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heyy if i used Gyo-ryong it means River Dragon King
TSBIRBV Ch 10
by berryChapter 10. Homeless, Templeless, and Now Guideless (3)
Twenty years.
Yegyeol rolled the words on his tongue, trying to taste their reality. The number felt hollow, absurdâlike thunder from a cloudless sky.
Had the Primordial Lord himself grown angry at a Kunlun disciple who refused to return to his sect?
He had only thought that if he kept collapsing on the way up the mountainâif he gave his senior brother enough reasons to worryâthen perhaps Haryang would finally give up on sending him back.
âT-that canât be rightâŠâ
Coincidence or not, twenty years was also the exact number of years he had lived since being reborn in modern Korea.
âI swear upon our late masterâs name,â Je Haryang said solemnly, âI do not jest, nor do I lie.â
The unrealness of it gave way to a creeping, visceral fear.
Je Haryang had seen him throw his body between the demonic swordsmanâs strike and his own. He might not have witnessed Yegyeolâs final breath, but he had certainly seen him mortally wounded.
And now, twenty years later, a disciple bearing the same face, the same voice, stood before him. What could he possibly think?
A ghost? A monster?
In the Central Plains, there were martial artists who, upon reaching transcendence, could rejuvenate their bodies and appear young again. But to return unchangedâexactly as beforeâwas impossible.
Even if he was an esper who could summon lightning, he was powerless before such logic.
âBut, Senior Brother⊠you havenât aged a day either. How could twenty years have passed?â
He looked up at Haryang with the desperate hope that the man might provide an explanation that would make this nightmare make sense.
Haryang studied his pale face quietly before offering a faint, rueful smile.
âThat is because I encountered a fateful opportunity long ago.â
ââŠAh.â
Yegyeolâs lips trembled. It didnât sound like a joke. Haryang was not the kind of man who toyed with others.
âI truly didnât know so much time had passed since the massacre,â Yegyeol said weakly. âI donât even know why Iâm here⊠or how.â
His face had gone from pale to almost blue. He had lied plenty before, mixing truth and fiction to surviveâbut this time, his words were all painfully, helplessly honest.
He was terrified to meet his senior brotherâs gaze. He would rather face the underworldâs Mirror of Karma than those eyes. Yet he gathered what courage he had and looked up.
It was a plea. Please⊠believe me. Donât think Iâm insane again. Not you.
âAt least if you return to familiar ground, your mind may settle,â Haryang said softly. âKunlun has endured for agesâif any place can explain your condition, it would be there.â
Yegyeol bit his lip hard.
âCanât I stay with you instead?â
The words slipped out before he could stop them. But once said, they left him strangely lighter.
âTwenty years⊠I donât know whatâs happened, or whoâs still alive. If I return to Kunlun, thereâll be no one I know. Iâd feel safer by your side, Senior Brother.â
He rambled without looking at Haryangâs expression.
âIâll work for my keepâanything, chores, whatever the trading company needs. Iâll repay the cost of my medicine tooââ
His fingers twisted nervously in his lap. He knew how pathetic he must look, begging like thisâbut pride was useless if it meant being sent away from Haryang.
He had to live first. Pride could come later.
ââŠIâm sorry.â
The older manâs voice was gentle but unyielding.
âYou owe me nothing, Yegyeol. Thereâs no debt to repayâand no reason to stay here for my sake.â
It sounded kind. But it cut like a wall slammed down between them.
How could a relationship grow when there was no tie to bind it?
Maybe⊠I should go to Kunlun first. Keep some distance.
He bit down on his lip again. The more they talked, the more he felt Haryangâs resolve to send him away harden like iron.
To push further now would be like swimming upstream against the Yangtze.
He forced himself to agree silently.
âThe times are dangerous,â Haryang continued. âKunlun will be your safest haven.â
Yegyeol bowed his head. If anyone else had been sitting across from him, he wouldâve bitten through his lip until it bled. Instead, he only nodded.
âYou must be doing this for my sake,â he said quietly.
âIâm glad you understand.â
Haryang reached out and clasped his hand.
For a man who didnât know what âguidingâ meant, his timing was impeccable.
Just as Yegyeol felt his resistance ebb, Haryang added something unexpected.
âAnd donât worry. You wonât be alone once you return to Kunlun.â
Yegyeol blinked slowly. Was he referring to another survivor of the massacre?
âIâve already written to your masterâs junior,â Haryang said. âElder Baekyang Jin-in will be waiting for you.â
Masterâs juniorâŠ?
The realization hit a moment later.
Baekyang Jin-in had been his own master in his previous life.
To think he had nearly forgotten the manâs existence! If anyone in the martial world couldâve read his thoughts, they wouldâve called him a walking disgrace to the sacred bond of master and disciple.
âBut wonât my master find me⊠unsettling?â Yegyeol ventured. âItâs been twenty years, yet I still look exactly like I did at seventeen.â
He subtly made himself sound younger. The more fragile and childlike he appeared, the more sympathy he could draw from Haryang.
And reallyâafter twenty years, could Haryang possibly remember how tall heâd been? Even if Yegyeol had died for him back then, heâd been just the youngest, least remarkable disciple in Kunlun.
âDonât worry,â Haryang said, voice calm and certain. âYour master will accept you without prejudice.â
His tone was strangely resolute, as though no other outcome existed.
Yegyeol tried to recall Baekyang Jin-in.
A gentle-faced Daoist with a compassionate air, he had taken Yegyeol as a disciple more out of obligation than intent. The boy had shown little promise, and so the master had largely ignored him.
They hadnât been close. There was no affection there to speak of.
Which made his supposed willingness to welcome Yegyeol back all the more suspicious. Twenty years had passed, and yet his âyoungâ disciple returned unchangedâwhat sane master wouldnât be unnerved?
Still, it was something.
âIâm relieved Master survived the massacre,â Yegyeol said softly. âBut stillââ
He darted his eyes sideways, lowering his voice to a whisper.
âSenior Brother, youâre the only one I can rely on. I donât trust anyone else. Being apart from you⊠itâs frightening.â
âI am not the saint you think I am,â Haryang murmured, almost to himself.
He leaned in slightly, his voice like a confession.
âDonât put too much faith in me. Donât depend on me so much.â
Yegyeol couldnât help but laugh quietly. To say that, while literally holding his life in his handsâit was almost sweet, in its naivety.
But fine. If he was to be sent away, then he had one last question to ask.
âOnce I enter Kunlun⊠will I ever see you again?â
His fingers clenched tightly atop his knees until the knuckles turned white. He wanted to sound casual, but the tremor in his voice betrayed him.
ââŠIf we could meet again after all this time,â Haryang said gently, âthen it must mean fate still binds us. So yes, I believe weâll meet again someday.â
A lie.
Yegyeol sensed it instantlyânot through any esper instinct, but because he knew Je Haryang. He caught the flicker of guilt that shadowed his eyes.
âThen⊠may I at least write to you?â he asked softly, head bowed in meek submission.
Silence.
He wanted Haryang to hesitateâto struggle with the thought of losing him. To miss him.
âYou know how vast the Central Plains are,â Haryang finally said. âAnd I often travel for trade. Letters may not reach me in time.â
In other wordsâno.
Yegyeol slumped his shoulders dramatically.
Then Iâll just have to get myself expelled, too.
He looked pitiful on the outside, but his mind was already racing through plans for how to get kicked out of Kunlun. All of them, naturally, danced dangerously close to violating the sectâs sacred taboos.
Perhaps sensing the storm brewing in him, Haryang added gently, âStill, if you send me a letter⊠I promise Iâll reply.â
And if I end up with nowhere else to go, Yegyeol thought darkly, I can always curl up under your eaves until you take me back in.
âIt may take time,â Haryang continued, âbut if you can be patientâŠâ
He averted his gaze, slightly embarrassed. When Yegyeol didnât respond right away, he called softly,
âYegyeol?â
Heâd been too busy scheming to process what was said. But when the words finally sank in, his head shot up.
âY-yes? Really? Youâll really write back?â
For once, the tears that filled his eyes were genuine.
Haryang had been rightâthe Central Plains were impossibly vast. There were no tracking devices here, no modern tools to follow him by. The idea of losing his guide forever had felt like being condemned to death.
If Haryang had refused even letters, Yegyeol wouldâve had no choice but to become a criminal to stay near him.
But his guideâhis too-kind, too-gentle guideâhad saved him again.
âDonât cry,â Haryang murmured, awkwardly stroking his hair.
Yegyeol made the sobs louder on purpose as he threw himself into the manâs arms.
Haryang stiffened for a heartbeat, then slowly, hesitantly, wrapped his arms around him, patting his back.
Do I look pitiful now? I hope so.
Because there was one thing Je Haryang didnât know.
Yegyeol might have lost his home, his sect, and soon his guideâ
âbut he hadnât lost the will to fight for what he wanted.
He was heartbroken, yes. But he hadnât given up.