeks. He was a ghost hunter stalking other ghosts, unseen and silent.

Cain turned to Susan. "You'll be the spark. Draw their attention, but not too far. Let them think they're controlling the chase. Keep them moving."

Her grin was sharp, knowing. "I like being seen," she said, voice low. "It makes them underestimate ."

"Good," Cain said. "And Steve?"

The masked figure was already adjusting a device, small pulses of light and faint chanical hums flicking across the floor. "I'll make sure they get the ssages they want—but twisted, misleading, flavored with fear."

Cain nodded once. "Then let the ga begin."

Susan stepped forward, hand raised in a casual wave to the nearest building corner, just enough to be noticed. Shadows shifted in response. Cain felt the subtle tightening of invisible strings—the phantom was reacting, recalculating, misreading. Exactly as planned.

"Observe," Cain muttered to himself. "Do not act. Wait. Let them commit first."

Minutes stretched into an hour, the city around them holding its breath as patterns erged. Figures moved where they shouldn't, signals were sent and received in error, and Cain cataloged every twitch, every hesitation.

At last, Hunter returned, stepping out from the shadows. "They've taken the bait," he reported. "Two separate cells, confused, circling each other. They don't realize they're being funneled."

Cain's lips curved faintly. "Perfect. Let them fight shadows while we prepare the strike that matters. Let them bleed for nothing, think themselves cunning. Soon, we will remind them whose hands close the throat."

Steve hissed a laugh behind them. "And the fun is just beginning."

Cain's eyes swept the streets once more, the city alive with movent, mistakes, and opportunity. "Yes," he said quietly. "And they still don't know it."

The ga was on.

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