My Xianxia Harem Life-Chapter 408 Bound
One man backed away so quickly he stumbled into a chair.
Another cursed under his breath, hands shaking uncontrollably.
A third’s courage shattered entirely, and he dropped his weapon and bolted for the door—
—only to freeze when Riley’s eyes flicked toward him.
That single glance stopped the man in his tracks. Sweat poured down his face.
His breath hitched in his throat. His knees buckled.
And Riley hadn’t even moved yet.
"W–who are you?" one gangster choked out, voice shaking. "What... what are you?"
Riley’s smile widened just a little. "Just someone trying to get a good night’s sleep."
And then Riley walked toward them as if it were just another ordinary day—another dull moment that happened to involve killing.
His expression didn’t change, his steps didn’t falter.
He carried the same calmness a man might wear while heading to breakfast.
"Let’s end this," he said, voice low, steady.
The group tensed.
Then Riley moved.
He dashed into the heart of the formation like a phantom dropping into their midst.
Confusion flashed across every face, but before a single word could be shouted, the slaughter began.
Riley’s arm swung once, clean and sharp.
A man stiffened, eyes wide, a blade lodged deep in his heart before he even understood he had been attacked.
Riley was already gone, spinning away, his cloak brushing the air like the hem of a dancer’s robe.
Another flash of steel.
Another wet sound.
Another body hitting the ground.
Riley twisted, stepped, pivoted—his movements smooth, perfectly measured, almost artistic.
Blood sprayed across the dirt in thin arcs as his blade plunged straight into the shocked eye of the next man.
The victim didn’t even scream; he simply dropped as though someone had cut his strings.
"Behind you!" someone shouted.
Too late.
A desperate attacker lunged at Riley’s side, but Riley leaned away with an ease so natural it looked premeditated—like he had seen the attack long before it happened.
It was as if his skin could feel killing intent, as if he had invisible eyes watching every direction at once.
The stabbing blade passed so close to him it brushed the fabric of his shirt.
Riley didn’t even look at the man.
He simply stepped forward, slashed backward without turning, and the man behind him collapsed, clutching a slit throat.
Panic spread through the rest of the group.
Men who had spent years surviving hell suddenly felt like children standing before a monster.
They attacked wildly—shouting, swinging, stumbling.
Riley slipped through their attacks like a shadow between flames, his body bending, swaying, weaving in ways that made it impossible to lock onto him. 𝒻𝘳𝘦𝘦𝘸ℯ𝒷𝘯𝘰𝑣ℯ𝑙.𝘤𝑜𝘮
Every time they blinked, he seemed to be somewhere else.
Every time they exhaled, another body hit the ground.
He carved through them with terrifying consistency.
One knife to a ribcage.
A quick jab under the jaw.
A spinning slash that opened a chest from shoulder to sternum.
A backhanded strike that buried a blade into a man’s temple.
Men dropped one after another, their screams short and cut off, their blood soaking into the floor.
In less than a dozen breaths the clearing was filled with bodies—some twitching, some already still.
The chaos faded.
The last echo of steel on bone went silent.
Only one man remained.
The leader stood frozen, his knees threatening to buckle, his breath shaking out of his lungs in short bursts.
He stared around at the corpses of his men—men he had trusted, men who had followed him through the apocalypse—now lying like discarded dolls.
Riley finally stopped moving.
He lifted his head, eyes landing on the remaining man with the same calm he had worn at the very beginning, as if this entire massacre had been nothing more than a chore he needed to finish.
The leader swallowed hard.
Riley took one slow step forward.
And the world suddenly felt very, very small.
"We are from the Night Watch Gang! You’re dead meat if you think you can get away with this!" the leader shouted, forcing every ounce of false bravado into his trembling voice.
The name of his gang had weight in this city—a reputation built on intimidation, extortion, and brutality.
He was banking everything on that name saving his life now.
His men were dead.
His confidence was dead.
Only the legend of the Night Watch Gang remained for him to cling to.
Riley raised an eyebrow, unimpressed.
He even chuckled softly, as if the threat were nothing more than a poorly delivered joke.
"Oh? Is that how it is?" he asked, slowly stepping forward.
"We’re throwing names around?" His smile widened into something sharp and cruel.
"Fine. My name is Riley... and I’m about to slit your throat. So why don’t you say your farewells to this world before I do it for you?"
The leader’s heart dropped into his stomach.
Riley kept walking—unhurried, relaxed, almost casual.
Each step echoed in the silent, corpse-filled room, the sound like death’s footsteps drawing nearer and nearer.
The leader’s breath hitched. Panic crawled up his spine like a cold hand.
"F-Fuck..." he whispered, his voice cracking.
His hand fumbled for his knife—a long, heavy blade that he usually carried to intimidate.
But right now, it felt useless, like a child’s toy in the hands of a terrified boy.
He raised it shakily, trying to point it toward Riley, but the knife wobbled. His grip wasn’t steady.
His knees weren’t steady. His heartbeat wasn’t steady.
Riley didn’t stop.
The leader took a step back.
Then another.
Then another—
And with a sudden burst of survival instinct, he spun around and fled.
He sprinted toward the door with everything he had, boots slipping on blood-splattered floorboards.
His breath came out in ragged gasps.
His hands reached desperately for the doorknob, slamming into it so hard it rattled.
He yanked the door open, his entire body leaning forward, ready to throw himself outside, ready to scream for help, for mercy—anything.
But he never made it through.
A cold, thin edge pressed against his throat.
The leader froze mid-step, body locked in terror. His mouth fell open, but no sound came out.
Even breathing felt dangerous, like the slightest movement would cause the blade to cut deeper.
Riley stood behind him, close enough that the leader could feel his warm breath on the back of his neck.
"Running?" Riley whispered. "Cowardly... but predictable."
The leader’s fingers tightened around the doorframe until his knuckles went pale.
Sweat dripped down his forehead and slid into his eyes, but he didn’t dare blink.
His heart hammered violently in his chest, each beat screaming this is the end.
He slowly closed his eyes.
For a moment, there was silence—just the sound of his trembling breath and Riley’s calm, steady exhalation behind him.
Then the blade slid cleanly across his throat.
Warm blood spilled over his hands as his grip on the door weakened.
His body swayed, stumbling backward as if trying to step away from death—but he had already been claimed.
His eyes opened one last time, empty and hollow, before he collapsed to the floor.
The leader of this group tonight drew his final breath right there at the threshold—so close to the exit, yet impossibly far from escape.
Riley wiped his blade on the back of the corpse’s jacket, straightened up, and stepped away as though he had merely finished another small errand.
Another day.
Another kill.
Nothing more.
Riley wiped his blade on the leader’s coat, sheathed it, and began moving from body to body with the cold efficiency of someone who had done this too many times to count.
He crouched beside each corpse, unfazed by the blood pooling around him.
Pouches were opened, belts unbuckled, pockets turned out.
He collected gold coins, silver scraps, daggers, small jewelry—whatever the men had carried for intimidation or survival.
It was a quiet, methodical process.
Looting wasn’t greed.
It was habit.
When he finished, Riley walked back into the dimly lit lobby.
The inn’s lanterns flickered in the stale air, casting long shadows across the floorboards still slick with blood.
The room was empty, but it wasn’t silent.
Riley could hear muffled breathing—quick, nervous, shallow—coming from upstairs.
The innkeeper was hiding.
Riley placed fifteen gold coins on the counter, letting them fall one by one.
Clink.
Clink.
Clink.
Each coin sounded painfully loud in the tension-soaked quiet.
"I know you can hear me," Riley said casually. "Clean this mess up. Here’s your payment for the cleanup."
Behind the counter, wood creaked softly—the unmistakable sound of someone flinching.
Riley didn’t bother looking toward the sound. The man was terrified already; no need to worsen it.
Riley turned away and walked up the stairs as if he were merely returning from a simple errand.
Not even a hint of guilt or concern crossed his face.
The hallway upstairs was silent, except for the soft groan of old wood beneath his boots.
He reached his room, opened the door, and shut it behind him with a calm click.
Downstairs, the inn remained still.
Minutes stretched into hours.
The innkeeper didn’t come out until he was certain Riley had gone to sleep.
And even then, his hands shook uncontrollably.
He muttered frightened prayers under his breath while dragging corpses toward the back door.
The bodies were heavy, their limbs stiffening as the night deepened.
Blood smeared across the floor, across the walls, and out onto the alley.
He worked until the moon began to fade from the sky.
By dawn, when the first pale rays of sunlight peeked over the rooftops, the sight outside the inn became impossible to ignore.
Fifteen corpses lay in the alley—stacked in a crude line, weapons tossed beside them, faces frozen in terror.
The innkeeper hadn’t dared take anything from them; the looted corpses alone were warning enough.
As the city woke, rumors spread like wildfire.
Merchants stopped in their tracks.
Travellers whispered.
Veteran guards exchanged uneasy glances.
"Who did this...?"
"Was it a feud?"
"This many Night Watch gang members...?"
"Who could kill them all alone?"
"Someone insane... or terrifying."
The whispers grew louder. A small crowd formed. Children were quickly pulled away by their parents. Some men swore they wouldn’t come near this inn again.
Inside, the innkeeper paced nervously behind the counter, glancing upstairs every other second, praying the killer would simply leave without incident.







