Primordial Heir: Nine Stars-Chapter 386: Hunt On 1

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Chapter 386: Hunt On 1

After the headmaster departed through his own method, the Emperor stood alone in his private study for a long moment. The fire had burned low, casting long shadows across the room. His body still hummed with the satisfaction of the fight, muscles loose and warm despite the bruises forming beneath his clothes.

But pleasure could not last. Duty called, time for some rat cleaning.

He moved to the far wall, where a simple tapestry hung depicting the Samael phoenix in flight. He pressed his palm against the fabric, and a section of the wall slid silently aside, revealing a dark passage.

He did not enter. He simply stood at the threshold and spoke two words.

"Come forth."

The darkness in the passage shifted. For a moment, nothing happened. Then two figures emerged, stepping from the shadows as if they had always been part of them.

They were identical in every way that mattered. Same height, same build, same nondescript clothing that seemed to drink the light. Their faces were plain, forgettable—the kind of faces you could look at a dozen times and never remember. Their eyes were pale gray, empty of emotion, empty of everything except patient obedience.

They knelt in unison, heads bowed, waiting.

The Emperor looked down at them, these instruments of his will, honed over decades into perfect weapons. Shadows, they were called. Not names—they had given up names long ago. Just numbers now, designations for tools.

"Number Seven. Number Eleven."

They raised their heads slightly, acknowledging.

"There are cells. Hidden in cities across the region. The organization thinks themselves safe, thinks their secrecy protects them."

The Emperor’s voice was calm, conversational, as if discussing the weather.

"They are wrong."

He gestured, and a scroll appeared in his hand—a list of locations, names, descriptions. He handed it to Number Seven.

"Root them out. Every last one. Leave nothing behind."

Number Seven took the scroll, reading it once, memorizing it instantly. Then he passed it to Number Eleven, who did the same. The scroll crumbled to ash in Eleven’s hands, disappearing without a trace.

"Go," the Emperor said.

They vanished. Not by moving—simply by ceasing to be there. One moment they were kneeling. The next, only empty space remained.

The Emperor stood alone in his study, staring at the spot where his shadows had been.

"Let them feel fear," he murmured. Then he turned and walked back toward the fire, settling into his chair to wait for dawn.

The first city was three hundred miles away.

Number Seven and Number Eleven appeared on a rooftop as the clock tower struck midnight. The city slept below them, unaware of the death that had just arrived at its heart. They moved without speaking, without signaling, without any communication at all. After decades working together, words were unnecessary.

They knew the target: a warehouse in the industrial district, disguised as a textile factory. Below its ordinary exterior, the organization ran a small but active cell—recruiting, experimenting, preparing.

Number Seven took the front. Number Eleven took the back.

They moved through the darkness like smoke.

The guards at the front entrance never saw him coming.

There were two of them, hidden in the shadows of a loading dock, their eyes scanning the street with professional alertness. They were good—better than most. They checked blind spots, varied their patterns, stayed out of the light.

None of it mattered.

Number Seven flowed between them like wind. His hand moved once, twice. Two throats were opened before the guards could register his presence. They fell silently, caught before they could hit the ground, lowered gently to the concrete.

Inside, the warehouse was a maze of machinery and stacked crates. Workers moved through the dim space—not guards, but laborers, the organization’s foot soldiers, the ones who kept the machine running.

Number Seven moved at such a speed you could have mistaken him as a ghost.

He passed through the aisles, invisible, silent, deadly. Behind him, bodies fell. A worker here, checking inventory—dead before he could turn. A supervisor there, reviewing papers—dead before his papers could rustle. One after another, they dropped, their lives extinguished without a sound.

At the same time, Number Eleven entered from the rear.

His path was different—a narrow corridor lined with doors. Sleeping quarters, probably. Storage rooms. He moved quickly, efficiently. Each door he passed, he paused for a fraction of a second, listening. If he heard breathing, he entered.

Inside the first room, two men slept in bunks. Eleven’s knife found both hearts before they could wake. Inside the second, a single figure, awake but facing the wall. A quick twist of the neck, and he joined his comrades in silence.

They met in the center of the warehouse, where a heavy door led to the lower levels. Below, the real work happened.

Seven looked at Eleven. Eleven looked at Seven. No words were needed between them.

They descended together.

The lower level was a laboratory.

Not as large or advanced as the facility Elysia had destroyed, but similar in purpose. Tables covered with equipment. Cages along the walls—some empty, some occupied by hollow-eyed captives. The smell of chemicals and something worse hung in the air.

Five scientists worked here, along with eight guards. They were relaxed, confident in their secrecy, unaware that death had already claimed everyone above them.

Number Seven took the left side. Number Eleven took the right.

They moved simultaneously.

A guard turned, sensing something—too late. Seven’s blade opened his throat. Beside him, Eleven’s knife found the heart of another. The remaining guards reacted, reaching for weapons, shouting warnings that died in their throats as the shadows flowed through them like wind through wheat.

The scientists never had a chance. They were not fighters, not prepared for this. They died at their workstations, still holding their instruments, still staring at their experiments.

In forty-three seconds, it was over.

The two shadows stood in the center of the laboratory, surrounded by bodies, untouched by the violence they had wrought. They looked at each other, exchanged a single nod, and then Eleven produced a teleportation scroll from his belt.

They simply vanished.