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heyy if i used Gyo-ryong it means River Dragon King
TSBIRBV Ch 124
by berryChapter 124 A Stolen Kiss (1)
When he opened the window, a cool breeze brushed Yegyeolâs cheeks. Yet he smiled brightly.
Back in Cheonghae, he was in good spirits. How good, exactly? Enough that even Samrangâwho was always at his heelsâposed such a question:
âWhy are you walking around smiling like that?â
Yegyeol countered with a question of his own.
âDoes it bother you?â
âNo. More like⊠itâs kind of scary?â
âDidnât you barehand a spider on our last trip? With that kind of courage, youâre scared just because Iâm smiling a little?â
Later, heâd learned it had been a venomous spider, rare for that season. It had been too good a chance to pass up capturing it.
âHow is that the same thing?â
Samrang, in his usual slow drawl, shook his head.
âActually, now that I think about itâif I ask, Iâll end up learning the reason for Lord Munâs smile. And I really donât want to know. So just forget I ever asked.â
âThen why did you ask in the first place?â
âBecause every time I turn my head and catch sight of your face, it startles me. You donât usually walk around smiling.â
Yegyeol thought he understood.
It was like suddenly finding the carved grimace of a guardian totem pole curling into a smileâunsettling, as if a ghost had tampered with it.
If he doesnât want to press, then thatâs a relief for me.
It wasnât something he could tell Samrang anyway.
Still, Yegyeol quietly reflected on why he was in such a good mood.
First, there was the night in Hangzhou when he had laid bare his heart with Senior Brother. He had learned that the man hadnât abandoned him in the past, but had left out of fear that young Yegyeol might be caught up in an assassination attempt. That alone made him feel as though he now stood on firmer ground.
Then there was what he had learned about Hwangbo Yulhuiâs true identity. The shock of Senior Brotherâs tie to the Hwangbo clan was great, yesâbut at least it proved Je Haryang had no old lover tucked away.
Just recalling that fact made his chest swell with ease. He even felt magnanimous enough now to lend Hwangbo Yakrin the phrase âthree wives and four concubines.â
On the surface, everything seemed to be going smoothlyâat least, for Yegyeol.
But like a seesaw where one side rises as the other sinks, Haryangâs circumstances were not quite the same.
âBy the way, when does my house arrest end?â Yegyeol asked.
Samrang, who was weaving something like a loose net, replied:
âUh⊠a hundred years from now?â
âHe must be really angryâŠâ
âIâd say itâs less anger and more excessive worry.â
Samrang coolly assessed his masterâs state.
When Yegyeol had gone to see Haryang upon returning from Sichuan, the manâs mood had been heavy. Likely because heâd just come back from a cold confrontation with the Black Ghost. It wasnât that he seemed merely upset.
Rather, he looked deeply lost in thought.
âYou didnât go straight back to the manor as promised, but elsewhere. You had guards, yes, but what if something had happened?â
Lowering his gaze slightly, Haryang added:
âI want to grant you freedom, now that youâre grown, but as the master of Cheonghae, you must be cautious with your movements. A merchant without martial skill is the ripest target there is.â
ââŠIâm sorry.â
Yegyeol bowed his head. Knowing Haryang was fully aware of the truth yet still speaking so, it was hard not to accept it. It sounded like a warning born of bitter experience.
âFor now, it would be best for you to remain in Cheonghae.â
âIâll do as you say, Senior Brother.â
So Yegyeol agreed meekly.
That much counts as a decent result.
Haryang would be deliberating carefully. Whether to let things remain a hollow shell, or to overturn the board and mingle black and white stones.
While wandering through the garden, which had been filled with flowers during his absence, Yegyeol spotted Jin-yeong approaching from the opposite path.
The man carried a long wooden case, his face as prim and proper as ever in his scholarâs robes. He had clearly noticed Yegyeol, but pretended otherwise. Very like Jin-yeong.
Feeling more mischievous than pleased, Yegyeol strode forward. Samrang tilted her head, curious what scheme he was up to this time, but followed close behind.
âItâs been a while.â
âLord Mun. I heard you had returned to Cheonghae. I am glad to see you in good health.â
If he could, Jin-yeong would have happily watched Yegyeol get scolded by Senior Brother front row. But his words were always polished, like someone who filled out endless forms in a fixed format every day.
One press and he spits out congratulatory phrases, two presses and itâs seasonal greetings, three presses and a politely venomous complaint reused from before.
âWhatâs that youâre carrying?â
âAh.â
Jin-yeong lifted the long case slightly.
âIt belongs to the master.â
Yegyeol arched an eyebrow. Of course he knew the case had an ownerâhe hadnât asked out of ignorance.
Clearly Jin-yeong had no wish to reveal its contents.
But curiosity is the treasure of humankind.
Quickly deciding, Yegyeol said to Samrang:
âSamrang. Take it.â
Samrang froze mid-step, about to spring, and tilted her head blankly.
âUm, my duty is guarding you, not stealing or fleeing.â
âHow rareâsensible words from you.â
Jin-yeong actually praised her. But it was far too soon to relax.
âBut it does sound fun, so Iâll try anyway!â
Sliding forward, Samrang lunged into Jin-yeongâs arms. His expression sharpened instantly as he cradled the case close, then grabbed her with his free hand and threw her back. A skilled golden-rope technique, no doubt.
Though he always looked the bookish scholar, Jin-yeong was clearly a master in his own rightâperhaps nearly Samrangâs equal. Otherwise, with one hand bound holding the case, he could never have countered so nimbly.
Where on earth does Senior Brother find people like this?
Samrang landed lightly, then flicked her foot, kicking sand toward Jin-yeongâs face. Hugging the case protectively, he swept his sleeve up to shield himself before the grit could hit.
Samrang seized the chance, surging forward with predatory speed. But Jin-yeong seemed to sense her angle, spinning out of reach.
He must have fended off her ambushes beforeâhis movements carried the weight of experience.
All of it happened in the span of an instant.
Without an esperâs eyes, Iâd never follow that.
Yegyeol clicked his tongue inwardly. Truly, martial artists were hardly human.
âAh, still amazing.â
Samrang licked her lips, eyes gleaming. Her usual drowsiness had vanished, leaving a predatorâs sharp gaze. She had long itched for the chance to cross hands with Jin-yeong.
Even her playful banter with Yegyeol must have been ploys to lull him.
âYouâre as savage as ever.â
Jin-yeong brushed his sleeve clean. In an instant, the traces of combat were gone, leaving him once again the picture of a tidy scholar.
âThen Iâll take my leave. I must deliver this to the master.â
He tapped the case and bowed politely before withdrawing.
âUgh, still ghostly as ever,â Samrang muttered, rolling her neck.
âHeâs strong, too.â
âWell, he survived, didnât he?â
The words slipped out before she realized how heated her tone was. Flustered, she added quickly:
âYou know how rough Jianghu is. And, um, to build a trading group this big, all sorts of things happen.â
ââŠHm.â
Yegyeol narrowed his eyes, studying her, then turned away as though letting it pass.
âAnyway⊠has the master been sleeping poorly lately?â
Samrang murmured curiously.
ââŠNot sleeping?â Yegyeol asked, startled.
âYou know what that was?â
âOf course. A smoke-pipe.â
âA smoke-pipe?â
Like⊠a pipe?
Seeing Yegyeolâs confusion, Samrang explained:
âHeâs always had trouble sleeping, so he burned herbs in it. Medicine doesnât last long in his system, but the fragrance at least calms him. He always carried it. Though lately, I havenât seen it.â
âI never saw him use one.â
Not just rarelyâYegyeol had never once seen Haryang with a pipe. He couldnât even picture it. And yet, maybe it would suit him surprisingly well.
If an esper saw their own guide like that and failed to etch it into memory, they werenât fit to be an esper.
âHe stopped using it some time ago. Around when⊠ah, it mustâve been when he found you. No, waitâafter bringing you back from Kunlun. Thatâs when he put it away for good.â
ââŠOh.â
So, all his pushingâhad it shaken him that much?
I hope he hasnât suffered too much.
It was a thought no different than a cat pitying a mouse. But it wasnât false.
As much as he wanted Haryang more unsteady and shaken, he also truly wished the man no pain as he came to Yegyeolâs side.
âYouâre sure it was a pipe? With a case that long, couldnât it be a sword?â
âHis swordâs much longer than that. And heâd never let anyone else carry it.â
True enough. In any sect, the first rule drilled into disciples was never to let go of oneâs blade. Dropping it in sparring was considered the height of disgrace.
âThen why didnât you say so before I told you to steal it?â
âAw, but if I told you, Iâd lose my chance to fight Jin-yeong. Canât have that.â
Truly, she had the enviable knack of never losing out.