MPNS Ch 51
by berryChapter 51
Chiririâchiwawang. The bird perched on Nikielâs bed hopped onto his knees and rubbed its beak against his chest. Bit by bit, his ragged breathing began to calm.
Nikiel reached out and embraced the bird. Hyperventilating in the middle of sleepâwhat next? And why were his cheeks soaked with tears?
Rubbing his damp face against the birdâs shoulder, he muttered,
âAh⌠it was such a sad dream, but I canât remember itâŚâ
In that dream, he had been swallowed in despair. He had lost something unspeakably precious, and what tormented him worse was the thought that he had disappointed the one who had vowed to protect that thing with him.
The dreamâvoice had condemned him, yesâbut Nikiel had realized it wasnât real blame. Behind the words was a plea: see me, remember me.
And Nikielâhe hadnât known what to say. He hadnât known how to comfort. That was the sadness of it.
But the next blinkâ and the ache of guilt, the tenderness, the desperate sorrowâall of it was gone.
Why was I crying again? He clutched his blank chest, eyes blinking. He felt heâd forgotten something immenseâbut didnât know what.
The hawk brushed its beak against him again and again, as if to console him. Its warmth gave him something to cling to, and before he knew it, Nikiel had fallen back asleep.
Thankfully, the dream did not return. Yet all the same, there was still the hard feel of someoneâs arms around him. The warmth was so good he nuzzled into it, brow pressed against hard chest muscle, purring a faint sigh.
Toward dawn, the one holding him stirred, as if to leave.
âDonât goâŚâ
Nikiel whispered without meaning to. And he felt the embrace pause. Seizing the chance, he wrapped his arms tighter, burying his face in that warm chest as if clinging to it.
The stranger flinched, startledâbut Nikiel only pressed closer.
This was the first time in his life he had acted so needy. Not even as a boy had he asked such comfort from his parents. Strange, yesâbut warmth like that, he never wanted to let go.
The hours waned, and at last light grew. From the accursed east, the sun rose once more.
âWhy are your eyes so swollen?â
ââŚGood question.â
Paulâs puzzled query was only met with a shrug. Nikiel did notâcould notâexplain that he had cried in his sleep. He didnât know himself why tears had come.
By morning, the hawk that had nestled at his side was gone. Only a black feather gleamed where it had lain. He thought it beautiful and gave it to Paul, telling him to cut the tip and craft it into a quill.
Paul fussed endlessly, saying those swollen lids must be treated at once. He brought in hot and cold towels, pressing them in turn to Nikielâs face, massaging brow and nape.
Normally Nikiel would have run out declaring this pampering unbearable, hiding in his exercise. But today his mood was too heavy to resist.
Sensing it, Paul spoke to lift him up.
âAt least this afternoon begins your first fencing lesson. A bit of movement will ease the swelling.â
ââŚAh, right.â
Fencing class. Nikielâs blue eyes brightened. He had nearly forgotten in the shadow of his dream, but indeedâtoday his instruction would begin.
Paul thought he was only cheering him because of his swollen eyes. But the truth was, the thought of learning anew filled Nikiel with joy no dream could dim.
He refreshed himself, ate roasted venison with Bendi the chefâs special sauce, then sorted through his monsterâecology notes until sunset approached.
At that hour, a message came from Yullan: the prince must use the Guardâs training grounds, as the Princeâs Palace had none.
Nikiel dressed in loose bray trousers and a tunic for ease of movement.
âAre you really going just like that?â Paul fussed.
âWhat, am I to wrap myself in diamonds for sword practice? Leave itâyouâll only make me late. My teacher waits.â
For the first session, propriety demanded that he not go alone. He must have attendants. So he endured Paulâs nagging, but at last snapped, unusually firm.
To be late for day oneâit could not be! Even back in Daechiâdong cram schools, parents queued before dawn not to miss star lecturers. To be tardy on the first day? Impossible!
Paul tsked at the light blazing in his masterâs eyes.
Since that illness⌠he hurls himself at every lesson as if bewitched by learning itself. Before, he would sabotage his etiquette tutors⌠shouted the man would be charged with treason to lay a hand on him. History, math, lawâall his teachers suffered at least onceâŚ
But not now. Now all his spite was gone.
Even toward Yullan Balt. In the past, he would have sneeredâI wonât trot over like a dog just because he calls. First run me a bath. Iâll go at my leisure.
Such words came easily to mind when imagining the old Nikielâbecause he had said them often.
But today he rushed eagerly.
Paul sighed, but hurried to ready supplies.
âYou did remember to pack food?â
âOf course! The chef prepared since morning. Not only for usâthere will be lateânight stores sent to the Black Thornsâ barracks as well.â
Nikiel nodded. He checked the large basket Paul hefted, murmuring he should have packed more. In truth, it overflowed.
Inside: apricots and peaches preserved in honey, small cakes topped with quince, bottles of wine from last yearâs sweet frost harvest, garlicâspiced pork belly and bacon wrapped for bread. Bendiâs finest workâsmoky, fragrant, made to impress.
Nikiel had even ordered two versions: mild seasoning and heavy, not knowing Yullanâs tastes.
And for the Black Thornsâan entire roast venison haunch, with fruit liquor and beer to follow. The kitchen had been in chaos preparing it all.
Because gifts to teachersâthe Korean concept of **chonji (ě´ě§)**šâwere the oil that greased the wheels of learning.
Money? Absurd. The house of Balt was richer by hundreds of times than any treasury Nikiel had known, rich enough to buy kingdoms.
The true strategy was sincerityâthe care borne of provision.
With baskets full, there was nothing left to do but go on time.
So Nikiel and Paul left the palace. For formality, they rode the Princeâs carriage across the short kilometer to the Guardâs training yard.
It was ornate: silver fittings, door handles carved of silver capped with great sapphires. And so carried, the âstudentâ went to his first lesson with his terrible teacher.
Notes:
- Chonji (ě´ě§): In Korea, âgiftsâ to teachers to smooth relations; usually money in an envelope. Nikiel adapts the idea, believing thoughtful mealâgifts will win Yullanâs goodwill.
- Bray (ë¸ë ): Local trousers akin to loose breeches described earlier, worn with tunics for training.
- Daechiâdong cram schools: Reference to South Koreaâs most competitive tutoring district in Seoul, invoked as comparison for fierce devotion to lessons.