
The steady rhythm of a cleaver striking wood echoed through the cramped butcher shop on the edge of Blackridge’s West End. Each thud of the blade was sharp, precise, as if the man wielding it had been born with a knife in hand. The smell of raw meat and iron lingered in the air, mixing with the faint stench of oil and dust drifting in from the street outside.
Leon Graves wiped his hands on a ragged cloth, his expression unreadable as he surveyed the cuts of pork laid neatly on the counter. His apron was old, frayed at the edges, stained permanently with blood no matter how much he scrubbed it. At thirty-two, he had the quiet, weary look of a man who had lived too many lives in too short a time. His broad shoulders carried invisible weight, and his sharp grey eyes betrayed nothing of the storms that had once consumed him. To the few customers who still wandered into his failing shop, he was simply the butcher. A man who worked in silence, who asked no questions, who gave more meat than he charged for because pity was easier than conversation. “Boss, we’re running low on beef shank again.” Marcus Lee’s voice broke the quiet. The young apprentice, barely twenty-five, emerged from the cold storage room carrying an empty tray. He was tall, eager, with the kind of youthful energy Leon had long since buried. Despite the failing business, Marcus always wore a grin, as if the shop’s survival was a battle worth fighting. “Then cut what’s left of the hindquarter and display it,” Leon said. His tone was calm, steady, a man used to giving instructions that were followed without hesitation. Marcus nodded, grabbing a smaller knife. “You know, boss, if we just did delivery service or online ads like other shops, business wouldn’t be this slow.” Leon didn’t answer. He continued chopping with mechanical precision, each swing of the cleaver clean enough to split bone in a single strike. Marcus had been with him for two years, long enough to know that Leon wasn’t a man of many words. Still, the kid never stopped talking, as if filling the silence with chatter might bring the butcher’s walls down. The bell above the shop door jingled. Two men stepped inside. Leon glanced up briefly, instinct sharpening the moment he saw them. Their clothes were casual, but their eyes weren’t. One had a jagged scar across his cheek, the other wore a smirk that didn’t belong to an ordinary customer. Both carried themselves with the arrogance of men who believed the world owed them. “Afternoon,” Scarface drawled, glancing around the empty shop. “Business looks… quiet.” Leon said nothing. He set down the cleaver, wiped his hands again, and leaned his weight on the counter. Marcus stepped forward, trying to be polite. “What can I get you, sirs?” The smirking one tapped the counter with his fingers. “We ain’t here for meat, kid. We’re here for payment.” Marcus frowned. “Payment?” Scarface chuckled. “Protection money. You’re in Black Serpents’ territory. That means you pay us if you want your little shop standing.” Leon’s eyes darkened slightly. The Serpents. A street gang that had been slithering through the district for months now, extorting every small business they could find. He had ignored them, thinking they would pass him by. Apparently, that patience had run out. “How much?” Leon asked, his voice calm, controlled. “Five hundred a week,” Smirk replied. “And don’t think you can cheat us. We’ll be back every Friday.” Marcus’s face paled. Five hundred a week was more than the shop made in a month. “That’s impossible. We can’t—” Scarface moved fast, slamming his hand down on the counter. “Not our problem, kid. Pay or bleed.” Leon’s hand twitched, but he didn’t reach for the knife yet. He looked at them the way a man might study cuts of meat—deciding where the blade should fall first. “We don’t have it,” Leon said flatly. Smirk’s grin widened. “Then maybe we take something else.” His eyes slid toward Marcus. “Like your apprentice’s fingers. A butcher doesn’t need both hands to work, right?” Marcus stiffened, but before he could respond, Leon’s voice cut through the tension. “Leave.” The word was low, steady, and carried with it a weight that made both men pause for a heartbeat. Then Scarface sneered. “Wrong answer.” He drew a switchblade. Smirk followed, pulling out a metal pipe from under his jacket. Marcus instinctively grabbed for the nearest knife, but Scarface was faster. The blade flashed, slicing across Marcus’s side. Blood splattered across the counter as the apprentice cried out, collapsing against the chopping block. Leon’s breath slowed. His vision narrowed. For the first time in years, he felt it—the familiar heat crawling under his skin, the cold calm of violence pressing at his veins. Scarface shoved Marcus aside, laughing. “Looks like meat’s on the menu after all—” He didn’t finish. The butcher’s cleaver flashed, faster than his smirk could fade. One clean swing, and Scarface’s hand—blade still clutched in it—dropped onto the counter with a dull, wet thud. Scarface screamed, stumbling back, blood spraying across the tiles. Smirk roared, swinging his pipe, but Leon stepped into him, shoulder slamming forward, elbow driving into the man’s jaw. The crack echoed like breaking bone. The pipe clattered to the ground. Leon grabbed his cleaver with both hands. His movements were not wild, not chaotic. They were precise, deliberate—like a craftsman at work. One slash across Smirk’s thigh. A second across his arm. The man screamed, crumpling to his knees. Scarface was still clutching his stump, eyes wide with terror. “Y-you crazy bastard! You don’t know who you’re messing with!” Leon’s gaze was cold, detached. He pressed the bloodied cleaver against Scarface’s throat. “I told you to leave.” The man whimpered, shaking. Leon’s hand tightened. For a brief second, the air thickened—then something strange happened. A voice echoed in his head. System activation complete. Welcome, Host.Initializing: The Butcher’s System. Leon froze. His grip on the cleaver steadied as glowing text, invisible to anyone else, flickered across his vision like fire branded into the air. New Mission: Process your first prey.Reward: Knife Mastery Level 1. Leon’s lips parted slightly, but no sound came. He blinked once, then looked down at Scarface again. The man’s throat pulsed under the blade. His terrified eyes begged for mercy. Marcus groaned in the background, bleeding badly. Leon’s heart should have been racing, but instead it slowed to a steady, powerful rhythm. Process your first prey. Without hesitation, the cleaver swung. Blood sprayed across the counter, warm and heavy. Scarface gurgled once before collapsing. The System’s voice purred in his mind. Prey processed. Reward granted: Knife Mastery Level 1. Cleaver damage increased by 20%. Precision improved. Leon exhaled slowly, the weight of the cleaver suddenly different in his hand. Sharper. Deadlier. As if the blade itself had been forged anew. Smirk whimpered from the floor, crawling toward the door. Leon’s eyes followed him, calm and merciless. New Mission: Eliminate the witnesses.Reward: Blood Sense (Passive). The butcher took a step forward. Marcus, pale and clutching his wound, whispered hoarsely, “Boss… what’s happening to you?” Leon didn’t answer. He lifted his cleaver, his shadow falling across the broken man on the floor. The butcher’s life of silence was over. The slaughterhouse had just opened.
Latest Chapter
Ashes and Vows
The fire smoldered for hours, long after the butcher shop had collapsed into a blackened skeleton of charred beams and smoking rubble. The flames devoured everything—his chopping block, his knives, the hooks where the carcasses used to swing, even the wooden counter where Mateo once cracked jokes while serving customers.The butcher’s shop was no more.Leon stood in the ruin until dawn, his face lit by the dull orange glow of dying embers. The neighbors had retreated to their homes, fearful of being seen near him, fearful of drawing Hector’s wrath. He didn’t blame them. The Serpents thrived on fear; they had built their kingdom upon it.But as Leon stared at the ashes, he felt something shift inside him. The shop was gone, yes—but the fire had burned away more than wood. It had burned away the last remnants of the man who once thought he could live quietly, selling meat to survive.From now on, there was only the Butcher.The System flickered in his vision, its cold text sharper than
The Price of Blood
The city never slept, but it learned quickly when to keep quiet. Word of the butcher who carved through a squad of Serpent enforcers spread faster than wildfire. In smoky bars, in back alleys where deals were made, and in the whispered gossip of street vendors, his name traveled like a curse.Leon. The Butcher.Some spoke of him with awe, others with dread, but all agreed on one thing: he was no longer just a shopkeeper. He was something else now, something dangerous.The BountyHector Ruiz didn’t wait long to act. By morning, posters bearing Leon’s face—grainy from an old ID photo—were plastered across the underground districts.WANTED: LEON “THE BUTCHER” Reward: ₦20,000,000 (Alive). ₦10,000,000 (Dead).The bounty was a declaration of war. Mercenaries, rogue killers, washed-up ex-soldiers, and desperate thugs all felt the pull of that number. A small fortune dangled in front of anyone bold enough—or foolish enough—to try their luck.Leon heard about it before the ink even dried. One
A Bloody Feast
The city breathed differently at night. Its lungs were filled with smoke and the metallic tang of desperation, and in that suffocating haze, only predators thrived. Leon stood in the narrow alley behind his butcher shop, his apron folded neatly under his arm, his eyes scanning the shadows that stretched across the cracked concrete. The city was changing—and so was he.For years, Leon had been content to sell cuts of pork, beef, and lamb to the locals who could afford his quality. His shop had been his world, his pride. But since the night the gangsters had stormed in, leaving one of his boys dead and his world drenched in blood, that pride had twisted into something darker.And the System that had awakened within him… it didn’t let him rest.A small notification shimmered in the corner of his vision as if only he could see it:System Quest Complete: Eliminate the Black Serpents’ Enforcers (7/7) Reward Unlocked: Skill – Butcher’s Frenzy (Level 1).Leon’s lips curled into something that
The Wolves at the Gate
The city had grown restless.Whispers of the Butcher weren’t just rumors anymore—they were stories with names, faces, details. Hunters who never returned. Serpents who vanished in alleys. Harlow Street turning into a place no one wanted to tread after dark.And Viktor Kane had finally lost patience.The squad arrived at midnight. Not drunk Serpents this time. Not desperate bounty hunters.They were mercenaries. Six men, dressed in black combat gear, rifles slung across their shoulders. Their movements were precise, disciplined. They weren’t here for money—they were here to break the legend.Viktor called them wolves. Trained killers pulled from old contacts, the kind of men who’d fought in warzones overseas.And they had one order: bring the Butcher back breathing.Inside the Pit, Leon’s recruits sensed the shift before they heard it. The tension in the air was thicker than before, heavier than the hungry thugs or ragged hunters that had come prior.Marcus’s cigarette trembled slightl
The Price on His Head
The bounty hit the streets faster than wildfire.Fifty thousand dollars. That was the price Viktor Kane had set on the Butcher’s head.In the alleys, in smoke-filled bars, in the backrooms of pawn shops, men whispered the number with greed gleaming in their eyes. Fifty grand was enough to tempt anyone—gangsters, mercenaries, desperate loners.And for the first time, Leon wasn’t just fighting the Serpents. He was fighting the city itself.The Pit buzzed with nervous energy. The recruits trained harder than ever, sweat dripping onto cracked concrete. Darren and Cole sparred with pipes, Marcus corrected stances, and the newer men watched Leon with a mixture of awe and dread.But Marcus’s jaw was tight, his cigarette burning down too fast. “Boss, this bounty isn’t a joke. Every gun for hire is gonna come sniffing around Harlow. You can’t cut them all.”Leon sat on a battered chair, sharpening his cleaver with deliberate strokes. The sound—steel against steel—was steady, unhurried.“They’l
The Price of Loyalty
The Pit reeked of blood. The stench clung to the walls, soaked into the cracked concrete, and drifted into the street outside.Leon stood at the center, surveying the carnage from the night before. Bodies had been dragged into a corner, covered with tarps, but the metallic tang of iron still hung heavy.His men—Marcus, Darren, and Cole—looked exhausted, but alive. They’d washed the blood from their faces, though their hands still trembled from the memory of blades flashing in the dark.Marcus leaned against a pillar, lighting a cigarette to cover the smell. “Boss, we can’t just leave it like this. The Serpents will come sniffing around again. Maybe not tonight, maybe not tomorrow—but they’ll come.”Leon picked up his cleaver, turning it over in his hands. The edge gleamed even after slicing through bone. He cleaned it with a rag, slow and meticulous.“That’s the point,” Leon said. His grey eyes were steady, unblinking. “Let them come. Let them see what happens when they step onto my s
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