Rate on NU
heyy if i used Gyo-ryong it means River Dragon King
TSBIRBV Ch 103
by berryChapter 103 Heaven above, SuzhouâHangzhou below (15)
âGoodness, goodness. Old Dog will die. Old Dog will die.â
An old beggar burst through the inn door and plopped himself down before Yegyeol.
Yegyeol was in the middle of breakfast.
The server had offered to bring the meal up to the room, but Yegyeol refused, aiming to return to handling everything alone.
With his responses to the world dulled to a bare flicker, Yegyeol didnât even twitch a brow at the intruderâs arrival.
âYoungster, those eyes are as dried as a salted fish.â
The old beggar clicked his tongue.
âWho are you?â
âIâm Old Dog of the Beggar Sectâs SixâKnot rank. No famous martial nameâjust an old man with broad experience.â
Yegyeol checked the corded knots at the manâs waist. There were six.
Six knotsâhe had heard that, if not quite a subâbranch master, it was the tier just under; Yegyeol was taken aback.
âYouâre here for me?â
âOf course. Ever seen a Beggar Sect elder find the wrong person?â
âIâve no ties to the Beggar SectâŚâ
âA beggarâs a Beggar Sect man.â
When Yegyeol narrowed his eyes, Old Dog raised both hands.
âKidding, kidding. Such temper in one so youngâtch.â
Clicking his tongue, Old Dog began.
âThis old one is on a commission placed with the Beggar Sect. The client left you here and requested you be taken to a place where you can be entrusted for life.â
âDid Haryang⌠did Young Master Haryang send you?â
Yegyeol sprang up so fast he banged his knee on the table. Tears sprang to his eyes, and he dropped back into his seat with a thump; the old man clicked his tongue.
âThat, I canât say. I didnât receive the commission faceâtoâface.â
Shrugging, Old Dog tore off a leg from the roast duck before Yegyeol and bit in.
âThis innâs duck is not bad.â
âDo you perhaps know the young masterâs surname?â
If nothing else, that would doâhis gaze turned pleading, but Old Dog stayed bland.
âTold you, I donât know. Never met himâhow would I?â
A hollow weariness flowed through Yegyeol.
Whether he knew the boyâs turmoil or not, the old beggar chewed his duck and spoke again.
âAt any rate, if you want to be adopted into a decent house, Iâll take you to a couple desperate for a child. If it isnât a family you want, I can take you to a small sect that will raise you till youâre grownâthe sect leaderâs upright, the people under him kind. Iâll choose well.â
Old Dogâs winkâtrusting the Beggar Sectâs intelligenceâwas impish. But Yegyeol knew what fortune had fallen into his lap.
If he followed this old beggar, heâd never return to Hangzhouâs back alleys. Six knotsâthirdârate drifters like Crooked Ear or Pit Viper wouldnât be able to touch him.
âIf nowhere calls to your heart, you can even join the Beggar Sect. As it happens, itâs time I took a disciple.â
As the boyâs silence stretched, Old Dog added gently,
âWellâwhat will it be?â
Yegyeol stared at the duckâfatâslick beard.
ââŚThen, can we go here?â
He spilled tea on the table and traced the only characters he knew.
âĺ´ĺ´â
He had stayed up nights to memorize it so he wouldnât forget; the strokes were wobbly, but still legible.
âOi, are you teasing me, thinking Old Dog canât read?â
Seeing what Yegyeol wrote, Old Dog scowled and scolded.
âI canât read.â
So blunt it verged on brazen; the old beggar paused.
âYou saying you know where this is, yet still want to go?â
âJust.â
Lowering his eyes, Yegyeol said,
âThereâs someone Iâm looking for.â
The longer he lived alone, the more he devoted each day to recovery so he could return to ordinary life, the more he thought of Haryang.
Before he put down roots somewhere for life, he wanted to see that the young master was safe.
âHuh. Huh. My, my.â
Old Dog stroked his beard again and again.
âWhere is this?â
âYou really donât know. Those characters read as Kunlun.â
ââŚKunlun!â
âIf Hangzhou is at the eastern edge of the Central Plains, then Kunlun is at the western edge.â
Grumbling that it would take more than three months just to get there, Old Dog asked,
âNow do you see how outrageous your talk is?â
Yegyeol tilted his head.
âDidnât you say youâd take me wherever I wanted?â
âSure. Thatâs the commission.â
Rubbing his palmsâsaying heâd received a pleasantly hefty anonymous voucherâOld Dog seemed to think the boy would give up at mention of the far west.
âAnywhere in the Central Plains?â
âAnywhere.â
At the repeated confirmation, the old beggar readily answered.
âThen Iâll go here.â
Yegyeol pointed at the teaâwritten characters.
âNo, come on. I know a fine sect in Wuhanâgood waters, good folk. Not the worldâs top art, but a mind method and sword art that ranked in the top hundred and change a century and a half ago.â
âKunlun.â
âOr Luoyang! How about Luoyang? The Son of Heaven resides there. I know a truly harmonious coupleâonly thing missing is a child. Their wealth is the best qualityâdescended from the adopted son of a eunuch favored by the emperor about a hundred years back.â
âI like Kunlun better.â
âNoâdo you think Kunlun is next door? For a child to endure such a long roadâdo you know how rough the Central Plains are? You could meet forest bandits or beasts and die crossing a mountain.â
No matter how enticing the offer, no matter the threat of death en route, Yegyeol stubbornly repeated his demand.
âKunlun.â
âYou want this old beggar to cross the Central Plains whiteâhaired and tottering?â
Even appealing to pity, Old Dog found him a tough one.
âIsnât a SixâKnot of the Beggar Sect a martial man?â
If he said no here, the pride of a hundred thousand Beggar Sect members would crumble.
For the Beggar Sect, weaker in martial arts than other sectsâthis was something they could never admit.
Yegyeol repeated what he had said all along.
âIâm going to Kunlun.â
It was the cleanâeyed madness of the truly fixed. In the end, Old Dog raised the white flag.
âTo bend a stubbornness even the sect head elder set asideâyouâll be a real specimen.â
Clicking his tongue, the beggar let out a long sigh and rose.
âFine. Letâs go. Letâs see.â
Saying heâd thought this a profitable deal but now it looked like a total loss, Old Dog grumbled. Yet the whole way to Qinghai, he protected Yegyeol as best he could.
Half by luck, Yegyeol reached Mount Kunlun in Qinghai before winter that year. More nights he groaned with fever and muscle ache than slept easy; still, somehow, his chest felt light as flight.
Standing at the foot of the grand mountain softly capped in white snow, Yegyeol vowed,
âIâll just see that the young master is well.â
Having climbed thus, the boy would not leave Kunlun until he breathed his last.
â
Relating the tale from their first meeting in Hangzhou to arrival at Kunlun with an even face, Yegyeol checked Haryangâs expression.
It was ambiguous, hard to read.
âBut when we met again at Kunlun, senior brother seemed to have forgotten me entirely.â
Blithely, Old Dog inducted Yegyeol into the Beggar Sect, saying the contract had been to find him a place to live his life. Now he knew it was Old Dogâs kindness; at the time, it felt like being left alone with a young lord on a mountain with no one else.
Still, his heart beat fast.
After the entry trial, becoming Disciple of Master Baekyang Zhenren, he met the young lord againânow called Je Haryang.
The joy of learning his surname was Je faded quickly; Haryang passed him as if he did not know him.
ââŚI see. So that is why you came to Kunlun.â
Lowering his eyes, Haryang murmured,
âWhen we met again as fellow disciples, I thought it too much the prank of fate to call it fortuneâand even so, until now, I did not know.â
There was a slackness to his tone.
âYou wrote it, knowing I couldnât read.â
With a notâunkind sideways glance, Yegyeol let out the old grievance.
ââŚThere were many ears listeningâand I could not reveal where I was going.â
âThen why write it so?â
Even knowing he couldnât read.
âI think⌠I hoped you would know, at least that much. Perhaps that was it. I was in no state to return home ever again, and I wanted someoneâanyoneâto remember me.â
His voice, retracing childhood clumsiness, sank low.
Never to return home againâheâd guessed it since the assassins, but truly a young lord with much behind him, thought Yegyeol, clicking his tongue inwardly.
Raising his head, Haryang looked at Yegyeol with a glint as if seeing something strange for the first time.
âWhy did you never demand answers of me? Why⌠did you not resent me?â
Astonishment tinged his voice.
âHalf out of stubbornness.â
Having suffered to reach Kunlun, surely there had been resentment and hurt that the young lord forgot him; but such things grew faint.
âThe other half⌠I thought a person could forget someone like me. Even then, senior brother helped many.â
Yegyeol gave a bitter smile.
When the young lord did not recognize him, he had been a little down; but thinking on it, remembering a beggar boy heâd spent a fortnight with for half a year would be strange.
Besides, crossing half the Central Plains at a young age, he had grown taller, put on flesh, and darkened from the sun.
âMay I ask one thing I wondered then?â
âWhat?â
Haryang readied himself to answer the discipleâs question. This time, he would answer frankly. The burdens that Je Haryang had carried as a child were long since shed.
âYour armâdid it heal?â
Footnotes
- Beggar Sect âSixâKnotâ: A rank marker often tied to cords/knots; indicates midâhigh seniority capable of undertaking protection/escort commissions.