BW C142
by berryChapter 142
Hoeun slowly pushed himself upright. He said quietly that he would go. It didnât matter if no one escorted himâhe would go alone. If no horse was available, he would simply walk on his own two feet.
But before he could stand fully, Gilsang, who sat nearby, reached out and took hold of his elbow. He did not pull or force him to sit; he merely held on. With his characteristic, clean and composed gaze, he looked at Hoeun.
âJust one day. Please hide for just one dayâonly from now until tomorrow night.â
âTomorrow night? No. Absolutely not. I canât do that.â
One day. It sounded short at a glance, but to someone in pain, it was anything but. Hoeun, who had lived a lifetime of illness, understood that more than anyone. Even suffering a fever alone made a day agonizingâbut Taemuk⊠Taemukâs entire body had been ripped apart. To leave him unable to eat or sleep for a whole day was too cruel.
Hoeun shook his head again, firmly refusing.
âItâs all for the Generalâs sake. So pleaseâwait for us.â
An unfamiliar voice answered him. It was Byeonguk, who had been sitting nearby sorting through firewood. His face was expressionlessâeerily similar to Taemukâs own blank, stoic expression.
ââŠâ
Hoeun stared at him. How could he be so calm? How could someone who served Taemuk, who had witnessed the extent of his injuries, claim that restraining Hoeun was somehow for Taemukâs benefit?
âHow can this possibly help the General? I donât understand at aââ
Hoeunâs protest halted abruptly. His eyes widened. A memory surfacedâwords Taemuk had spoken long ago, after the first night they shared a bed, when Hoeun had been bedridden with pain for several days.
âIf Iâm ever that badly hurt again, run.â
âA wounded me isnât in my right mind. Iâm not human then.â
âSince Iâve already tasted you once, next time I might really devour you like a Shikgoe. Ointment wonât save you from that.â
âSo run. Go hide with Oh Gilsang or someoneâanyone.â
âAfter a day, when the wounds begin to close halfway, Iâll be better. Then you can return.â
Remembering that low voice, Hoeun collapsed back onto the ground as though his knees had melted.
âThis⊠this was the Generalâs⊠order?â
His voice floated hollowly.
ââŠâ
ââŠâ
The soldiers gathered around the fire answered with silence. A silence that meant yes.
âAhâŠâ
Hoeun shut his eyes tightly. Taemuk had foreseen that he would be grievously wounded again somedayâand had prepared for the possibility that he might harm Hoeun in that state.
Dongja blocking Taemukâs path,
Gilsang dragging Hoeun away,
Seongim and Byeonguk following themâ
all of it had been the Generalâs command.
Taemuk had sent him away.
Because the Taemuk who lost himself to injury might hurt him again.
ââŠâ
Hoeun bit down on his lower lip.
Foolish man.
Why fret about Hoeun being hurt a little? Taemuk was the one bleeding everywhere. His flesh was torn open. And yetâhe feared causing Hoeun pain. He intended to endure agony with a clear mind, just so Hoeun wouldnât suffer.
If this was how things were to be, why seek a guide at all? If Hoeun could not help him, then wasnât Hoeun no different from being absent?
Why⊠why make him feel so useless?
Hoeun pressed his lips together tightly. If he didnât, he would shed tearsâshameful tears unbefitting a man.
Just then, something steaming was held out toward him.
âPlease drink.â
Byeonguk was holding a round bowl filled with a dark liquid. Hoeun stared instead of taking it. How on earth is there decoction here? he wondered.
âItâs medicine,â Byeonguk clarified, perhaps assuming Hoeun didnât recognize it.
âAh⊠yes.â
Hoeun accepted it belatedly. So that was what Byeonguk had been brewing earlier while crouched near the fire. While they themselves made do with cold potatoes for dinner, he had gone through the trouble of preparing medicine for Hoeun.
Was this also Taemukâs instruction? Or their own goodwill? Either way, Hoeun felt humbled.
âIâve never made something like this before, so Iâm not sure it tastes rightâŠâ
Byeonguk scratched his cheek awkwardly as he sat. The comment made Hoeun chuckle despite himself. As if decoction ever had a âtasteââit was only bitter, less bitter, or unbearably bitter.
âThank you. Iâll drink it gratefully.â
Hoeun blew on the medicine and sipped. It was as bitter as always, but at least warm enough to slip down easily.
He sipped it slowly, lifting his gaze toward the dozen soldiers gathered around the fire. They must be exhausted and irritated by this abrupt situation, yet none complained. They remained steadfast at their posts. He felt both admiration and guilt.
âI caused so much trouble. You all had to flee with me when it shouldâve been only me.â
Hoeun lowered his eyes as he spoke. Byeonguk let out a short laugh.
âDoes this look like many?â
ââŠPardon?â
âI asked if this looks like a large number.â
âOh. Yes. It does.â
âWell⊠it is not small. But even so, if the Captain decides to come, none of it will matter.â
Byeonguk looked toward the spear resting against the tree. His expression suggested he was prepared to fight Taemuk with it if necessary.
âWeâll hold as long as we can,â Gilsang added quietly, brushing a hand over the sword at his side. âHeâll be better once time passes.â
ââŠâ
Hoeun stared at the two of them. They were willing to fight Taemukâto protect him. All because he was Taemukâs guide. It was absurd.
He shook his head slowly, confusion filling his gaze.
âI donât understand. Canât I simply⊠hurt instead? Wouldnât that resolve everything?â
âYou said⊠hurt?â Byeongukâs brows rose sharply.
Hoeun nodded with simple honesty.
âYes. My body has been frail since birth, so Iâve lived in pain my entire life. While of course itâs nothing compared to the Generalâs suffering, I still believe that even if I grow more ill, it wouldnât be unbearably painful or tragic. Which means that easing the Generalâs burdenâshouldnât that be the proper thing to do?â
Hoeun spoke softly, voicing his sincere thoughts. He understood why the soldiers and Taemuk worriedâhe truly was weak. But for Hoeun to hurt more so that Taemuk hurt lessâthat seemed right to him.
He looked at Byeonguk as if pleading for understanding. Byeongukâs gaze darted away awkwardly.
ââŠIt may not end with pain alone.â
ââŠWhat?â
Hoeunâs eyes widened. He tried to question further, but closed his mouth. He remembered Gilsangâs silence when asked if Taemuk might kill him. Could they truly believe that? Gilsang, Byeonguk, the others here⊠and Taemuk himself?
Hoeunâs expression darkened.
Byeonguk continued in a measured voice:
âWe cannot allow the Captain to return to being a military god without a guide. So we will protect youâeven if the one we must protect you from is the Captain.â
ââŠâ
Hoeun parted his lips but found no words. A thin plume of white breath slipped between them.
How strange.
He existed so Taemuk would not die.
Yet to avoid dying by Taemuk, he had to abandon him now.
And these soldiers were protecting Hoeun for Taemukâs sakeâby guarding him from Taemuk.
âTruly⊠would the General⊠that is, would he truly do such a thing to me?â
Hoeun scratched lightly at the rim of the bowl, voice trembling. He understood the logic, yet could not accept it emotionally.
After all, lately Taemuk had been⊠unbearably gentle.
He slept while holding Hoeun each night. He caressed his hair carefully. He worried over his fever. Kissed his forehead. Helped him mount his horse. Fastened his clothing. Draped his cloak around him. Even led thousands of soldiers from the front but still turned back, now and then, to look at him.
How could such a man hurt himâmuch less kill him? It felt impossible.
But Byeonguk only let out a dry sigh of a laugh.
âYou donât need to understand it. The Captain is⊠a mysterious man. Born with great power, so everything he bears becomes greater as well.â
âMysteriousâŠâ
Hoeun echoed the word. He had said something similar about himself once.
âMy body is a little mysterious. Even the physicians donât know whatâs wrong.â
Taemuk had grown angry upon hearing about Hoeunâs spontaneous nosebleeds. And now they were both called mysterious. As though they were two halves crafted to match.
Hoeun sat quietly, deep in thought. Then he lifted his gaze again.
âSo⊠this will happen again, wonât it? Whenever the General is gravely wounded, or whenever he uses too much strengthâyouâll take me away like this?â
âYes. We will.â
âThen the General must remain in pain⊠even though he has a guide.â
ââŠâ
Byeonguk fell silent. So did Gilsang. So did Seongim. The others looked up at the sky or down at the snow. Their silence made Hoeunâs expression twistânot quite laughter, not quite tears.
âSo Iâm⊠someone who canât even do the one thing Iâm meant to do.â
He murmured the words as he stared down at the black medicine. Reflected in the firelight, it glowed redâthen shifted back to black when tilted. Black, then red again, like the turning of Taemukâs eyes.