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heyy if i used Gyo-ryong it means River Dragon King
TSBIRBV Ch 107
by berryChapter 107 Mission Complete (3)
Senior brother, too, looked impressed.
âIâve never seen a spirit creature obey human words so well⊠If it has a certain level of intelligence, even a beast seems to recognize a discipleâs character.â
âExactly. Baembaem is very bright.â
Unaware the praise was partly his own, he remained absorbed in boasting about the companion spirit. Then, as if realizing that wouldnât do, Yegyeol gauged Haryangâs mood and added lightly,
âAnd this is why Samrang trained him for situations like this.â
But senior brother seemed unbothered even if Yegyeol only praised Baembaemâs merits.
âSeems many exciting things were done.â
Haryang lifted the ledger and opened it. After tucking Baembaem safely into his sleeve, Yegyeol read over his shoulder.
âWhatâs written here⊠looks more like names than goods.â
Next to each name were not amounts, but rows of tally marks. Recognizing what the marks meant, Yegyeol knit his brows.
âOhâthis, I know. It notes how many months interest is in arrears.â
He vaguely remembered ledgers of the Red Blood Sect that Crooked Ear or Pit Viper had carried; since most heterodox drifters were illiterate, they used very simple symbols to check how much money and how many months were owed.
âMm⊠so heâs dipped into moneyâlending, too.â
âAs the saying goes, old habits die hard.â
Je Haryang glanced at his disciple, who clicked his tongue, then asked,
âA few are marked with red crossesâknow what that means?â
Frowning, Yegyeol hesitated over whether to speak plainly.
He knew that, as a chivalrous wanderer, Haryang had seen all there was to see; still, he disliked telling him such bleak things.
One cannot sing of blossoms all year, but even telling only the good and showing only the fine would be too littleâŠ
âIt means they donât need to pay anymore. Usually⊠itâs not because the principal was repaid; itâs when theyâve fallen so far they canât even pay interest.â
âThen perhaps those children were taken in lieu of debt.â
Yegyeol nodded.
âThatâs what I think.â
Zhang Qi had claimed the children were sent to lighten a householdâs burden, but Yegyeol hadnât believed it from the start.
Finding a ledger listing only peopleâs namesâwhat more proof was needed.
âIâll hold on to this.â
Haryang tucked the ledger into his robe. With his large frame and broad chest, a neatly stowed ledger showed not at all.
Yegyeol realized he had been staring blankly at that chest and squeezed his eyes shut.
Forgetting to keep a straight headâtrouble.
âLetâs check what happened to the families marked in red and tip off the constables.â
That this was all he could think to say in order to hide that he had been tracing senior brother with his eyesâhow poor.
In terms of chivalrous experience, Je Haryang was a veteran among veterans; even while Yegyeol was away from the martial world, Haryang remained, and would surely know the procedures of such matters better than anyone.
âIndeed.â
Haryangâs voice sank low.
âThatâs as much as we can gain today. The meal was poor as wellâbest to return.â
With a sour face, Yegyeol looked at him.
Frankly, it was clear senior brotherâs chief concern was Yegyeolâs safety. Such a man, sitting in the very heart of the enemyâs ground, pointed not to danger but to the shabbiness of the foodâproof that Zhang Qi was truly nothing.
Zhang Qi wasnât a master of any towering skill. Perhaps even in a former life, while a Kunlun disciple, Yegyeol could have beaten him; awakened now as an esper, it went without saying.
He felt anew how hard his fear had worked to swell itself.
âThank you for waiting!â
Zhang Qi returned with a bright smile, lining up many fine wines. The bottles alone looked costlyâhe truly seemed to be staking all on sealing this deal.
âSeems itâs time to move on to the next appointment.â
Yegyeol spoke in regretful tones.
âWhatâanother appointment?â
âItâs rare for someone to come all the way from Cheonghae to Hangzhou; many have asked to meet. At this rate thereâll be five meals a day before returning.â
Realizing the next appointment was a potential rival, Zhang Qi felt the heat he had forced down surge again.
He had buttered him up till his lips cracked, but the Cheonghae master barely reacted. Heâd thought such a young pup could be goaded into an easy contract; as it was, money would be spent on entertainment and the deal scuttled.
Zhang Qi shut his eyes tight.
It was time to throw the final card.
âJust once more!â
As Yegyeol rose, Zhang Qi called to his back.
âGrant me one chance. If you wait but a quarter hour, I will show the dye masters I have gathered laying color on silk.â
He was almost grabbing at trouser hems. But Haryang blocked him, and Zhang Qiâs hand failed to reach its aim.
âWhatâs so special about dyeing.â
Yegyeol sounded indifferent, but inwardly cheered. With Baembaemâs help they had secured the ledger; if Seonye Workshopâs matter could be resolved as well, it would be two birds with one stone.
âTruth be told, our original target is the dye masters.â
Giving a glance to the chest that so profitably held extra gains, Yegyeol turned his eyes as naturally as he could.
âIf you see it, youâll be amazed. The dye masters our WuâSam Consortium has secured make colors unseen anywhere in the Central Plains.â
After a pause, Yegyeol nodded.
âFor the face of the WuâSam master, Iâll trust once more. Lead on.â
As if he had made up his mind with great generosity, Crooked Ear sprang up and led them.
âThis way, please.â
At the rear of the manor was a rather desolate annex. Seeing chainâshaped grooves worn into the door handle, Yegyeol stared straight ahead as if not noticing.
When the door opened, dye odors surged. Rather than disgust, Yegyeol felt a familiar comfort at the sharp scent pricking the nose.
Workers who seemed from Seonye Workshop clustered in twos and threes.
They were spreading cloth busily in the yard. The silk boasted colors more vivid than Yegyeol remembered; but, perhaps for lack of proper drying, there were stains here and there. It was only naturalâhaving smashed the workshop, theyâd hastily patched together work to display.
âAs you see, we can lay very bright color. With postâtreatment known only to these masters, the color wonât wash out even after repeated laundering.â
âSuch vivid, bright tonesânever seen their like.â
Half sincere, his praise. Decades had passed since he left Hangzhou, but Seonye seemed to have kept developing dyes.
Feigning meticulous inspection as he moved among the workers, Yegyeol pressed Zhang Qiâuntil the man relaxedâon the cost of base materials for dye, how long to fully dye a bolt of silk, and more.
Whatever coercion they labored under, those who seemed to be Seonyeâs workers answered faithfully.
âMy stewardâdiscuss terms with the WuâSam master.â
In other words, keep Zhang Qi busy.
âAs if thereâs a choice. Thenâshall we talk?â
With a grin splitting his face, Zhang Qi followed Je Haryang. Thinking the steward held the practical reins rather than the tooâyouthful Yegyeol, he glanced back at Yegyeol a few times, then stopped looking altogether.
At last, when Zhang Qi was some distance off, Yegyeol spread a length of silk and, pointing to a stain at the corner, murmured just loud enough,
âOld Huang would have flipped at a stain like this.â
A meaningful ripple came from the middleâaged man standing closest. Hesitating, he checked where Zhang Qi was, then approached under cover of showing another silk and asked quietly,
âDâdo you know Old Huang?â
âMm? And you are?â
Only after another glance toward Crooked Ear did the man answer who he was.
âKoo Youngâik, of Seonye Workshop.â
âSeonye Workshop? Seonye? Hard to believe.â
Narrowing his eyes, Yegyeol barked,
âFew know Iâm a distant relation of Old Huang. Did the WuâSam master tell you?â
Je Haryangâs lips almost quirked; instead of asking after Old Huangâs whereabouts first, the disciple scolded him outrightâhis air so natural it was uncanny.
âOh no, sir. We are not on good terms with the WuâSam master.â
âWhat are you saying? Youâve brought me all the way to a back annex to show a ânewly developedâ dye method.â
Though he sensed his senior brotherâs stir, Yegyeol brazened the act out.
âWe are all in debt to the WuâSam Consortium.â
âTrue, minds differ when borrowing and when payingâbut surely youâre not maligning Master Zhang for that alone?â
âPerish the thought.â
Koo Youngâikâs eyes grew wet.
From that face, Yegyeol recalled a worker from when he had loitered about the workshop in youthâa young man who made many mistakes, yet with big, liquid eyes like an ox, was rarely scolded harshly.
Back then they called him âthe young Kooâ; it seemed his name was Youngâik.
âHe deliberately fastened debt onto usâonto Seonye Workshop.â
At his tremulous voice, Yegyeolâs eyes went cold.
As suspected.
No matter how polished a trading master he played, this was predictable.
Those who know the side roads never walk the highway; leaving such easy, convenient ways untraveled to keep the lawâwho but fools would do so?
âThis is no ordinary matter.â
Yegyeol knit his brows.
âTell me, in detail.â
Footnotes
- Dye annex as proof: Chainâscarred handles, rushed stains, and sealed annexes indicate forcible control of artisans and stageâmanaged demonstrations to impress buyers.