Scary Horror Stories by Dr. NoSleep - SMASHER vs. Mafia: A Christmas Special (Part 2)
Episode Date: December 24, 2025Dr. NoSleep Studios presents a Dr. NoSleep Original series: SMASHER vs. Mafia: An SvM Prequel. Over 80 exclusive bonus episodes are waiting for you. Unlock them now with a 7-day free trial of �...��Dr. NoSleep Premium. Cancel anytime. No commitment. BetterHelp: Sign up now and get 10% off at betterhelp.com/dns. Author: Dave Kavanaugh * * * CONTENT DISCLAIMER: This episode contains explicit content not limited to intense themes, strong language, and depictions of violence intended for adults. Parental guidance is strongly advised for children under the age of 18. Listener discretion is advised. #drnosleep #scarystories #horrorstories #doctornosleep #horrorpodcast #horror Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The bells at St. Holvert's Cathedral were ringing after the mid-morning Sunday Mass.
The priest waited outside.
atop the front steps, to shake hands, give blessings, and hand out flyers to the families that
poured from the church doors and moved out into the streets of Little Dublin.
The parishioners at St. Halvards looked much as one would expect.
The fathers in suits, the mothers in modest dresses, the children pulling off their itchy
sweaters as soon as they were outside.
There were no obvious clues that most of those men and some of the women were engaged
daily in criminal activity and violence of every time. The priest certainly wasn't too concerned,
and was all too happy to accept the donations and protections of Marade McMurrow. Waving as the last
churchgoers exited the building, he delivered his final, go in the peace of the Lord, to the
gangsters without any sense of irony. Most of the Celtic cartel families headed south down the main road,
But two of the young men broke away, turning west.
Where are you too running off to?
Old Fitz called to them.
Just grabbing some lunch downtown, answered Young Fitz, as he and Dermit made their way toward the Odin's Gate Bridge.
You can grab your lunch at the pub?
His father complained.
You don't serve Chalmain!
As they walked, young Fitz glanced down at the pamphlet the priest had handed him.
It showed an old.
illustration of a high brick tower with stained glass windows, and two bulldozers were
sketched to move ominously in from either side. The pamphlet read, Save All Saints Monastery.
Rolling his eyes, Fitz crumpled up the page and tossed it into a garbage can. The sky was
gray and a crisp breeze stung their eyes as they walked across the bridge. Young Fitz
tightened the newsboy cap he wore, then flipped up the collar of his suit jacket.
and stuffed his hands in his pockets.
Dermott, hulking along beside his friend,
didn't mind the breeze in his long, orange hair,
and breathed in the salty taste of the bay through his nostrils.
His hands were much too large to fit in any pockets.
Once across the bridge,
they glanced up briefly at the towering downtown skyline,
but soon turned down a modest side street.
The city of Grim Bay didn't have so much of a Chinatown
as it did a China alley, and red paper lanterns hung above the street,
bouncing in the spring breeze, passing by the family-run convenience store,
grocers, herbal medicine shop, and mahjong parlor.
The two men ducked into a little noodle house on the corner.
Even bent low and turned to the side, Dermott could hardly fit through the door.
Once inside, the cook behind the counter smiled and nodded to them both.
Young Fitz clapped Dermit on the arm, then moved to take a corner table as the cook prepared as usual.
Dermit, meanwhile, ducked past the counter, down the dim hall, and out the back,
where he emerged into a small, grimy courtyard between old brick tenement buildings.
He was just about to climb up the nearest fire escape when a tiny sound made him look down.
From between two overflowing garbage cans, there limped a very small,
very frail, three-legged kitten with gunky eyes and matted white fur.
Dermit stared at it, then lowering himself to the ground, he cocked his giant head and smiled.
The kitten cocked its tiny head and meowed again.
Laying the back of one massive hand down before the animal, Dermit waited patiently.
After another 30 seconds, the kitten crept up to sniff at his fingers, then walked cautiously onto his palm.
Rising, Dermit gently scooped it up and plopped the kitten into his breast pocket.
Turning, Dermit began to ascend the fire escape, not moving up its stairs, on which he would
never fit, but climbing swiftly up the outside, moving floor to floor with grace and surprising
quietness, like some great ape in the jungle.
Upon reaching the roof, he swung his legs up and landed gently on the terrace there, where
a jumble of pots held a hundred varieties of flowers. Reaching to his pocket, he removed the
kitten, which bit him on the thumb before allowing him to rubber head with a fingertip. To his right,
from an apartment on an adjoining building, a window squeaked open. Dermit looked over, and there,
framed in the window, and with a pink flower in her hair, Lotus raised an eyebrow.
Really, sweetheart, another stray. Dermit gave a sheepish smile. She laughed lightly, and climbing out of the window onto the terrace, she dusted herself off and walked toward him.
So what should we call this little lady? she asked. Dermott murmured in his throat and nodded at the little cat.
Do you mean it's a boy? He nodded again.
How can you tell?
He shrugged.
Lotus clicked her tongue and shook her head, then winked.
You and your hidden talents.
She was barely five feet tall, and when she stretched up on tiptoes to kiss him,
he had to kneel for her to reach him,
carefully cupping the kitten in one hand and bowing his head to hers.
Her lips were soft and cool against his,
though he could feel the raised cut where she had been hit in the club a few days before.
She lifted her hands to hold his face, and as her fingers touched lightly against his skin,
he shuddered, not in pain, but in overwhelming tenderness.
Breaking away from the kiss, she smiled into his eyes, which were blue as a clear sky.
I missed you, she whispered, and he chuckled.
I know it's only been a few hours, but I wasn't complaining.
I like it, having someone to miss.
Not everyone has that.
He lowered his massive arm to set down the kitten, then snatched Lotus lightly at the waist and lifted her into the air, he said, kissing her again.
They were interrupted by the kitten, which began attacking Dermott's boot laces.
It began to rain, fat drops striking the back of Dermott's head.
He bent to set Lotus back on her feet and nodded toward the apartment window, but she shook her head.
I don't mind the rain, she said.
it's good for the flowers.
She turned to the corner of the terrace,
where she laid out bricks into a ten-foot square
and planted grass within.
It wasn't much, that tiny lawn, but it was theirs.
Taking his giant hand in her small grip,
she led him over to the grass and giggling,
moved to sit in the middle.
He squinted at her, mouth twitching.
She sniffed a laugh.
Who cares if my dress is dirty?
He grinned.
At first,
It had been difficult for Lotus to read the meaning in Dermit McMurrow's expressions,
because she had assumed there must be a vocabulary to it.
Private words, subtle grammar, subtext and secrets.
But no, his reactions and emotions were simple, straightforward,
for those who bothered to accept his truth.
It was everyone else it was difficult to read, Lotus realized,
with their lies and their judgment and their games.
There was nothing secret about Dermit, and that was his secret.
As he lowered himself onto the grass beside her, his long legs poking out the end of the square,
she looked at him and she saw him.
All his quiet strength, his deep-set pain, his desperate desire to love.
She saw it all, so plainly on his face.
Others saw something else in those features.
They saw ugliness, something to be laughful,
at, something to be feared, a monster even, a creature of violence. She knew about all that, of course.
She knew the things they made him do all his life, just as she knew how easy the world found
it to judge a person based on their circumstances, instead of their heart. She got enough of that
judgment down at the club, and before working there, she had gotten it in a brothel down the street.
And before that, back when she was just a little girl, in a brothel in Shanghai.
The world was so cruel, and yet?
You, she said, smiling as the rain fell harder.
You are so beautiful.
He looked at her and blinked water from his eyes.
Must be the rain.
She pushed him gently on the chest,
and he lowered himself onto his back in the wet grass,
shivering as the chilly wetness soaked his shirt.
Glancing over, he saw that the three,
Three-legged kitten had found a dry spot beneath a potted bush and was fast asleep.
Lotus curled up beside him, her head against his neck, her hand on his chest.
He wrapped the fingers of one hand around her shoulder, and while the spring rain fell,
they held each other, and their little patch of paradise lifted up high above the slums of hell.
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The sun finally came out from the clouds that evening, just in time to set, and paint the sky
with gold and fire and blood. Dermit could not see that sunset. He was sitting in the back of a
windowless work van, hunched and hugging his knees, jostling back and forth as the vehicle
headed down the winding streets west of town, where big, bland, identical houses stood beside
golf courses and country clubs.
Dermit usually liked to keep his mind blank on these particular journeys.
Trips to job sites.
But after spending the afternoon on the roof terrace with Lotus,
it was impossible to zone out.
His heart was too full.
His skin, it still tingled with the echo of her touch.
And when he breathed in through his large nostrils,
beyond the grimy sense of the van,
he could still smell her hair, clean, floral, like a garden.
The van pulled to a stop,
And Dermit shook himself, trying to throw off the emotions to empty himself so that he might go through the task at hand without caring, without snapping.
The rear doors swung open, and Dermit wiggled awkwardly to get his legs out, then stood.
They had parked in a gravel alley beside a large house.
The first stars were coming out, and crickets were chirping from a nearby tree.
The driver of the van, a one-armed gangster named Mooney, looked around cautiously.
Then up at Dermit.
This here's a Bucky's place.
He's a feckin' cheat.
So Ma wants to send a message and...
Dermit glared down at him, and he raised his one hand in mock surrender.
He don't want to know.
Gotcha.
Know where he's Smasher.
Just follow me.
They moved around the corner of the van and headed toward the back of the house.
But that's when young Fitz came walking up to meet them.
I'll take him in, Mooney, said Fitz.
You wait in the van.
Mooney shrugged.
So it yourself.
Dermott's eyelids twitched in concern,
but Young Fitz turned and started slowly back into the shadows.
Once they were out of earshot of the driver, he whispered,
Something's up, man. It's Cormack. He's getting paranoid or, I don't know.
They turned the corner of the house and headed for the back door.
But Fitz stopped just outside of it.
Dermit, he's ordered me to keep an eye on you and report back.
He knows something's up.
In the darkness, Dermit's nostrils flared.
I know.
And I'll only tell him what you want me to, of course, but, well, you know he's weird about the women at the club.
So I think maybe you should stick around Little Dublin for a few days.
A grumble rose in Dermott's throat, and at his sides, his bulbous knuckles popped as his hand squeezed into sledgehammer fists.
Fitz sighed, and moved to open the back door and usher Dermott.
his huge body beginning to tremble, Dermott ducked through the doorway, entering a sitting
room with the lights off and the blinds drawn. Across the room, another gangster was waiting
beside an open door with a light on within. "'What's up, Smasher? Mad cow's in the basement with
him,' the man said, shifting aside. Dermit marched forward, head bowed, eyes blazing. Flying down
the carpeted stairs, he found himself crouching in an open-plan basement. A leather couch,
faced an entertainment center. A foosball table sat in one corner, and on one shelf,
board games were stacked besides crates labeled Christmas and baby clothes. And in the middle of the
basement, under a fluorescent light, a family of four was gagged and tied to chairs.
Cormack was standing behind them, one foot bouncing anxiously. His sigs sour in one hand,
now with a suppressor screwed onto its threaded barrel. Two more of his men stood by a table in the back,
going through the paperwork.
Hey, Smash, said Cormac.
Pretty straightforward job tonight.
We need you to...
Keeping his eye on his brother, so as not to look at the family.
Dermott swept across the room, seized the head of the first, gagged figure in both hands, and crushed it.
What the fuck?
Grunned Cormac, jumping backward as blood and brain splattered his jeans.
Put the fucking bag over them, first, and...
The three others and the chairs were all screaming through their gags.
Dermott moved to the next family member and slammed his fists together on their skull.
Christ smash!
Smasher growled in his throat and snatched his hand over the next head.
It was smaller than the first two.
What's gotten into you?
Dermott flexed his fingers, feeling the skull creak and crack under his grip.
From the head, a high, child's ground issued through the gag.
Dermott flinched, and before he could stop himself, his gaze flicked downward.
He saw a light brown ponytail with a mini-mouse hair tie poking out between his index and middle fingers.
He gasped and released the girl, stumbling backward.
What the actual hell smash? said Cormac, shaking his head.
The girl continued to groan as blood poured down her face and ears.
Cormac raised his pistol and shot her in the back of the head.
Turning, he aimed at the last family member, a young boy, and shot him.
Dermott began to hyperventilate, his chest swelling and head striking the popcorn ceiling with each deep gasp.
Cormack sighed, lowering his smoking pistol.
What a fucking mess. Seriously smash. What's gotten over you lately?
With an enormous effort, Dermit slowed his breathing, and bearing his teeth, his gaze snapped up to his brothers.
Cormack cocked his head.
What? You don't want to be here right now? No shit.
We have a job to do.
Get control of yourself.
Dermott's jaws tightened, teeth grinding.
At his sides, his hands were shaking, dripping blood into the carpet.
Cormack shook his head.
Sometimes I wonder, man, how someone so strong can be so fucking weak.
Smash her awoke from a nightmare, late the next morning.
Sitting up on the two mattresses laid end-to-end in his sparsely furnished room above the pub,
He rubbed his head in his hands before remembering the night before, and looking down, saw the red
stains upon his skin. It was always so hard to wash away, all that blood. The floorboards creaked
as he got to his feet, crouching to avoid the light fixture. Sunlight was streaming in through
the window, and he could hear a few voices chatting boisterously from downstairs. Tomorrow was St. Patrick's
day and the busiest day of the year for the Ballygub.
yawning, he pulled on his boots and opened the bedroom door.
One of the wolfhounds was standing in the hall outside and looking up at him.
He smiled down at the dog, but from his mother's office, he heard the druid call to the animal,
and it turned with a whimper, ears drooping, and sauntered away down the hall.
Dermott heard the office door close.
When he came down the pub stairs a few minutes later, dressed, and with his hair brushed back and tucked behind a
large ears. He saw a few locals at the bar, and young Fitz's sister, Jenny, standing on a stool
to hang a chain of glittering shamrocks across the room.
"'Mor'n't'n' Mr. Dermott,' said old Fitz.
"'Or should I say, afternoon? Fancy a fry-up?'
Dermott shook his head and walked through the pub and out the front door.
He stood for a moment on the sidewalk outside, blinking in the dazzling sunlight,
though the breeze was crisp. His stomach growled.
He was hungry, but not for a fry-up.
He wanted noodles.
Crossing his arms to hug his hands around his chest,
he trudged down the road in the direction of Odin's Gate Bridge.
Lotus would be home again today, tending to her flowers on the roof.
Monday was her day off.
Fitz had been right, of course.
Dermott would be wise to stay away for now,
to let things simmer down, to be patient.
But he couldn't.
He had been alone so long, invisible in the dark, and now he had been seen.
He couldn't help it.
The light called to him.
Lotus, she called to him.
As soon as Dermott turned into the street with the red paper lanterns, he knew something was wrong.
It was too empty, even for a Monday.
And as he glanced around at the shops, faces that had been looking out through the storefront windows suddenly turned away.
Senses tingling, he sped up, his boots pounding the pavement.
He came up to the noodle shop, but saw that the blinds were closed and the open sign had been turned off.
Dermit's mouth went dry.
He looked up at the buildings rising around him, but he didn't know where her apartment was.
He had never come in through the front door before.
Lunging into a run, he charged down a nearby alley that led to the trash-filled courtyard behind the restaurant.
A gate and a high chain-link fence ahead was locked, but Dermott didn't even slow down.
Head budding through the gate, he hurried through the courtyard, leapt, and grabbed the
second-story railing of the fire escape.
He climbed with ferocious energy, bending the bars and rattling screws loose, until he reached
the top and jumped up onto the terrace.
His boots crunched down, flattening the blossoms of a dozen snowdrops.
The flowers lay scattered on the rooftop, their pot broken.
on its side. Dermit stood frozen on the spot, his gaze panning from left to right,
from the grassy square, over potted plants, to her apartment window, which was open, the curtains
fluttering. Swallowing, he moved to the window, and leaning down, peered inside. The room was dim
and completely empty. No furniture, no kitten, no lotus. Dermit led out an agonized groan
and swooned.
Staggering backward, he turned,
his vision spinning wildly.
His eyelids peeled back in his pupils wide.
He felt afraid, so afraid.
The fear was a storm inside his head,
and from its swirling depths,
a sharp crack of violent anger,
like lightning, flared within him.
He ran back to the edge and jump,
spinning midair and grabbing the fire escape railing.
It snapped under his grip and he plummeted,
60 feet, then punched down with both fists,
crushing the lowest level of the fire escape to slow his wild descent.
He landed with knees bent, shaking the ground, then shot forward with a grunt,
hurtling down the alleyway.
Several people screamed and fell backward to the sidewalk as Dermit sprinted from the alley
and charged down the street.
His long legs flew, and his great fists beat the air as he came up to a busy intersection
and raced through the traffic.
A bus honked, and two distracted drivers got into a fender bender as he charged past.
Reaching the bridge, he sped across it.
Salty wind in his hair, his furious eyes fixed on his target ahead.
On little doubling.
In the lusty shamrock, Cormac's hands were shaking as he pulled out a cigarette,
and it took him three tries to get his lighter to work and light it.
Sucking in a shaky breath, he closed his eyes.
He stayed up the last two nights, trying to keep everything together.
The club, the docks, that new Russian crew, those fucking feds, Tippett and Cohen,
and the goddamn parade tomorrow.
Not to mention, he exhaled, trying not to think about the early hours of this morning,
and opened his eyes.
Aye.
He called out, seeing two of his men starting up a game of pool in the back.
Did I fucking say it was playtime?
No.
They get back to work.
There's two broken urinals and the men's room clogged with pubs and piss.
And the goddamn VIP lounge is need a deep clean.
Now!
Setting down their pool cues, the gangsters, hurt.
off without complaint. As it was midday, the club was closed, brightly lit with fluorescent
houselights, and the only music was the buzz of a vacuum and the clinking of clean glasses
being put away behind the bar. Cormack blew a line of gray smoke at the ceiling, feeling a migraine
start to blossom behind his eyes. Then, from the front hall, he heard the door swing open,
and a scream, and a great deal of stomping.
Okay, okay, okay, fuck,
Cormack muttered to himself,
taking another drag on the cigarette to try and study his nerves.
He had to get this over with.
Dermit marched from the hall and across the room.
Hey, Smasher, said Cormack, trying to smile.
I was wondering when you'd get here to...
Dermott whipped one great fist at a table in his way,
sweeping it into the air.
It struck the wall and burst into pieces.
Cormac flinched.
As his younger,
brother stomped up to him. Cormack saw young fits and a couple of his guys hurrying in after.
One of the men reached for his sidearm, but Cormack caught his eye and gave a quick shake of the head.
Smash, listen, Cormack began, but reaching him, Dermott leaned over, breathing hard, his lips
bared. Back inhaled. Just take a deep breath, okay? Let's talk.
Mac exhaled. I'm not gonna bullshit you man. That girl, we, well, we moved her
to another club up the coast, okay?
I don't even know where, seriously.
But that's how it worked with the dancers.
You know that.
Dermit leaned closer, his throat rumbling.
And, frankly, you don't need any distractions right now, all right?
None of us do.
But there'll be another time, and other chicks, and he's lying!
shouted a voice from above.
Cormack froze, his blue eyes wide.
Dermott looked up at the balcony.
Whiskey Blaze was standing outside the club
office in a hoodie and sweatpants, hugging her arms around her chest. Her eyes were red and puffy from crying.
It was me, Durham, she said, her voice weak. It was me that told Corb about you two. I'm sorry, but I never thought.
Her lower lip began to tremble. They, they... Dermott's heart seemed to turn to ice in his chest.
And then they just threw her in the trash, Dermott. Kormack winced.
clasping his eyes shut.
Oh, Jesus.
Whiskey sniffed and wiped at her eyes.
They said,
Fengel will swim by later to take her away
because they'll need space in the dumpster
for the fucking parade.
Dermott stared up at her.
His expression blank, his body numb.
The club melted in his vision
as tears filled his eyes.
Cormack tried to take another drag on the cigarette,
but his hand was shaking so hard he dropped it.
It hit the ground with a tiny,
puff of sparks.
Oh, God.
Oh, fuck, smashed.
And now his blue eyes.
Eyes just like Dermitt's.
They were moist, too.
I swear, man, I didn't want to have to...
Dermott's right arm snapped forward, clutching his fingers around his brother's face.
Cormack seized, kicking out.
Behind them, men cursed and pulled out their pistols.
Dermott turned and marched forward, his boots stomping on the lit cigarette with a hiss,
dragging Cormack.
by the head while his brother fought back, swinging both hands uselessly at Dermott's wrist.
His screams muted by Dermott's wide palm over his face.
Get the fuck off him, man!
screamed a gangster behind them, cocking back as pistols, hammer.
But Fitt's yelled, Hey, hey don't shoot!
Dermott is my son, you idiot!
Dermott did not respond.
Reaching the employee's only door, he kicked it open and marched down the hall,
past rooms stocked with sex toys, packaged drugs, and military.
grade weapons. As he reached the club's back doors, Dermott adjusted his grip on Cormack's head
and his brother gasped for air. Smash, you fucking listen to me, man! Dermott bucked through the
doors and walked out, into the sunlit parking lot behind the club. Dragging Cormack beside him,
he marched straight toward the dumpsters and spotted two drops of glistening red on one of the
containers. Don't look in there, Smash. Don't look! Reaching out with his left arm,
Dermit seized the plastic lid.
Please, Dermit!
Dermit ripped the lid off its hinges.
He stared down, into the piled garbage.
There, amongst soggy cardboard and glass bottles,
lime wedges and soiled paper towels and used condoms,
he saw her hand, pale and limp.
A rat was chewing through her thumb.
Dermott stared at the hand, at her fingernails,
and the little mole on her wrist.
His vision drifting in and out of focus,
breathing slowly, completely numb,
find a voice behind him.
I do that smasher.
Fucking why.
Dermit blinked.
Turning, he saw that five men now stood around him in the parking lot.
All of them, except for fits, had their weapons drawn and aimed at his chest.
He was your fucking brother, said Mooney.
The one-armed driver was holding a revolver in his only hand.
Dermit blinked again, and, cocking his head,
he slowly lifted up his right hand. It was empty, but dirty. Lots of pulpy blood was dripping down
his fingers and his wrist, and there were tight clumps of black hair and bits of bone and scraps of
skin. Some of the skin was pale white with freckles, other bits dark brown, and a diamond
stud earring was stuck in his palm. Dermott looked down by his feet. His brother's headless body lay in a puddle of red,
which was spreading slowly across the pavement.
Cormac's pistol, it was still in his holster.
He hadn't gone for it.
Dermott, said Fitts very softly.
My friend, listen to my voice. Can you hear me?
Dermott's face finally moved, cheeks flinching, lips trembling,
a growl rising in his throat.
The four men with the pistols crept a little closer.
Dermit inhaled through his nostrils, exhaled through his clenched teeth.
Bowing his head, he turned his narrowed eyes to the nearest gunman.
Big fella!
Mooney whispered, his finger tightening on the trigger.
Let's not make any sudden movements and...
Dermit made a sudden movement.
Spinning as he dove sideways, he snatched the gangster's wrist and yanked.
The whole arm ripped free with a pop and spray of blood,
and before Mooney's scream could even exit.
at his gaping mouth. Dermott had ducked low, another gangster's bullet slicing the air above him,
and launched forward, punching the second gunman in the chest, blasting him off his feet and through
the windshield of a parked car. The final two attackers tried to back away as they took aim,
but Dermott pounced upon them, seized both their heads in his hands, and smashed the heads
together in a bloody burst of shattered skulls and gelatinous brains. Straightening up, Dermit flicked
the filth off his hands, then turned back to Mooney. The man was wriggling,
worm-like across the pavement, shedding blood and tears and snot as he tried to get himself under a truck.
Dermott took one step toward him, and setting his right boot against Mooney's face, he leaned in
and crushed the skull flat.
Walking back to the dumpster, Dermit swallowed, took a deep breath, then reached inside,
and gently pulled Lotus out.
Her body was so very light.
Rigormortis hadn't set in yet.
She was limp like a doll.
a doll with cold skin and sweet-smelling hair and four bullet holes in her chest, and one just above
her right ear. Dermott cradled her against his chest, squeezing his cheek against the top of her head,
tears falling from his eyes, even as he ground his teeth and every muscle in his body clenched.
You, you know the order to do that. It didn't come from Cormack, said young Fitz, who had pulled off
his cap and now held it over his heart. He never would have done that unless the order must have
come from. You know, Dermott's eyes went hard as iron as he pictured his mother's face in his mind.
In all-consuming wrath filled his being, he nodded. So, what are you going to do?
Dermott McMurrow turned, his giant shadow stretching across the crumpled bodies on the pavement
and carrying Lotus with him,
he headed out of the parking lot
and into the shadowy alleys of the city,
growling one word as he departed.
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