BW C19
by berryChapter 19
How long did they travel like that again? By the time the sky was densely dyed with afterglow, the sound of water came from somewhere. Just as Hoeun pricked up his ears at it, the tightly standing trees opened a path. At the same time, sharp sunlight poured in.
Hoeun knit his brow. The sun had shone in the forest as well, but the sunlight here was somehow differentâmuch whiter and more intense.
Blinking through narrowed eyes, Hoeun soon faced the scene before him.
âAhâŠâ
Large and small white rocks stacked in tiers filled one side of the mountain. The large ones were the size of a house; even the small ones were bigger than Hoeunâs head. Rounded smooth by time, the stones looked as if they had existed there for a very long while.
Between those rocks, a torrent peculiar to mountain streams gushed down. It was so clear it looked like panes of watery glass pouring forth; the water was truly transparent to the bottom.
It was a splendid sight.
As Hoeun stood there, dumbly admiring a view unseen within the capital, Taemuk and the soldiers began fording the stream. None of them minded whether their shoes got wet, or their trousers soaked. The horse Hoeun rode followed them and, tossing its head, stepped into the water.
The stream was not very deepâshin-high on the soldiers, knee-high in the deeper spots. Of course, there were deeper places; where stones gathered in pockets, the water was black and must have had some depth, but it was impossible to judge by eye.
Splash, splish-splash, ssshhh⊠splosh, ssshhhâŠ
The clop of hooves and the tread of boots tangled with the streamâs sounds. It was strangely pleasant to hear, and Hoeun watched the pouring water with quiet fascination.
Then, suddenly, something darkish mixed into the water that had been clear enough to see the bottom. Muddy water? The hue was odd for that.
Only after staring for some time did Hoeun realize it wasnât darkish at allâit was red.
Something red.
Red water.
RedâŠ
ââŠBlood?â
Hoeun snapped up his head. Where had the blood come from? Was someone injured? Who? As he darted his eyes around, the soldiers all stood intact. Then he thoughtâsomeone not of Jeokudae must be hurtâand at that moment, something poking between distant rocks snagged his eye. A human foot in straw sandals. It was definitely a human foot. Judging by the body lying sprawled, they had fallen.
Hoeun quickly called Gilsang.
âSergeant, thereâs someoneâŠâ
But he couldnât finish. The strong current rolled that personâno, that ankleâover toward them. The cut surface of the ankle was jagged, as if torn off by great force. Luckily or unluckily, before Hoeun could look too closely, it sluiced between the horseâs legs and was gone.
ââŠâ
Hoeun looked at Gilsang, to see if he had seen it too. But Gilsang was staring elsewhere. Hoeun followed his gaze, but saw nothing beyond big rocks.
So he looked to Taemuk up ahead. Taemuk had already dismounted and was also staring somewhere. Soon other soldiers followed suit, dismounted, or drew their weapons.
ââŠâ
Hoeun was confused. Nothing was visible to his eyes, so what were they all looking at? Was Jeokudae a unit that hunted ghosts as well as monsters?
Still, Hoeun felt with his whole body that something had happenedâno, was about to happen. The landscape, the sky, the wind, the fluttering leaves told him so.
He gripped the reins hard. SplashâGilsang, off his horse, came toward him.
âYoung master.â
ââŠY-yes?â
âDismount.â
âNow? Here? Ah, yes.â
Realizing that questions were useless, Hoeun bobbed his head, and as he awkwardly tried to get down, Gilsang steadied him. Hoeunâs feet soon sank into the shallow water with a splash.
âUghâŠâ
Cold water burrowed into his flesh without so much as asking permission; gooseflesh ran over him at once. As he pressed his lips tight and endured the unfamiliar chill, Gilsang and the other soldiers linked the reins front to backâHoeunâs horse included.
When all the horses were connected, Taemuk, at the head, slapped his horseâs haunch. The horses began to run one by one and then thundered together toward the forest.
With the weighty movement of the horses, the ground seemed to tremble in convulsions. Hoeun saw a mirage of rocks squirming and the stream water heaving.
And as the horses disappeared into the thick of the trees, a column of water shot up not far awayâshaaah! That spray soon scattered into rain. A few drops spattered Hoeunâs cheekâbut before he could wipe themâ
KAAAAAAAK!
From between the water columns, a monster appeared, jaws gaping as it screamed. A pitch-black body, blood-red eyes, a wide helmet-bone pulled over its head, and in the center of that helmet, two overlapping leaf-like bladesâhorns, or perhaps antennae.
ââŠâ
Hoeunâs face went pale in an instant. A living monster. Until now he had only seen corpses crushed by Taemukâthis one was unmistakably alive.
Krak-akk, krk, kka-kak!
With blood-red eyes that held Jeokudaeâs reflection, the monster screamed again. The leaf-shaped antennae on its helmet quivered. And within seconds, water columns sprang up on all sides. More monsters. Some rose from behind rocks where they had crouched.
Dozens appeared like that. Even at a glance, they seemed twice Jeokudaeâs number. On the white rocks, wet footprints of monsters stamped thick and ugly.
ââŠâ
Hoeun watched them, scarcely able to breathe. Gilsang snatched his elbow and strode him toward a nearby boulder.
âStay here.â
âH-here?â
âYes. Whatever you do, donât run. Donât be alone. Stay where our hands can reach you.â
Issuing warnings, Gilsang kept flicking glances around, then drew the sword at his side. Hoeun blinked rapidly and, trembling fine, nodded.
âY-yes. Understood. I absolutely wonât run. Iâll fight too.â
Hoeun fumbled at his clothing. The pistol Father had given himâaround his side, surely⊠But before he could find it, Gilsang locked eyes with him, fierce and blazing.
âI didnât say fight.â
âTh-thenâŠâ
Seeing Hoeunâs dismayed face, Gilsang shoved him backward. There, between a house-sized boulder and a smaller one, was a tight crevice. He all but stuffed the smallish Hoeun into it.
âHide here. Keep your head down. Donât make a sound. Stay put.â
âYesâyes! Yes!â
As if to show he understood, Hoeun folded his knees tight, making himself small. He tucked in his neck as well. Just as Gilsang noddedâexactly like thatâ
Splosh.
A soaking-wet monster dropped down in front of Gilsang. Before he could raise his blade, it lunged jaws-first. Those hideous teeth came right up to Gilsangâs nose.
KAAAAAAK!
But Gilsang wasnât about to offer up his flesh. He sprang lightly in place and drove a knee up into the monsterâs jaw. As its head snapped back, he plunged the sword deep into its exposed neck. Thick, slimy red blood crawled down his blade.
âHaaâŠâ
Seeing that, Hoeun exhaled in reliefâso it was dead, he thought. Butâ
Kkak-ak, kak, KAAAAK!
The monster wasnât dead at allâit thrust its face forward and charged Gilsang. It slashed with hands tipped in ragged nails. The blade bit deeper into its neck, but it didnât care. Its hunger seemed greater than fear of death. A truly ghastly beast.
Its saw-like teeth lunged farther, eager for Gilsangâs flesh. Gilsang turned his blade sideways and, with a roarââUuuaagh!ââswept the monsterâs neck through. Trd-d-dukâthe monsterâs shell-like skin split.
âGg-ihkâŠâ
With its neck half-severed, the monster didnât die but lost its balance. Bearing the heavy helmet-bone on its head, that weight dragged its skull along the cut, tilting it askew. The cut surface of its neck yawned open and blood poured like a waterfall. Even so, with its jaws agape, it tottered toward Gilsang.
Gilsang sliced the rest of the neck clean through. The head thumped to the ground, and he lifted his sword high and drove it into the center of the helmet.
Crack! Something hard shattered. Only then did the monsterâs biting cease.