MPSN Ch 3
by berryChapter 3
Staring at Yullan, I completely forgot about the blood trickling from my lips. In my life, Iâd seen many beautiful women, but I couldnât recall seeing many truly handsome men. You had to turn on the TV to spot their kind, and even then, faces like mineâwhich had been a few times called âhandsomeâ in real lifeâwere rare enough to know just how dire the state of street-level male beauty could be.
Except for that one time when a celebrity actor visited my college campus for a shoot, Iâd never encountered a face like his in real life.
And as soon as Yullan entered, the room was so saturated with male pheromones it was overwhelming. It wasnât even that he was tryingâit just seemed to exude from him naturally.
His presence alone was so commanding that my frail, glass-like body was trembling.
âHe could probably kill a man with his presence alone,â I thoughtâbecause there was no way to express it except like that. It was the feeling of confronting a very dignified beast. It felt as if a prince had barely managed to civilize some fierce predator, a creature with fangs like blades and claws thick as clubs, and then let it stalk the palace gardens in a gentlemanly manner.
Even amid the electric tension, I found myself unable to look away from Yullanâs eyes. Those emotionless, blue-black irises glistened as if obsidian had been set into them. Even as someone from Koreaâa nation of black hair and black eyesâI had never seen such captivating azure-black.
âSo this is what it looks like when a man is truly, impossibly handsome,â the thought floated through my blank mind, the same lost silence as when admiring a breathtaking landscape. Lost in my own stupor, I only came to my senses when Yullanâwhose gaze had been fixed on meâaddressed Paul.
ââŠIs His Highness in any condition to hold a conversation?â
Snapped back to myself, I realized his question was just short of, âIs this guy still crazy?â The look in his eyes was openly contemptuous.
I cleared my throatââAhem.â Paul, catching my cue, quickly pressed a linen cloth to my lips, giving me just enough time to regain my composure.
What was the correct courtly way of speaking again? I was an engineering major, so language had never been my strong suit; all I could do was try to mimic the kind of haughty speech Iâd heard in historical period dramas.
âAs you can see, I am unwell. And to enter a royalâs chambers without knockingâare my relations with Your Grace really so intimate?â
ââŠYour manner of speaking is strange.â
Yullan looked down at me, raising a single eyebrow. Behind him, Paul was shaking his head violently and making an âXâ sign with his arms.
Is this not it? I asked with my eyes, and Paul nodded furiously, only for his expression to turn poker-faced when Yullan looked back at himâbusying himself fixing my robe as if nothing had happened.
âHm. I must have fallen asleep reading ancient texts last nightâŠâ
âHis Highness⊠reading,â Yullan replied, his tone unidentifiable as either mocking or genuinely surprised. I wondered if even this was incorrect, closing and opening my eyes as if to reboot myself.
Whatever; might as well just say whatâs really on my mind.
âAll right, so why exactly did you come here?â
ââŠI came to receive your confirmation that you will not be participating in this yearâs Hunting Tournament.â
Faced with my total lack of decorum, Yullan looked exactly as if to say, âOf course, what else could I expect from you,â with an expression betraying he never held out hope in the first place. What kind of life did you live, âChin-kielâ? I screamed inwardly, but naturally, no answer came back.
Wait, so he came for confirmation I wouldnât participate? My mind snapped into focus; the monster subjugation tournament was a major plotline in the original novel, marking the protagonistâs rise to glory and earning the loyalty of the house heads.
But here he was, requesting a clear withdrawalâI wasnât sure what to make of it, and Paulâs face had gone pale, but I, delighted, gave a quick affirmative.
âVery well, I shall withdraw!â
I was more than glad; as much as going along with the novel and riding to glory by slaying the black dragon would be, in this world my role was less hero-in-training and more someoneâs prospective bride.
Listening to how Yullan framed it, it seemed like the original storyâs featured tournament was less about glory and more about a marriage market. Somewhere, the script had shifted.
âDonât underestimate the power of modern reasoningâI come from a world where we form hypotheses and back them up with experiments!â
I couldnât help giggling at my own wit, grinning wide and flashing teeth smeared with blood. Yullan, watching me, then said to Paul,
âClean His Highnessâs mouth.â
âYes, Your Grace.â
Paul answered promptly and set to wiping the blood from my lips. Watching Yullanâwhoâd come in radiating open hostility yet now seemed surprisingly attentiveâI narrowed my eyes suspiciously.
He, for his part, stood as massive as a fortress in the middle of my room, treating the princeâs attendant as if my attendant were also his. Yet the behavior seemed less rude than intimately familiar, as if weâd always had this kind of rapport. Leaning close, I whispered to Paul,
âAre we close, him and me?â
ââŠI wouldnât say so. But more to the point, His Grace is a swordmasterâhe can probably hear anything we say at this distanceâŠâ
Startled by that, I glanced back at Yullan, who had heard every word. His face was set in an expression that said, âI couldnât care less; your words are garbage unworthy of attention.â With his impassive face layered over palpable indifference, it was clear he had not the slightest actual interest in me.
âHm, anyway, I will not be joining the hunting tournament. Now that Your Graceâs business is finished, youâre free to leave without a wordâjust as you entered.â
My voice came out far colder and sharper than I intendedâlike the crackle of iceâbut I managed to keep my composure. In truth, outside of the petty grudges I held against professors whoâd repeatedly rejected my dissertation, I wasnât the type to hold real animosity toward people.
Yullan, whom Iâd only met once, could offend me with his rudeness all he wanted; it rolled off me. But in this world, any immediate friendship with a house head would surely prompt the king to push for our wedding.
I was undoubtedly dead in my real body from cardiac arrest and would not be returning; but I had little desire to resign myself to sharing a bed with a man, just because that was the local custom.
Itâs not like the thought of marrying a man made me want to retchâthere are women in this world, after all, so why do things this way? Thus, I resolved to act abrasive at times, so as to keep myself firmly off Yullanâs list of preferred partners.
Luckily, it seemed to workâYullan fixed me with a narrowed gaze, his Adamâs apple bobbing once before he gave a curt bow of pure obligation.
It was the most perfunctory bow imaginable, as if done solely from duty to royalty. His face was purposely unbothered, not even caring to hide his displeasure.
âI hope you do not change your mind. I know Your Highness to be fickle, but overall, your intentions are upright.â
âYour Grace!â Paul shouted in surprise, his face scandalized as if to say, âHow could you say such a thing to my charge!ââeven though heâd been just as disrespectful himself earlier. Rolling my eyes, I gestured nonchalantly.
âPaul, heâs not deaf. Youâre the one who told me even an antâs whisper would reach a swordmaster at this distance. Besides, Your GraceâI did say you could leave without another word, didnât I?â
ââŠMy apologies.â
Yullan, apparently caught off guard by my tone, arched an eyebrow, then nodded slightly before pivoting smartly on his right heel and striding out. I couldnât help but think his step was the model for a military drillââRight face! Forward march!ââa paragon of military parade ground style.
As I watched in admiration, Paul griped,
âWhy would you say youâre not joining the hunting tournament? Do you know what kind of event it is?â
âWhy, what kind is it?â
I replied indifferently, prompting Paul to launch into a mini-lecture.
âSince Your Highness has conveniently forgotten, let me explain: The tournament is a grand festival honoring the great Solar God Solius, starting by daylight and culminating in a hunt to drive out the black dragon Nasiuâwhom darkness nursed in its cradle. Every two years, it rotates among the northern, western, eastern regions, and here in the capital, Rashiris. This year, itâs being held in the forest outside Rashirisâan important event! Your Highness must attend!â
âIs it so I can âhuntâ for a husband?â
âThatâs right, to find aâno, forgive me, Your Highness. I would never suggest such a thing.â
âBut you just did.â
âI was only parroting back what you saidâŠâ
âAnyway. Then it really is about securing a marriage match, at Fatherâs instigation.â
Paul nodded with a sigh, looking like he was about to combust from anxiety over my withdrawal from such an important event.
Meanwhile, I felt a bit better. At least, with tournament participation deferred, Iâd have time to adjust to this world at my own pace.
ââŠHrk, hack, erghâ!â
âYour Highness⊠Are you all right?â
And maybe, with luck, I could figure out how to rehabilitate this wretched, chronically hemorrhaging body of mine.
Though Iâd died of sudden heart failure brought on by overwork, I had actually been the âhealth evangelistâ of my research group back in the lab. Iâd constructed a rational health algorithm, improved muscle mass, and established regular exercise habits in pursuit of a wholesome life. Despite all that effort, Iâd still died youngâbut with one parent afflicted by heart disease, perhaps it was just genetics.
âEven if my previous methods missed the mark, itâs got to be better than this decrepit body.â
I made a vow.
It was exactly one month later that rumors spread about the kingâs mad youngest son withdrawing from all activity to begin a regimen of exercise to vent his frustrations.*
*Footnote: This is a joke by the protagonist, referencing how âhwabyeongââa traditional Korean concept roughly translatable as âanger illnessâ or stress-induced malaiseâmight in modern times be managed through exercise rather than hysteria or fainting.