Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 164: Moonlit Ghost Stories from The Yellow-Haired Villain in Soaring Phoenix's Novels Also Desires Happiness, a Action novel by 子与我非鱼.

“Heart-Ripping Banshee... a hauntingly beautiful demoness said to prowl the Lower City. On bright moonlit nights, she seduces passersby and drunkards, then lures them sowhere secluded... and eats their hearts.”

“Shadow Butcher... identity unknown. Wears a loose black raincoat and carries a bloodstained butcher’s knife...”

“The Sleepless One... a monster wandering the streets deep into the night...”

“The Lake Monster of the Glein River... a tale popular around the docks. Said to be capable of taking on twenty virile n in a single battle.”

Celicia thodically laid out the legends she had compiled overnight—urban myths of the Lower City, blurry photos, vague accounts—spreading them one by one across the table in front of Viscount Goun, her lips faintly curled in mockery.

“The Lower City’s urban folklore really is sothing. I only asked you to investigate the Heart-Ripping Banshee, and yet you’ve dredged up all sorts of strange nonsense.”

“Viscount Goun, your Lower City seems far livelier at night than I imagined.”

“H-ha... does it?”

Viscount Goun wiped at his sweat, but his body trembled uncontrollably.

“These are just rumors, mostly hearsay... not exactly credible. Heh... really, they don’t an anything.”

“Oh? So the recent surge in missing persons reports in the Lower City is also... aningless hearsay?”

Celicia tossed another file onto the table. It was a report outlining the spike in kidnappings, human trafficking, and even human sales over the past month.

“This...”

Seeing the docunt, Goun’s face instantly turned ghostly pale. He barely managed a crooked smile.

“There... there’s no concrete evidence yet...”

“Of course there’s no evidence. The people are gone.”

“Well, the Lower City is very populous...”

“What, Viscount Goun—are you suggesting that with so many people down there, a few going missing doesn’t matter?”

Celicia’s eyes suddenly sharpened.

“N-no no no... of course not! I only ant that with such a large population, the investigation is difficult! Difficult! And it’s only been two days—Your Highness, no matter how urgent this is, two days just isn’t enough ti to dig anything up!”

His voice was on the verge of breaking. Crushed by the oppressive pressure emanating from the young girl before him, Goun nearly fell to his knees on the spot.

Unfortunately, the cramped carriage offered no room to collapse. Any movent might be seen as disrespectful.

“Difficult or not... you’re still obligated to investigate, are you not?”

Celicia lowered her gaze, flipping through another file, no longer wasting her breath on the terrified man before her.

She hadn’t co to interrogate him. Didn’t even care enough to.

The chaos of the Lower City was tangled in countless threads—far too complex for one petty viscount to unravel.

If anything, the fact that he’d been put in this position at all was proof he was just a convenient scapegoat propped up by those “benevolent and wise” lords above.

Otherwise, how could a re viscount ever be entrusted with a role as critical as governor of the Lower City?

“Every last one of them... utterly useless.”

Celicia sighed softly and rubbed her temples.

A murdered count’s son.

Unidentifiable, bizarre urban legends.

A flood of missing persons cases.

The Lower City was clearly steeped in a new, unknowable darkness. Even Celicia—the Empire’s Third Princess, soone with access to considerable resources—was beginning to feel overwheld.

Most troubling of all was how eerily calm the Empire’s upper echelon remained.

Even if they looked down on the Lower City, this was still Berland. If sothing exploded here, the fire would surely climb upward, and no one would be left untouched.

When that ti ca... it’d be too late.

“Or perhaps... sothing even greater has captured their attention—sothing so consuming they can’t spare a glance for what’s happening beneath # Nоvеlight # their feet?”

Celicia suddenly recalled the recent incursion by the Evil God at the Academy. What if that and this were not two separate incidents?

What if this was all... part of the sa event?

Then the true horror of it might still be far beyond what she imagined.

“How interesting... the death of a single count’s son is unraveling all this filth.”

Her slender fingers tapped rhythmically against the carriage window. The weight of too much thought left her mind aching, and for a mont she longed for the student council’s coffee—laden with obscene amounts of sugar.

At least it recharged her glucose. And tasted great.

But now wasn’t the ti for cravings.

Even if Berland truly stood on the edge of a crisis, soone taller would be forced to step in first. Since her father, the Emperor, hadn’t said a word, that ant he didn’t yet need help from his daughter—who was still technically a student.

Her imdiate priority... was finding the one who had murdered Tyke Rodd.

If that count kicked up a fuss, it’d be trouble for both the Academy and herself.

“We’ll end things here for tonight, Viscount Goun.”

Feeling she wouldn’t get anything useful from him, Celicia stood to leave.

“Eh—Your Highness is leaving already? Shall I escort you?”

“No need.”

Her gaze alone froze Viscount Goun mid-movent. She pulled open the curtain and stepped out of the carriage.

He knew it was improper not to accompany her, but his legs were jelly from fear. All he could do was poke his face through the window and force a pitiful smile.

“Take care, Your Highness... safe travels...”

Celicia ignored him.

She walked straight into the shadows.

The night fog shifted.

A man in a black trench coat appeared before her—his face pale, as though it hadn’t seen sunlight in years. Upon his chest, pinned to his coat, was a strange emblem that glead coldly beneath the moonlight.

The emblem depicted a blade-like finger raised to a pair of black lips.

A symbol of absolute silence.

The Silent Ones.

Celicia recognized him instantly and showed no surprise at his arrival.

“The analysis results are in.”

The man looked at her without any trace of deference. His face remained blank.

“It was indeed a scale from a Serpentfolk.”

“So Tyke Rodd really was killed by one of the moon-worshipping cultists?”

“Without a doubt.”

He continued, “The so-called Heart-Ripping Banshee is very likely a Serpentfolk. Their kind possesses an instinctive hunger for the hearts of the opposite sex.”

“Can you capture her?”

“It’s difficult. In fact, we’ve been planning her capture since half a year ago. But she’s cautious. Escaped us every ti. Worse, two months ago, she abruptly ceased all activity. That’s made things even harder.”

“Two months?”

Celicia’s eyes narrowed.

Maybe she was being too paranoid, but that timing... that was exactly when the Academy reopened.

“So in the end, we still have nothing concrete?”

“No. In fact... we received this.”

The man pulled out a sealed tal box.

It looked heavy—thick plating and etched with magical runes. Celicia imdiately recognized a high-level sealing spell.

Seeing how seriously the man treated it, her own expression grew more solemn.

After a complex series of verifications, the box finally opened.

Inside... was a letter.

Celicia’s lips twitched. “A letter?”

“As Your Highness can see—yes, a letter.”

Wearing gloves woven from mithril thread, the man carefully picked it up. “It was delivered five hours ago by a mailman to one of our branch drop boxes.”

“...And what’s the issue?”

“Issue one: That branch has never sent or received any mail.

Issue two: We have no leads on the sender. The mailman has no mory of delivering it.

Issue three: You’ll understand once you read it.”

He handed over the letter. Celicia hesitated briefly, then coated her fingers in a thin frost before accepting it.

She opened it.

Nothing happened.

She quickly scanned the contents—then her brows lifted instinctively.

“This is... a tip-off? And the subject is...”

“Exactly. That’s why I ca to you, Your Highness,” the man said. “The target is a fellow student of Saint Maria. I believe you may have so insight. At the very least, we need to verify if this letter is credible.”

“If it’s real or not... wouldn’t finding the person answer that?”

Celicia pondered for a mont, then raised her hand and curled her finger.

Flapping wings sounded above. A white dove flew in from nowhere and perched on her arm.

“Find soone for ,” Celicia said coolly.

“Who?” the dove asked.

“Anna Kaplin.”

...

...

“Have we dropped the bait yet?”

Two figures—one tall, one short—stood in a deserted street under the vast, moonlit sky.

The moon, just past full, was still bright and round. Only a faint shadow dulled its edge—rendering it ever so slightly imperfect.

But the two remained spellbound by its cold, lonely beauty.

Until the shorter one asked the question.

The taller said nothing. He was chewing sothing. Crunch, crunch—the sound sharp and unceasing.

“Ah... so it’s done, then?”

The shorter one stretched out both arms, as if to embrace the moon. Her figure, wrapped tightly in leather, curved seductively like a serpent—tempting and dangerous.

“Then let us begin...”

Her body writhed, her voice solemn and fervent. She danced like a prophet, chanting like a lover in prayer.

“Oh, moon... shine upon .”

“I shall tear away the world’s lies and reveal your glorious truth.”

“I shall watch for your descent, and herald your arrival as divine gospel.”

“I shall forge your new body from ice and silence—your crown adorned with jewels of blood and hatred.”

“I shall live forever in your divine kingdom!”

When the ritual ended, the shorter figure lowered her head in reverence.

She was stunning—every glance, every smile, enough to steal a soul.

“Let’s go,” she said.

“Let us welco the return of our god’s child.”

The taller one grinned silently.

His large hand—hidden beneath his black raincoat—tore off a piece of a writhing, twisted shadow and shoved it into his mouth.

Crunch. Crunch.

“Tasty,” he said, grinning wide.

You are reading The Yellow-Haired Villain in Soaring Phoenix's Novels Also Desires Happiness Chapter 164: Moonlit Ghost Stories 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

Timeless Assassin cover
Trending now

Timeless Assassin

RajShah7152 ·Action

Leoawakensinaworldhedoesn’trecognize,withnomemoryofwhoheisorwhyhe’sthere.Allheknowsisthatsurvivalisn’tjustanecessity—it’shisonlychancetouncoverthet...

I Have a Golden Crow cover
Trending now

I Have a Golden Crow

Great Yu ·Eastern

DuYuhasnoclueabouthowhehastransmigratedtoaworldofdemontaming.HeisalsoinastateofconfusionwhenhecontractstheGoldenCrowthatwasliterallyasun.“Areyoufro...

The Lucky Farmgirl cover
Trending now

The Lucky Farmgirl

Bamboo Rain ·Romance

TheFourthBrotherhadsquanderedhiswealththroughgambling,leavingtheirmotherinacriticalstate.Tomakemattersworse,thecreditorsevenaskedthemtosellManbaoto...

I'm the Culinary God cover
Trending now

I'm the Culinary God

Greedy kitten ·Fantasy

LinXu,whoisabouttograduatefromuniversity,suddenlygetsboundtotheCookingGodsystemandhasbecometheownerofarestaurant.Totastehishandmadenoodles,customer...

Supreme Vision Master cover
Trending now

Supreme Vision Master

Mo Yan ·Fantasy

Cultivationdestroyed,eyespoisonedblindandrobbedofherstatusinthehousehold? LuoQingtongnarrowshereyesandsneers,“Bringiton!Letmeteachyoualesson!” A24t...

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.