Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Volume 2—Chapter 11: The Commission and the Constrictor from Records of Immortality, a Reincarnation novel by A.S. Storyteller.

Today marks the fifth day since I commissioned the book from the library.

Ashan's fingers pinched the thin, limp pouch in his robe pocket, feeling the ager weight of what remained. The leather was soft, worn, and when he pressed, he could feel the edges of the coins through the fabric—too few, too light.

And now I have only eight bronze coins left.

His expression tightened. The morning light was bright, unforgiving, casting hard shadows across the mission board where a small crowd of Arashen-ranked mbers jostled for position. Their eyes scanned the postings written on parched, brownish goatskin papers, their voices rising and falling in the particular cadence of desperate n.

Ashan's gaze swept over them, analyzing quickly.

[Hunting Vypers]

[Reward: 2 bronze coins per body]

[Ti limit: Three weeks]

[Location: Outskirts of the base, near the cave areas]

This will do. He let the words settle, examined them from every angle. Vypers aren't among the stronger rakshasa breeds.

He pushed through the crowd, feeling the press of bodies, the weight of desperate gazes that slid over him and found nothing worth noticing. He took the road leading toward the cave areas, his steps quick, his mind already moving ahead to the hunt.

On the southeastern edge of the main base, Ashan arrived at a large gate leading into the wilds. The wood was dark, weathered, the iron bands that held it together rusted to the color of dried blood. Robed figures moved in and out, their chatter and laughter a stark contrast to the looming wilderness beyond—a wall of green and shadow that pressed against the edge of the settlent like sothing waiting.

A woman sat at a counter beside the gate, her hair pulled back, her eyes sharp, her hands moving with the chanical efficiency of soone who had done the sa task a thousand tis before. She checked identification badges, handed out small, tallic rings, and collected coins with the sa motion, the sa expression, the sa professional smile.

Ashan joined the line. He watched as the mbers ahead of him handed over their badges, received their rings, and passed through the gate. Each transaction took seconds, no more.

Wait. His eyes narrowed as the woman collected two bronze coins from each mber. You have to pay to even take a mission?

Soon, it was his turn. He handed over his badge. The woman glanced at it, then back at him, her expectant gaze signaling for paynt. Her fingers drumd once on the counter, the sound sharp, impatient.

He coughed lightly. "I am new. Could you explain the procedure?"

Reluctantly, he produced his two bronze coins—the last of his funds, the end of the line. She took them, dropped them into a box beside her chair, and handed him a simple ring of dark tal.

"This is a storage ring." Her voice was flat, professional. "It can hold up to two cubic ters." She returned his badge with the sa chanical motion. "And we take a fifty percent commission from your mission earnings." A light, professional smile touched her lips, and for a mont, she looked almost friendly.

Fucking daylight robbery.

Ashan's face grimaced before he could school his features. He examined the ring, turning it over in his palm, feeling the faint hum of energy that pulsed beneath its surface. "Is this mine to keep?"

The tale has been taken without authorization; if you see it on Amazon, report the incident.

She nodded. "It is. If you fill it, you can purchase larger ones from ."

He slid it onto his left index finger—the tal was cold, heavy, a weight that had not been there before—and passed through the gate.

The air shifted instantly.

It was cooler here, carrying the raw scent of earth and vegetation, the sll of things growing and rotting and growing again. The paved stone road ended, giving way to a muddy trail that wound into a thicket of trees whose branches reached for the sky like fingers grasping at sothing just out of reach. Ashan followed it, consulting the map on his badge, letting the faint glow guide his steps.

The cave area isn't far.

He walked for a while until the caves ca into view. He wasn't alone; several other mbers lingered at the entrance, their voices low, their eyes scanning the darkness beyond. The caves weren't simple openings in rock faces—they were gaping maws leading deep underground, their edges worn smooth by water and wind and sothing else, sothing that had been here long before the Order built its base on this island.

The land around them was barren, devoid of vegetation, and a strange, murky stench hung heavy in the air—the sll of old death, of things that had crawled into the dark and never crawled out.

Ashan observed the others for a mont. So moved in groups of two or three; others, like him, were alone. A few disappeared into the dark entrances without a backward glance, their forms swallowed by the shadows.

He selected a cave at random and stepped inside.

Darkness swallowed him.

The transition was absolute—one mont the light was behind him, the next it was gone, as if the cave had reached out and taken it. A foul odor assaulted his nostrils, thick and cloying, the sll of rot and stagnant water and sothing else, sothing that made the back of his throat tighten. He reached out, touching the wall to orient himself. Cold. Rough. The stone was wet with condensation, slick beneath his fingers.

Keeping one hand on the wall, he moved forward, activating his Life Sense to probe for any sign of living beings. The world sharpened, clarified, beca a map of shadows and presence. His eyes flickered intermittently with grayish-white swirls, casting faint light that was swallowed almost imdiately by the dark.

The only sound was the steady, echoing drip... drip... of water, falling from sowhere far above, sowhere he could not see.

The tunnel was spacious enough to walk comfortably—wide enough for two, perhaps three, to walk abreast. The walls were rough, uneven, the floor slick with moisture. He moved slowly, his feet finding the path, his senses reaching ahead into the darkness.

Hiss! Hiss! Hiss!

Ashan froze.

The stench shifted, ripening into the sll of rotten at, of sothing that had died and was still dying, still waiting. The dripping water was drowned out by a soft, slithering sound—the sound of scales on stone, of bodies moving through spaces too small for anything that breathed.

He stood perfectly still, not daring to move a muscle.

Hiss! Hiss!

His Life Sense detected two hostile presences—one to his left, one ahead, their outlines sharp in the darkness. His eyes swirled, tracing their forms, letting the information flood his mind.

[Race: Rakshasa]

[Species: Vyper]

[Rank: Bodnir]

Two of them.

Hiss! Hiss!

Their brownish-green bodies moved with sinuous grace, thin and rope-like, their scales catching the faint light of his eyes and reflecting it back in patterns that hurt to look at. One of the Vypers slithered forward, approaching his foot, its body warm where it touched his skin.

It began to crawl up his left leg.

Ashan held his breath, forcing his leg to remain utterly passive, to be nothing more than stone, than darkness, than sothing the creature had no interest in. The Vyper's coils tightened around his calf, his knee, his thigh, constricting with a strength that was surprising for sothing so thin.

The second Vyper rose, balancing on its tail, and forked a long, poisonous tongue into the air.

Standing on its tail. Ashan's mind worked behind his frozen expression, cold and clear. A mating pair.

The female's tongue dripped dark-greenish droplets onto the stone floor.

Drop. Drop.

Sizzle!

Where the venom fell, small holes pocked the ground, the stone dissolving with a hiss of steam and the sll of sothing burning. The holes were deep, precise, the kind of damage that would take flesh and bone and leave nothing behind.

Ashan felt the blood flow in his left leg begin to cut off. The male Vyper's coils had tightened to the point of pain, the pressure building, the numbness spreading. It brought its head near his right ear, its cold, forked tongue darting out to lick the lobe.

The touch was wet, exploratory, and in the darkness of the cave, with the venom dripping and the coils tightening and the slow, steady beat of his own heart counting down the seconds, Ashan waited.

Now or never.

His hands began to move, slow as rising water, toward the place where his blade would be.

You are reading Records of Immortality Volume 2—Chapter 11: The Commission and the Constrictor 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

Lord of the Truth cover
Trending now

Lord of the Truth

TruthTeller ·Action

RobinBurtonisayoungmanwhogrowwitheverythinganyonecanhopefor,immensetalentforcultivation,sharpmind,awealthyfamilythatwillstopatnothingtoprotectandnu...

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.