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heyy if i used Gyo-ryong it means River Dragon King
TSBIRBV Ch 259
by berryChapter 259. The Audacious Impostor (8)
The woman who had taken the Reclusive Tigerâs offered hand led them deeper into the village. Soon, they came upon a small house where the remaining townsfolk had gathered closely together.
So this is where all the signs of life came from.
There were barely any young adultsâonly a few small children and mostly the elderly. None of them looked well. The woman reassured them that the visitors meant no harm before ushering the group further inside.
She poured waterânot teaâinto small cups and sat down heavily before them.
âI heard this village used to be larger,â Yeon Sosho remarked. âThere are far fewer people than expected.â
The middle-aged woman exhaled deeply.
âTheyâve all left.â
âWas it because fishing has declinedâŠ? Or trade?â Yeon Sosho asked.
âNo. Neither.â The woman shook her head. âHalf⊠went missing. The rest⊠fled.â
It was a strange answer. There were no man-eating beasts in this area, so what could possibly have driven them away?
âIâd like to hear this in more detail,â Peng Munhyeong said gently.
The woman nodded. âWhen you came in, did you notice the burned-down house near the edge of the village?â
Yegyeol nodded. He had already guessed that was the source of the smoky scent Hongye0 had detected earlier.
âThat was once a dojo.â
âA dojo?â
âYes. One day, a man who claimed to be a bodyguard-for-hire drifted into the village and decided to settle here. That wasnât unusualâtravelers came and went oftenâso we welcomed him. He said he would open a training hall to teach simple breathing and movement exercises.â
âMmm.â
âHe said it wasnât true martial cultivation, but that it would strengthen the body and loosen tired muscles. The young people were intrigued. It didnât cost much, and if they grew stronger, their work would be easier.â
At first, it all seemed harmless. One young man with a bad back reportedly improved after three months of lessons, easily lifting heavy loads afterward.
Even people around the womanâs age began to attend. Some of her friends persuaded her to join, saying it made them feel younger. But exercise was never her taste, so she eventually stopped going.
âThen one day, the masterâthe one who ran the dojoâtold one of the young men that he had talent for martial arts.â
Talent.
Yegyeol could imagine it: a young fisherman from a riverside village, suddenly told he had the potential for martial mastery.
There would be joy, surely, but also bitterness. Had he been born into a martial family, or been lucky enough to join a sect, he might have achieved greatness. Still, he would feel deep gratitude toward the man who recognized his giftâperhaps even devotion.
âThe master took him under his wing for special instruction. The boy grew incredibly strongâstrong enough to beat back a petty bandit once. People started calling the man âMaster Hwangâ and respected him.â
So far, it sounded like a tale of small fortune, not tragedy.
âMaster Hwang treated that first student as his discipleâhis deputy, even. Before long, the young man began leading the other youths, and a kind of hierarchy formed.â
The woman sighed heavily.
âThey began collecting offerings âfor Master Hwangâs sake,â shirking their patrol duties, and making others do the unpleasant workâlike gutting fish. Some people must have found that appealing, because soon everyone started flattering Master Hwang, begging to learn real martial arts instead of just breathing techniques.â
Soon, there was no young person left who wasnât attending the dojo. All of them strove to catch Master Hwangâs attention.
âMaster Hwang took on more disciplesâtwo, three at a time. But the first disciple grew jealous, and there was⊠a fight. A bloody one.â
The womanâs voice trembled as she spoke.
âHe wasnât a bad boy,â she whispered. âHe wasnât kind, but he never hurt others for gain. I donât know what happened to himâŠâ
Her eyes reflected the sorrow of someone who had lost a familiar soul to something incomprehensibleâtinged with guilt, confusion, and grief.
âMaster Hwang said it was his own failing and that he would strip the boy of his martial power. He subdued him, and afterward claimed the youth, devastated, left the village. At least⊠thatâs what he told us. But that was only the beginning.â
Yeon Soshoâs expression hardened.
âThe next disciple took the boyâs place, and for a while, the village seemed peaceful. But after a year or so, the students began acting strangely. Those who practiced his breathing and movements the longest started locking themselves in caves, saying they were close to âcompletingâ something. They stopped eating, stopped sleeping.â
âDemonic cultivationâŠâ Peng muttered grimly.
The martial world had no shortage of techniques that eroded the mind while granting power.
âI went to confront him one night, to tell him to stop teaching whatever that was,â the woman continued. âBut when I looked inside, all the disciples were kneeling, chanting strange incantations. It wasnât anything Iâd ever heard before.â
She shook her head, visibly uneasy at the memory.
âI backed away quietly. But⊠I think Master Hwang saw me. I ran home and wrote a letterâgave it to a bodyguard staying in the village, and begged him to deliver it to the Golden Fish Guild. I told them something was terribly wrong in Yeogok Village and pleaded for help.â
âAhâŠâ Yegyeol exhaled softly.
Now he understood who that drowned Golden Fish Guild warrior must have beenâand who had killed him.
The others seemed to come to the same conclusion but said nothing. The woman mistook Yegyeolâs sigh for sympathy and went on.
âThree days later, all the young men who attended that dojo left the village,â she said. âThey said they had somewhere to go. Even when their parents clung to them, they pulled away, cold as strangers. Their eyes were⊠wrong. Like they were bewitched.â
The longer she spoke, the more Yegyeol was reminded of the tale of the Pied Piper of Hamelin.
âSome of the youth had dreamed of leaving someday, but not like this. Those who left for the cities always saved money and prepared. This⊠this was unnatural.â
Her jaw clenched; her reddened eyes shone with a dry, exhausted despair.
âFamilies feared their children would disappear next, so they fledâwhole households, gone overnight. Thatâs how the village became empty.â
She pressed her brittle eyelids with her fingers, then set down her untouched cup.
âWas burning the dojo an act of revenge?â Yeon Sosho asked quietly.
âNo. One of Master Hwangâs disciples came backâlurking around, watching us. I thought he meant to harm whoever was left, so I burned it down to drive him off.â
The woman looked utterly spent. Most of the youth were gone; those who remained had fled in terror of Master Hwang. Only the frail, the old, and a few orphaned children were left.
She had been standing guard alone, waiting for a threat that could come at any time. Exhaustion was inevitable.
âThen the first discipleâthe one he supposedly stripped of martial powerâmay not have left willingly,â Peng muttered. Yegyeol nodded grimly in agreement.
âWhy did you stay?â Yeon Sosho asked.
âHow could I leave my home? Iâve lived here all my life. And⊠the Golden Fish Guild was supposed to send help. When they arrive, everything will be all right againâŠâ
âNo,â Yeon Sosho said flatly.
The woman blinked.
âThey wonât be coming.â
The Flood Dragon Kingâs tone was cold as steel.
âOn our way here, we found the body of a Golden Fish Guild member floating in the river.â
The womanâs eyes widened in disbelief. She had clung for days to the hope that help was on its way. That single thread of faith had kept her sane. Now it snappedâand despair flooded her face.
âThe man was likely killed by that âMaster Hwangâ or one of his disciples,â Yeon Sosho continued. âTell meâdid the man show any signs of using poison?â
âPoison?â she echoed weakly, then shook her head. âNo⊠nothing like that.â
âDid he have any knowledge of herbs?â
âNot at all. One of his students once ate the wrong plant and fell deathly ill.â
So, the man knew a form of cultivation that caused madness over timeâbut not poison. Yet the Golden Fish Guild warrior had died from an extraordinarily rare toxin, potent enough to kill through the waters of the Yangtze itself.
âThere must be an accomplice,â Peng muttered darkly.
It was only a small village. Hardly worth the effort of a yearâs deception, let alone the price of such an expensive poison. And Master Hwang hadnât even stayedâhe had fled.
No matter how Yegyeol calculated it, the numbers didnât add up.
Did he bear a grudge against someone here?
There was that cut across the tattoo on the Golden Fish Guild manâs armâdeliberate, vindictive.
As he pondered it, something clicked in Yegyeolâs mind.
Wait.
Master Hwang hadnât left alone. Heâd taken his disciples with himâall of them.
Those young men had lives rooted here, families, homesâyet they had followed him without hesitation or preparation. If it had been one or two, it could be dismissed as devotion or madness. But all of them?
Some eat eagerly at a feast; others turn away. Some rejoice at fine silk; others find it unpleasant to touch.
But for everyone to move in unison like this? That was no natural loyalty.
âAbout this Master Hwang,â Yegyeol said suddenly.
âDo you think,â he asked softly, âthat taking those disciples was his goal from the very beginning?â
âWellâŠâ The woman hesitated. Clearly, the thought had crossed her mind before.
He had taken only the young and ableâthose who could work, fight, or be sold.
âThe Emperor forbids human trafficking,â she said bitterly, âbut what would a simple villager like me know of such dealings? If thatâs what this is, then⊠theyâre gone beyond reach.â
âIâve no knowledge of such things,â Peng said, shaking his head. He was a man of fists and action, not information.
Yeon Sosho might have known more, but she couldnât reveal her identity as the Flood Dragon King. Hongye0 was in the same position.
âI know,â Yegyeol said, a faint smile curving his lips.
âTo be precise,â he added, âI happen to know someone who does deal in that kind of information.â
His tone was calmâbut his eyes gleamed with quiet resolve.
Senior Brother⊠how far have you come?