Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 94 - Fun Times // Don't Last Forever from The Exorcist Doctor, a Action novel by Maradina.

Lorcawn had turned his office chair to face the window hours ago and never bothered to turn it back.

The view outside was the only thing worth owning tonight.

Two weeks. It’d been two weeks since his first base fell, and the day after that, he'd thought things would right themselves. He’d thought the math still added up. He had more n, more weapons, more rounds, more everything except for money—that accolade still belonged to the Rot rchants—so by all maths, nobody should be able to challenge his rule in the southern ward.

But the Raven didn’t do math.

After the second base fell, his n ard themselves to the teeth and swore they’d stand their ground, but the Raven didn’t fight like n fought. He was like a plague: never arriving in the mornings, and never when sunlight crept through Blightmarch’s crack, but always there at night. Whispers on the wind say he always rose out of the Gulch pipelines, as though the tunnels themselves blessed him with their fortune, and then the first thing he did after that was always the sa:

Turn the dial on his Vile Eater.

The Raven drowned every Repossessor base in toxic green. The slaughter always ca afterwards, and not once were there any demands. The Raven had no deals to make. No questions to ask. The insult to injury was the fact that he’d always announce the bases he was going to attack that night. Letters were scattered in every gutter and alley, warning the people nearby to run south to that clinic if they wanted to live. A mockery of kindness. Civilians had fled by the hundreds, and even so of his n had deserted, taking their blades and guns with them.

Two weeks after the first letter and thirty-five bases annihilated later, Lorcawn had lost over four hundred n. Four hundred. The number knifed him in the gut whenever he counted it. Worse, he’d lost all four of his Fingers.

Tobias, the whisperer, had been hacked to pieces and left to bloat across the flooded bar where he’d run his information business. Luthien, the trafficker, had been flayed, disemboweled, and plastered against the side of a blood-thrall carriage like a grotesque tapestry. Drenn, the treasurer, had been nailed seventy-two tis to the top of his belltower where he’d overseen the gang’s coffers. And Sorrel, the smith, had been force-fed a toxin so cruel it turned his body and his seventeen apprentices into brittle glass where he’d run his weaponsmaking operations.

He shifted in the chair and peered down at his empty bazaar. Storm rain gathered in the pitted stones in dark coins. The one hundred n he had left were all recalled to the Bazaar, because at least here, he knew the alleys by taste. Here, they could fight as a knot. He fancied his headquarters building, and he fancied the Raven would fancy it too.

He wanted that man to co.

He’d also wanted to march south and rip the Raven’s clinic out from its roots, but even his pettiness understood arithtic when it ca in this flavor. Too many civilians had packed themselves around the clinic like mud around a foundation, and it didn’t help that the first group of assassins he sent to destroy the clinic had been destroyed before they even got to the clinic. Then every other group of assassins he’d sent the past two weeks had been utterly annihilated by the hellhounds, the iridescent forest, and the shadows guarding the general neighborhood. At least fifty of his n had died trying to assault the clinic already.

Oh, he could go down there himself and launch an all-out war against them, but the big three in Vharnveil wouldn’t appreciate sudden and massive piles of civilian dead.

The Mortifera Enforcers, especially, liked to pretend to be watchers with clean hands. They enjoyed equilibrium down here because it ant their records could be read like scripture, so he couldn’t afford to stain the record so red it reflected onto their windows. If he slaughtered a clinic full of petitioners and civilians, he’d have a prayer on his door and a hamr on his head. He couldn’t go too far.

And yet the Raven could slaughter his n in return, because why would Vharnveil care about a boy scrubbing filth out of the lower city for them?

Through the stormwater, through the thundering night, he glared up at the distant City of Splendors until the golden lights there beca a rake of hard gem bites through the fog.

“... So this is the deeply repressed cruelty of a Demonic Plagueplain Doctor, huh?” he said softly.

No answer, of course.

As the lamps outside flickered on one by one, lining the mist-choked streets with dim orange lights, he scratched his armrest and cracked his neck.

This tale has been unlawfully lifted without the author's consent. Report any appearances on Amazon.

This was his headquarters. He wouldn’t give it to the Raven. He wouldn’t give the boy the honor of believing he was a plague that couldn’t be fenced. There was a monster in his heart, so damn if he went down tonight without a fight.

He tore his eyes from the window and glanced around, long enough to bark, “You.”

A guard flinched in the doorway. The man was young and all the soft places were still visible under the iron. Lorcawn had never bothered to learn his na; boys with nas believed they could outgrow them.

“Go downstairs,” he said, “and bring the Exorcist girl up from the basent. We’ll use her as a hostage.”

The man paled. “Right away.” He bowed his head, almost to hide the tremble that rattled the words, and then he bolted, boots slapping out of the office towards the stairwell.

Lorcawn swiveled back to the window and let the dark press his thoughts into hard shapes.

This wasn’t one of the throwaway bases he’d scattered across the southern ward, those ramshackle rat warrens the Raven had been burning like kindling. This was the house, the original headquarters where the Repossessors had first been ford. It’d survived three purges, two famines, and a siege of seven days back when he was still new and his hands shook when he cut. His Repossessor Bazaar outside, too, had teeth. He’d shut it down this afternoon, and now thirty n were posted across the square, every approach watched. Ten more crouched down in the pipes, lights hooded, axes ready. The remaining seventy Repossessors filled the headquarters itself, and they were only his strongest n, all fitted with Jumping Spider Classes.

They knew all of the Raven’s tricks by now. They’d morized his toys. Tonight, Lorcawn would kill the Raven with his two hands, and with the death of the Demonic Plagueplain Doctor, none would challenge him in the southern ward ever again.

And that’s if he can even get up here to my office.

How will he even step foot into this Bazaar, let alone my building, without knowing?

Marrowe sat in the foyer of the mansion, boots crossed at the ankle, pistol slack in her lap. Five Repossessors lounged around her in the lamplight, their morphing weapons clinking softly as they toyed with them to pass the ti. The air slled of oil and polish, because the boss had made sure this place, unlike their ruined dens, still looked like power.

They cracked jokes and muttered wagers on how long the Raven would last—anything to keep their nerves from chewing them hollow—until there ca a sound outside the grand double front doors.

A cart. Rolling slowly across wet stone, wheels squealing like knives drawn too thin.

Every back in the foyer stiffened. Their pistols ca up as one. Marrowe was the first on her feet, the way a leader’s had to be, and leveled her pistol at the doors.

“Up,” she muttered. “Now.”

Her n quickly fell in line around her. Stormwater pitter-pattered against the murky glass on the doors, and all six of them held their breaths as there ca another sound: a knock.

Almost gentle. Almost polite.

“Fire!” Marrowe barked.

Six pistols thundered. The doors spasd under the hail of iron, wood spitting splinters, and light smoke veiled the foyer, the sll of powder clawing at their lungs.

When the last hamr clicked dry, they pulled back to reload, quick fingers trembling.

And then—

“What the hell was that for?” a man’s voice called from outside, muffled and dripping with confusion.

Yemin, her youngest subordinate, froze. “That doesn’t sound like the Raven.”

“No way,” Mardo hissed. “We’ve had no alarm from the bazaar or the pipe-n. There’s no way he can get past forty n without a sound, even if he’s going through the pipes.”

“Then who the fuck is it?”

Marrowe’s eyes narrowed. She hated hesitation—it spread like rot if left too long.

“Open the door,” she ordered.

Yemin muttered a curse but obeyed, inching forward. Putting on his mask, he pulled the door open, rain bleeding in.

On the porch stood a man in robes so tattered they might’ve belonged to a beggar. A cleaning cart slouched before him, sagging with mops, rags, a slop bucket, and all sorts of other tools for filth. Three ravens perched on him like ornants of grief—one on each shoulder, then one on his rain-slick head. A crude iron mask covered his face, circular holes punched out for eyes.

Not the Raven.

The man simply looked down at the bullet holes peppering his coat.

“You didn’t have to shoot,” the man mumbled, his voice flat behind the iron. “I’m just here for the job.”

“What job?” Marrowe snapped, pistol rising a little higher.

“The cleaning job.”

A pause.

Marrowe’s n traded uneasy looks. A second passed—two—long enough for her to wonder if the boss had, in so fit of vanity, actually ordered cleaners to co polish the foyer tonight.

Then, from inside the cart, ca another muffled voice:

“No, no, no. I need the other cleaner.”

The man tilted his head, as if rembering a detail he’d misfiled.

“Oh.”

And the greatsword ca out from behind his cloak in one fluid arc. Yemin barely had ti to react before his head spun off his shoulders, blood geysering across the doorfra.

At the sa instant, the cart blew apart in a storm of splinters, and from the wreckage burst a figure black as plague, lenses glowing green, beak mask catching the lightning behind him.

Cane in hand, laughter wild.

“What’s up?” the Raven cackled.

You are reading The Exorcist Doctor Chapter 94 - Fun Times // Don't Last Forever 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 Extra's Survival cover
Same genre

The Extra's Survival

Mohitkumar ·Action

OnmywaytothejobinterviewunfortunatelyImetanaccident. Insteadofdying,Ifoundmyselfwakingupinthenovel'Dawnoflegend'whichIreadbeforedying. Iwakeupinthe...

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.