BW C8
by berryChapter 8
Deokwooâs head lifted so high it seemed it might strike the ceiling. His feet, finding no purchase, flailed as if swimming.
âGood heavens…â
Mouths fell open as people stared. A man as big as a door had soared into the airâso strange it tipped from wonder to the uncanny.
Stranger still was Taemuk, who held Deokwoo up with one hand. Even two hands would have shocked the crowd; in one, he cradled him like a small wild thing.
Still gripping Deokwoo without so much as looking at him, he straightened slowly, tilted his head, and murmured to Hoeun,
ââYoung masterâ?â
He was echoing Deokwoo. His voice was so low the air nearby seemed to cool, and a curious liltâalmost a sneerâran through it.
At last, Taemuk looked at Deokwoo and tightened his grip. Veins rose thick on the back of a hand as broad as a pot lid.
âGhkâkgh…â
Under the crushing pressure, Deokwoo thrashed like a man in seizure. Taemuk watched him with an unfeeling gaze, as if he might snap his neck then and there.
âWhatâwhat are you doing! Let him go!â
Hoeun cried out, aghast. Taemukâs ink-black eyes shifted to him.
â…â
For a fleeting instant, the corner of Taemukâs mouth quirked. Then, with a look that said, You asked me to, he flung Deokwoo away. Deokwoo flew across the hall like a kite caught in wind. Screams scattered in his wake as bodies leapt aside and toppled.
He only stopped when he struck the wallâthen dropped, limp, to the floor.
âDeokwoo!â
Hoeun tried to run to him, but Taemuk still held his nape. Hoeun glared up, eyes blazing.
âLet go!â
âNo.â
It was the sulk of a spoiled childânot the speech of a full-grown man, much less a general. Hoeun flushed scarlet.
âH-how dare you behave like a brigand! I said let me go!â
âNo.â
Eekâ Hoeun twisted, but Taemuk didnât budge. Teeth grinding on helplessness, Hoeun seized Taemukâs wrist. He knew his paltry strength couldnât winâbut there was nothing else to do.
And thenâat the instant Hoeun clamped down on that thick, hard wristâTaemuk jerked his hand away as if burned. It was strange, but Hoeun had no time for puzzlement. He bolted to Deokwoo.
Deokwoo lay sprawled, groaning. Hoeun slid to his knees and steadied him.
âDeokwoo. Deokwoo. Are you all right?â
âAre you all right, young master?â
Even then, he worried for Hoeun. Hoeun shook his head.
âIâm fine. Youâare you hurt?â
âThat is…â
With effort, Deokwoo raised his head and looked at his ankle. Hoeun followed his gaze. One ankle was twisted off to the sideâwrenched on impact. Hoeunâs face went white.
âW-we need to go to a hospital.â
âWhat hospital? Itâs fine. A hot compress will fix it.â
âNo. That wonât do. Weâre going now.â
Hoeun tried to hoist him. With his meager strength, he couldnât lift even one arm. After several failed attempts, he appealed to those gathered around.
âPleaseâhelp. The hospitalâhe needs to go to a hospital. Please.â
After glancing at one another, people edged in to carry Deokwoo. Hoeun thanked them over and over, clutching Deokwooâs hand tight.
And Taemuk…
â…â
He stood where he was, staring down at his own wristâwhere Hoeun had gripped himâuntil Hoeun disappeared from the hall.
âIâm fine, young master. Why cry?â
Deokwooâs ankle was fractured. Thick, heavy bandages wrapped it round and round; a black handprint ringed his throat where Taemuk had seized him.
Throughout treatment, Hoeun had kept his mouth clamped shut. When Deokwoo finally lay back on the hospital bed, the tears broke loose.
His heart still hammered. He had never known such threat, such fear. A life so quiet and bland only made the aftershock crash over him twice, ten times as hard.
âIâIâm not crying. Itâs just, just…â
He tried to excuse himself, then sniffled hard. Deokwoo soothed him, worried.
âHush now. Youâll set off another fever.â
âA-are you sure youâre all right?â
âI said Iâm fine. Ah, a grown man with tears like thisâhow will you ever marry?â
Hoeun nodded as if understanding, breathing deepâhoo, hoo. Still, the tears kept coming, and the thin shoulders shook now and then, until at last he simply sobbed.
âIâIâve only ever been the one in pain. Iâve never seen you hurt…â
It was grief, and worry, and rage, all at once.
Heâd been to hospitals countless times for himself, but never as a guardian for familyâor one who was like family. Only now did he understand why his parentsâand Deokwooâhad always made such a fuss over him when he was ill. It felt as if his heart were being crumpled in a fist.
Watching the edges of Hoeunâs eyes flush redder and redder, Deokwoo let out a long sigh. He dropped his feet over the side of the bed.
âLong day, wasnât it? Come lie down.â
Startled, Hoeun waved his hands.
âNo, no. Stay put. The doctor said not to move.â
âHow can I lie here in front of you, young master?â
âShh. No backtalk.â
Hoeun scolded him with surprising aristocratic bite, scratching the back of his neck as he spoke. Deokwoo frowned.
âStop touching it. Your skinâs bright red.â
Since arriving, Hoeun had not stopped worrying at his nape. Heâd never had such a habit, yet today he kept touching, scratching, rubbing.
âAh… Right.â
He dropped his hand at onceâbut his thoughts kept circling back. The place where Taemuk had touched burned. It felt as if that hand still rested there.
He reached up again, then dropped his hand under Deokwooâs look. He tucked the blankets neatly around him. Deokwoo watched, then spoke in an unusually subdued voice.
âWhy did that man do that?â
âHmm?â
âWhy did he hold you? He isnât your partner, is he? He canât be. A man like thatâa partner? Absurd.â
Deokwoo clenched a fist. Hoeun, after a few ragged breaths, sank into the stool and wiped his wet cheeks.
âI… donât know.â
Everything had happened too fast. In the rush to get Deokwoo out, he hadnât seen what became of Taemuk. When a Military God and guide matched, they were to submit their namesâheâd done nothing of the sort.
Noâwere he and that man even a match? Was the sensation at their touch real? The entire day felt like a dreamâhazy, fogged.
Just then, someone entered. A familiar doctor.
âMaster Hoeun.â
âYes?â
âYou have a visitor.â
âA visitor? Who?â
âA soldier, it seems.â
âA… soldier?â
Hoeunâs eyes widened, the tip of his nose still pink from tears.
In the corridor, as the doctor had said, stood a uniformed man. From behind, the red cloud embroidery on his cape made his unit plain at once.
Hoeun tensedâthen eased. The man wasnât as tall as Taemuk. Which meant it wasnât Taemuk.
Thank goodness.
…Was it?
He swallowed and stepped up behind the soldier.
âWere you looking for me?â
The soldier whirled. Seeing Hoeun so close, he froze a beatâthen saluted, a fraction late.
âGood day to you, sir.â
He was young, compactly built, clean-cut. His hair was very short; his skin, dusk-toned. Hoeun returned the greeting with a brief bow.
âYes. And… you are?â
âSergeant Oh Gilsang, Jeokudae. We crossed paths at the ceremonyâdo you remember?â
Hoeun blinked fast. Perhaps he had glimpsed him behind Taemuk; he couldnât be sure. Taemuk swallowed every hint of presence around him. Regardless, the uniform said Jeokudaeâso likely yes.
âI see. What brings you here, Sergeant?â
Hoeun assumed heâd come to apologize to DeokwooâTaemuk had rank, after all; he would send a subordinate. It wasnât proper, but Hoeun meant to accept it. Instead, Gilsang said something unexpected.
âWell, itâs time to go.â
âGo⊠where?â
âWhere else? To hunt the Shikgoe.â
âMe?â Hoeun echoed, appalled.