BW C21
by berryChapter 21
Hoeun carefully asked something that had long made him curious.
âSergeant, do you not have a guide?â
âWhy wouldnât I? I do.â
âWhere is he? Iâll fetch him for you.â
âDidnât come along. Heâs at the encampment. Riding back and forth all dayâhe gets mighty bored of it. And if he says he donât want to go, there ainât no way I can make him⊠So I came alone.â
âBut⊠youâre injuredâŠâ
âDonât you worry. Thisâll be right as rain after a few nightsâ sleep. Heâs so finicky, he wonât even hold my hand over a scratch like this.â
Gilsang clicked his tongue but couldnât hide a smile. It was the first time Hoeun had seen him smile like that. He must truly love his guide.
âEven so, not seeing each other for twenty daysâis that all right?â
âItâs bearable. Our Captain went over ten years without his guide and managed. Wouldnât do for me to complain over this.â
At that, Hoeun cast a glance at Taemuk in the distance.
Ten years. Ten years lived without a guide. Then when had he become a Military God? And how had he lived alone all that time? He couldnât fathom it.
Whether he sensed that gaze or not, Taemuk, impassive, was yanking a fallen soldier from between rocks as if uprooting a radish.
Everyone else was with a guide, yet Taemuk did not spare Hoeun even a momentâs glance. He did not seem to need him. Hoeun couldnât help feeling⊠slighted.
Does he dislike me so much?
Noâthat canât be. Would he have saved me, then?
Hoeunâs fingers twitched. The moment Taemuk had rescued him flashed bright in his mind. He had seen just how large and powerful that fist wasâhow quick and deft.
Yet he hadnât strutted about claiming heâd saved him, nor scolded him as a fool⊠Truly, a man among men.
As he kept sneaking glances at Taemuk, Hoeun unconsciously licked his dry lips. The wound that had split when heâd taken Taemukâs flesh into his mouth the night before stung.
And yet, somehow, it didnât hurt at all.
Leaving the stream and following the horsesâ tracks, they soon found them. Because of the tied reins, they were bunched together, grazing.
Hoeun quickly checked his own horse. Thankfully, it seemed unhurt. Monsters, it appeared, had little interest in horseflesh. Still worried it might have been startled, he stroked its neck again and again.
Just then, Gilsang came to help him mount.
âUp you get.â
But Hoeun said, awkward,
âAh, IâI think Iâll walk.â
âWhyâs that?â
âThe bâblood⊠might get on itâŠâ
âOn what?â
âOn the horse.â
âPardon?â
âWouldnât the horse dislike it?â
Gilsang pulled in his chin and stared at himâan expression that said he had no idea what on earth he was talking about.
But Hoeun could not mount in such a stateâsoaked in monster blood. He would feel sorry for the horseâand for Father. It was Fatherâs cherished horse, one heâd groomed as often as he polished the car bearing the plum blossom crest.
If something is precious to another, one should treat it as precious tooâbe it truly valuable or seemingly trivial.
As Hoeun gave Gilsang an embarrassed smile, a snort came from behind his headâa scoff close to a sneer. He whipped his head around. Taemuk was passing behind.
ââŠâ
Hoeun blinked. Was he laughing at what heâd said? No⊠surely not? He watched Taemukâs back. But as ever, Taemuk did not look back.
After wandering the forest for quite some time, Jeokudae found a space to pitch tents only at midnight. Beyond a few trees ran a sizeable river. Deep in the mountains, the current was strong, though not so fierce as the stream.
Once the perimeter was checked, soldiersâmen and women alikeâplunged into the river. They must have been desperate to wash, having been drenched in blood from the battle.
Hoeun wanted to wash too, but held back. He couldnât bring himself to bathe with them.
It wasnât aristocratic airsâjust embarrassment, awkwardness. If he went now, he knew he would only dab himself in a corner, washing more in pretense than in fact, watching their eyes.
Still, he imagined that someday he might be able to wash among them.
Only after one by one the soldiers had gone back to their tents did Hoeun head for the river. He held clothes and cloths in his arms, and in his hand a flashlight Father had packed for him.
The river he reached was broad and large. It was night, of course, so dark, but brighter than the forestâthe moon in the sky and the moon in the water made two.
Even so, he couldnât help but be afraid. The gaps between the trees around the river were so black that something seemed ready to jump out at any moment. Sweeping the beam here and there, Hoeun muttered to himself,
âMaybe⊠I should justâŠâ
Go back.
He hesitated, then decided he couldnât possibly sleep in this state; he hid under a big tree and began to undress. The dried blood crumbled into powder and scattered. Where the cloth was thin, it had set stuck fast to the skin, maddening to peel off. And monster flesh was smeared here and there; it made him retch.
Hoeun stripped as if his clothes were on fire. But he did not remove his under-jacket. However things were, how could he bare his skin outdoors.
Before stepping into the river, he shone the flashlight around again. He checked the unitâs tents not far off. At this distance, if he shouted, someone would surely comeâGilsang, or else⊠Taemuk.
He wedged the flashlight into the darkest notch between trees to shine and dipped his hands into the river.
ââŠCold.â
Naturally, he had never washed in cold water. Even wetting his hands alone raised gooseflesh along his spine. But he gritted his teeth and scrubbed his hands clean. He held them to the light to wash even under the nails. He splashed his face lightly.
Then, after staring at the pitch-black water, he slowly went in. Afraid of a sudden depth, he turned around and lowered himself like a child descending stairs, testing the bottom, dipping one leg at a time.
It was a sorry sight, but he had never once swum in his life; it was the best he could do.
Right by the bank, the water reached his hipsâperfect for washing. He wanted to bolt from the cold, but he hugged his arms in and endured. If he couldnât stand even this, he told himself, he wasnât a manâso he endured and endured.
He let down his hair to wash it, and he scrubbed his body. Where the under-jacket kept him from reaching, he glanced around and slipped a hand beneath his clothes.
By then, oddly, the cold felt eased. It was surely only that his body had adapted, but Hoeun felt like a true man. His brain tingled; he even felt giddy.
He made a point of washing more heartilyâsplish, splash. He imagined a big man flinging water about as he scrubbed, though in truth he looked more like a cat scooping water with a paw and licking it.
Right then, a leaf drifting from somewhere brushed his wrist.
âMother!â
Hoeun jumped in place. The ankle floating down the stream flashed through his mindâred blood watering the current, someoneâs flesh.
ââŠâ
Suddenly the black water frightened him. From time to time a strong eddy curled around his legs; that too scared him needlessly. Growing pale, he rinsed the rest of his body quickly and finished. As he moved to climb onto the bankâ
Squelch, squelch.
There were footsteps. Human footstepsâyes, humanâbut in that moment he didnât think it was a person. The monster he had seen hours ago still flickered before his eyes.
Scrambling for a place to hide, Hoeun stepped on soft earth and slid.
âUaghâŠâ
His head snapped back; his body tilted too. He flailed his arms, butâsplash!âwas sucked into the water.
Black water rushed into nose, ears, throat, without distinction. He sprang up with a start. It was only hip-deep, but in that instant it felt like the sea.
âHaaâŠâ
Scrubbing his face with his palms, he flicked his eyes toward the sound. A dark figure stood before the water, staring at him.
After staring for a while, Hoeun realized it wasnât a ghost or a monsterâit was Taemuk. His shoulders slumped with release. âWhew,â he let out a vast sigh of relief. Then, belatedly, he greeted him.
âY-youâve come.â
ââŠâ
Taemuk didnât answer. He waded in, still in uniform.
ââŠâ
Hoeun, manners forgotten, looked him up and down. Even as the others pitched tents and ate supper, Taemuk had not shown himself. Where had he been? Now that he looked, he seemed even more bloodstained than before. Had he gone to kill a monster? Alone? What if he got hurtâŠ
Hoeun bit his lip and stammered,
âW-were you hurt at all today?â