BW C72
by berryChapter 72
âYoung master, stay close to me and follow tightly.â
With that, Gilsang shouted, âHyah!â and spurred his horse into a strong gallop.
âAh, yes!â
Hoeun hurried after him. Behind the two of them, several dozen soldiers followed as well.
At the relentless pace, Hoeunâs backside jounced rough against the saddle, barely keeping seated. Still, he grit his teeth and clung on. Falling now wasnât just dangerousâit would be an unforgivable hindrance.
As they raced down the crimson-smeared streets, a building with a sign reading Imperial Daily came into view. Just beyond it, turning right would lead them straight to the hospitalâtheir goal.
In that moment, Hoeun found himself glancing back. He was worried for Dongja. Fewer than a hundred soldiers had remained with her. Of courseâanyone would call such numbers formidable, especially Jeokudae soldiers. But if the monsters kept coming in hordes, danger still loomed.
She must not be harmed.
Nothing must happen to her.
It must be so.
He stretched his neck long to catch one more glimpse. Through broken bodies and snapping monsters, he thought he could just barely make out her figure. Narrowing his eyes as though to pierce the chaos, he strainedâ
âYoung master, eyes forward. Only forward.â
Gilsangâs voice rang firm. Startled, Hoeun snapped his gaze back ahead. But his thoughts lingered, always toward Dongja. Worry gnawed him so deep he bit his lip hard and restless. Perhaps sensing itâ
âWe will see her again soon enough.â
Gilsang declared with a steady tone. But the words did not calm Hoeunâthe certainty sounded too much like wish rather than fact. As though even Gilsang himself was clinging to that hope.
So he said nothing. Naturally, Gilsang would be thinking too of Dongja. If Hoeunâs chest felt heavy, what of Gilsangâwho surely carried doubly multiplied weight of worry, and guilt besides?
ââŠYes. Yes, of course.â
Hoeun gave a small nod. Then he filled his lungs with one long breath and forced himself to stare straight ahead.
The monsters did not relent. They appeared without sense or reason, hurling themselves straight at horse and man. Dodging them, striking them down mid-sprintâit was no easy feat. Riding a horse was both blessing and curse.
Gilsang swung his blade again and again, low to high, high to low, cutting through whatever size opponent rushed them. When steel bit neck or vein, warm blood flew wild, spattering his own bodyâŠand often across Hoeun as well. Clumsy yet desperate, Hoeun dared not take his hands from the reins, even to wipe his face.
They pounded into a wide crossroadâand suddenly, strangely, not a single creature blocked their path. Not even bloodstains remained.
ââŠ.â
Hoeunâs brows furrowed faintly. Only a few more turns from here lay the hospital. Beyond itâthe shelter. This was the main road people traveled, and yet here were neither bodies nor beasts. Could it be the townsfolk evacuated before they were eaten? And soâno prey, no monsters?
Casting a glance back, Hoeun saw themâcreatures crawling after on all fours, pounding their limbs against stone, snarling, panting ragged. But as they reached the junction, in an instant, they scattered, darting into alleys, vanishing like cockroaches from light.
ââŠ.â
Something was wrong. Hoeunâs jaw tucked inward, suspicion itching. Had they noticed other preyâhumans? As the thought struckâ
âHelp⊠help meâŠâ
A voice. Weak, thin. So faint he barely caught it beneath the hammer of hooves.
âPlease⊠someone, help meâŠâ
And yet Hoeun heard. He turned to its call.
In the open street between two tiled houses lay a child sprawled upon the ground. It was the first living soul theyâd seen since entering the town.
The boyâs legs barely moved, trembling if at all. Blood soaked the earth around him. One leg in particular, drenched crimsonâthe flesh beneath the knee carved out deep, ghastly as if monsters had bitten away his calf. His face was small, filthy with grime, streaked with trails of tears.
âPlease⊠save meâŠâ
Too exhausted now for loud cries, the child only murmured, lips moving weakly as tears clung fresh.
âAhâŠâ
Hoeun gasped. Some senseâhorribly familiar. He had seen this once before. His mind rang with the echoâ
âSave⊠meâŠâ
âSave usâplease, please save usâŠ!â
âSave me⊠save meâŠâ
The voices of a noble, his ankles mangled and shredded, sprawled upon dirt. The memory of ominous stillness in that other place, the absence of vision until the beasts emerged.
Hoeun looked around now. Clean houses without blood, silence heavy as lead, monsters absent, a child alone. The same.
Bait.
That child was bait.
âWait.â
Just then, Gilsang too spied the child. He raised one hand, slowing his horse. Hoeun, stopping with him, peered far down the street at the motionless child.
ââŠ.â
The childâs image overlapped with that nobleman in his vision. And yetânot the same. Their difference was clear.
This child was no noble. His garb was ragged, shamefully poor. And unlike that vile man who had surely met his fate rightly, this one looked incapable of such vice. He was barely six. Perhaps his only âevilâ had been a childish quarrel, quarrels over stones in games by dirt roads.
In other wordsâhe was nothing but pitiful. Only pitiful.
If heâd been wicked, Hoeun might leave him. But innocent, defenselessâhow could he?
ââŠ.â
And yet⊠if not left behind, then what? To save him? How many monsters lurked nearby? If Gilsangâor any soldierâwere injured or slain for it?
Then should they abandon him? Even if they tried to save himâcould they, without Taemuk?
No. Still, even so, surely they must tryâ? The thought seized Hoeun until he squeezed his eyes shut, then open again.
Fool. He knew he could do nothing. All he could do was plead, beg Gilsang to save the boy.
ââŠâ
But he could not meet his eyes. Whatever Gilsang chose, he must obey it. Even if it meant leaving the childâhe could not argue. For Gilsangâs judgment here was of battle, born from years of blood.
But⊠if abandoned, the child would die. Those little limbs shredded to ribbons in monster jaws.
âHaaâŠâ
Hoeun bit his lip tight and stared at the small figure.
Gilsang took a deep breath. He bent low in the saddle, leaning closer to whisper, softly yet firm.
âFrom here, ride. Ride as fast as you can.â
âEh?â
Baffled, Hoeun looked at him. Gilsangâs eyes did not waver, fixed, hard.
âAs fast as you can. With every ounce of strength. You must gallop.â
ââŠ.â
Hoeun froze a breath. Strange, baffling wordsâbut he did not ask again. Gilsangâs word was right, he believed it. And somehowâfeeling stirred that he would save the child. With all he knew of him, so far, surely he would.
âYes. I will.â
Hoeun wrapped the reins so tight his hands went pale.
Gilsang signaled to the soldiers. At his gestures, they sheathed their weapons. Madnessâwhen monsters could leap from shadow at any moment. Strange.
Then he gave a nod to one soldier in the rear. That man nodded back, wheeled his reins, and galloped away down another street entirely. Leaving them? Alone, at this moment? It made no sense at all.
Hoeun glanced, unsettled.
âHyah!â
And in that instant, Gilsang kicked off into a furious sprint. Hoeun, startled, struck his horse awkwardly to follow.
The animal, clever and strong, needed little urging, pounding in rhythm alongside Gilsangâs mount.
âUghhâŠâ
Wind slammed into Hoeun, sharp and deafening. It shrieked in his ears, stung his throat, drove his hair all back. Breath came hard, eyes watering with force. Yet still, he kept gaze locked forwardâforward, upon the fallen child.
They closed fast. The boy lay still now, perhaps fainted. Not even a plea left in him.
Hoeun flicked his eyes to Gilsang, nerves chewing him inside. The man had never said outright he would help. What if he simply rode past?
ââŠ.â
But Gilsangâs eyes never left forward, tall and unswerving. Hoeun opened his lipsâabout to call outâ
In the same instant, Gilsang toppled from his saddle. Swift, sudden, hitting earth with intent.
âSergeant!â
Hoeun cried his name in shock.