Rate on NU
heyy if i used Gyo-ryong it means River Dragon King
TSBIRBV Ch 102
by berryChapter 102 Heaven above, SuzhouâHangzhou below (14)
Yegyeol spoke in a voice that trembled.
He himself could not tell what he had been thinking to say such a thing; the terror of nearly dying in the place he thought safest had driven him out of his senses.
Even so, there was a feeling that overcame that fear.
âTheyâre looking for that naive young lord.â
Why would assassins hunt someone at this hour of night?
If they met the real Haryang, they would not hesitate; as they had with Yegyeol, they would not threaten him for information but achieve their goal at once.
âI donât want that.â
Death was frightening; yet if Haryang were to cease to exist in this world, somehow that felt unbearably sad.
If a cold fire were burning in the mind, perhaps it would feel like this.
âHaryang? You, of all wretches, are our target?â
A vile laugh came from the assassin. Yegyeol drew his shoulders back and met his gaze. The straight posture, the unwavering eyeâall of it was an imitation of the Haryang he had watched.
The assassinâs eyes, exposed between his hood and mask, scanned him coldly.
The beggar boy in whom both cringing and fear had vanished as if washed away.
For a moment, he looked convincing enough to make one think he might be the ârealâ one.
âIf so, what is your surname?â
Surname?
The question came from nowhere; backâalley children were not called anyoneâs son.
As if expecting this, the assassin slapped Yegyeolâs face.
âInsolent brat.â
His head snapped aside, too weak to resist; the taste of blood filled his mouth.
He only regretted not lying more cleverly.
âSo the young lord really does trail drippings of himself everywhereâseems it wasnât a lie. Maybe heâs got a hobby of collecting wretches more pitiful than himself.â
At that, Yegyeol glared, eyes wide.
âWill you kill me with a look? Insulting your precious young lord angers you that much?â
Lowering his voice, the assassin asked softly,
âEver think this? That your soâcalled young lord treated a beggar well to make a sacrificial lamb to die in his place?â
A base curiosity colored his tone; intending to kill, yet wanting first to watch Yegyeol suffer a little more.
Assassins were said to be fearsome, given their dangerous trade; seen like this, they were not so different from Crooked Ear or Pit Viper.
âIâŚâ
As Yegyeolâs lips moved in a thread of sound, the assassin bent closer to hear.
âGo onâwhat are you?â
Ptui.
Yegyeol spat into eyes full of expectation. The man recoiled, cursing.
âYou littleâ!â
Dodging the flailing hand was not so hard.
Hurling himself, Yegyeol rolled across the floor. The one standing beside him seized his hair as if waiting for that very moment.
Yet the boy was smiling.
He had not meant to run anyway. Just before his mouth was sealed again, Yegyeol shouted with all his might,
âFire! Fire!â
If he cried for help, people would hide like turtles meeting a natural enemy. But if there was a fire in an inn, they would move for fear of damage to their purses.
âWhâfire?â
âFire! Fire!â
From far off came a rumbling clatter. People rushed out; beyond the dim sliding doors, a bright yellow shone.
Yegyeol grinned.
âYou⌠youâŚ!â
âEnough. Finish it, then move at once.â
A blade touched his throat. Yegyeol moved quickly; with a slice, hair fell away. The next would truly be deathâwhen the door crashed down and men with sabers burst in.
Behind them stood Haryang, ghostâpale. Bandages stained with blood wrapped his arm; his gaze, relentless, was fixed on Yegyeolâs face.
At a swordsmanâs strike, the assassin holding Yegyeol lost his arm; blood splashed, weapons clashed in confusion, yet Yegyeol could not look away from Haryang.
âWhy⌠where did he get hurt? These assassins didnât seem to have met the young lordâŚâ
His neck bleeding, too much blood seemed to be flowing; dizziness muddled his thoughts.
A throwing blade from the surviving assassin whisked past his ear. As darkness crowded his sight, Yegyeol slowly crumpled to the floor.
â
When he woke, he was lying in a modest room. Startled by the unfamiliar place, he tried to rise, but his limbs were heavy as waterâsoaked cloth used for dyeing.
âOh? Awake.â
A man who seemed a server entered with a basin of hot water.
âWhere⌠is this?â
It was not where he had stayed with Haryang.
âThis is the Songwol Inn.â
Yegyeol jerked upright.
âI have no money for board and lodge.â
He wanted to be thrown outâthrown out so he could scour Hangzhou to find Haryang.
âHe looked hurt.â
He bit his lip.
The assassins seemed to have met only the nurseâthen how, and where, had Haryang injured his arm?
âA young master paid three monthsâ room and board; stay without worry.â
The openâfaced server stepped out for a moment, then returned with food. After the meal, a respectable tea was prepared.
It was not the premium tea he had shared with Haryang, but the boy still knew little of tea; the sight alone of the liquor ripening to gold brought back the time with Haryang.
âWhat backâalley stray drinks tea cup by cup,â he mutteredâand no sheepish smile came back.
He was alone again.
Dipping a finger into the cup he had surely been told to drink, then pulling it out, Yegyeol traced the characters Haryang had written:
âĺ´ĺ´â
Just two characters threw him into turmoil.
What did it mean? Did he remember it right?
He regretted not asking what it meantâout of a halfâbaked possessiveness.
In truth, he wasnât even sure he remembered correctly. And even if he wanted to grab Haryang and askâthe young lord had gone to a place unknown.
âThis⌠wonât do.â
He kept moving his hand to clear the mist from his eyes; it was no use.
Perhaps he was the graceless orphan people said didnât know gratitude; he found himself resentful of Haryang.
All he had done was feed a beggar boy who caught his eyeâand leave when it was time.
âCold.â
The boy curled in on himself. In the space left by Haryangâs departure, the briny, damp sea wind knifed in.
The day after Yegyeol woke, the physician who had seen him while he stayed with Haryang came.
âDid the young master send you?â
âHe paid in advance.â
Hopeful against sense, Yegyeol greeted himâand was disappointed.
With the same brusque face as the first time, the physician examined him.
âThe wound at the neck was quite deep, but at this rate it will heal quickly. Be glad your youthful recovery is strong.â
Enduring the careful hands binding his neck, Yegyeol rushed to ask as the physician packed up,
âDo you know where the young master went?â
âHow would I know what you donât?â
The physician clicked his tongue, for once sounding pitying.
âI thought you brightâdid you give him your heart?â
Though he knew it wasnât an inquest, Yegyeolâs head bowed of its own accord.
âYou know as well as Iâsuch fine young lords dispense a little pity, then return to their own.â
âI know.â
Mumbling, Yegyeol lowered the sleeve he had raised for pulseâtaking.
âStill, youâre lucky heâs a young one and naive. Iâve seen more than a few like you give heart and body and end up broken.â
Hangzhou was a city of pleasure. People from all over the Central Plains gathered; the wealthy who came to enjoy a season of delight would take wine and delicacies, the sceneryâand fleeting tiesâand go.
When summer passed, there were children born or abandoned without fathers.
ââŚHe wasnât like that.â
Weakly, Yegyeol answered. He knew the words were hollow, abandoned as he was, but he could not help saying them.
Giving him a sidelong glance, the physician left without a word of comfort.
In the end, he would endure alone.
As all who passed this summer had done.
Not long after the physician left, the server brought decocted medicine. With swollen eyes, sunk into the bed, Yegyeol saw the dish of sweets placed beside the bowl.
Fruit candied in sugar water gleamed like jewels.
âWhâwhy this?â
âThe young master said the guest wonât take the medicine without this.â
Liar.
ââŚThank you.â
With a face twisted on the edge of tears, Yegyeol swallowed the medicine and gazed at the glittering red fruit.
Like jewels.
Knowing it wasnât real, yet finding his gaze drawnâthat made it worse. Haryang was not here; this was not a fruit skewer he had brought himself; and yet the lingering trace of that terrible kindness left Yegyeol adrift.
What would happen when the reprieve Haryang had purchased for him ran out? When the money he had left with the inn was spent?
ââŚBack to the alleys.â
The thought, slow to rise, was worse than nothing; it was only a return to the bleak, squalid realityâand yet why did it feel so hard?
Alone again that night, the boy curled on the bed and held his breath through sleepless hours.