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heyy if i used Gyo-ryong it means River Dragon King
TSBIRBV Ch 5
by berryChapter 5. The Departed Must Return (4)
Yegyeol blinked, dumbfounded by Je Haryangâs shocking words.
âA⊠a merchant? You became a merchant?â
It was more startling than the fall of Kunlun itself.
To imagine Je Haryangânot a martial artist, not a disciple of Kunlun, but a merchantâwas unthinkable. It was easier to believe the entire sect had perished than to accept this.
They say a child grows not by their parentsâ will but their ownâbut this was something else entirely.
Kunlun would never have willingly released a genius like his senior brother. After the demonic invasion, the sect would have needed every ounce of Haryangâs talent to rebuild itself.
âDid something happen that day? Did your dantian get destroyed? Or⊠is it a permanent injuryâ?â
Yegyeol sat upright in a panic and reached out, fumbling to feel Haryangâs body. It was an astonishingly agile motion for someone the physicians had declared untreatable.
Caught off guard by such a sudden reaction, Haryang let him.
As Yegyeol tried to edge closer on his knees, he lost his balance at the edge of the bed. Even for an esper, moving blind was disorientingâhe had no way to steady himself.
He felt himself tilting, falling.
ââŠYegyeol!â
His face landed squarely against Haryangâs chest. His fingers caught on fabricâand in his panicked struggle not to slip, he realized he had torn it.
And then he realizedâhe could see.
âAhâŠâ
The bandage over his eyes had loosened during the commotion. His vision was still hazy, but it was enough to make out the bare skin before him.
White.
Kunlunâs disciples had always been sun-darkened from years of training on snowy peaks. The sunlight reflecting off the perpetual snows burned more fiercely than any summer field.
Haryang had been among the fairer onesâbut never this pale.
So he truly isnât part of Kunlun anymoreâŠ
The flawless whiteness of his skin made it real. No true warrior could have such an unmarked body.
A strange sense of loss swept through Yegyeol.
âCan you⊠can you see?â Haryangâs voice trembled slightly. He leaned in close, and the face that had been a blur upon their reunion now came into sharp focus.
A man as striking as carved jade, his beauty cool and distant.
In his past life, when the memories had begun to fade, Yegyeol could recall that face only in dreams.
The Haryang before him now was more mature, weathered by timeâbut the calm dignity remained.
âI can see. A little hazy, but⊠yes.â
âWhat miracle is this⊠Every physician said you would never see again.â
Relief, disbelief, joy, confusionâevery emotion was written plainly across Haryangâs face.
Yegyeolâs gaze greedily traced every detail of it.
Even as a merchant, his body remained well-trainedâhis chest firm beneath the torn fabric. His reflexes, too, were as quick as ever; heâd caught Yegyeol before he fell.
Did he become a merchant because he lost his inner strength?
Yegyeol, who had no dantian himself, couldnât sense anotherâs energy. In his past life, even as a trained martial artist, heâd never been able to gauge Haryangâs full level of mastery.
âIâll bring the physician right away. First, letâs rewrap the bandages. Noâclose your eyes first.â
Yegyeol complied, shutting his eyes obediently. He could feel Haryangâs hands, careful yet tense, rewrapping the cloth.
Even in his hurry, Haryang was meticulous, his fingers trembling slightly.
Iâll ask about Kunlun later, Yegyeol decided.
Right now, recovering came first. His guide, fragile as he seemed beneath that calm exterior, might faint from worry if Yegyeol pushed too far.
Any esper knew: when dealing with your guide, appear harmless. Those who let their greed show too soon were often abandonedâand their regret could fill towers.
Yegyeol had no intention of becoming one of those fools.
âAgh⊠Iâm dying here.â
âCheck his pulse.â
Haryang returned with a woman whose casual tone immediately broke the quiet tension.
Hearing the unfamiliar voice approach, Yegyeol instinctively tensed, and Haryangâs calm murmur soothed him.
âThis is Samrang. She means you no harm.â
âHello there. Iâmâ ahemâSamrang, assistant to our merchant lord here.â
The moment she spoke, Yegyeol was reminded yet againâthis was not Kunlun.
Among the Nine Great Sects, Kunlun, Shaolin, and Wudang never accepted female disciples.
âI donât mind a diagnosis, butâŠâ
He hesitated, then added softly,
âCould my senior brother⊠hold my hand while she does?â
Half sincerity, half mischief.
He told himself it was reasonable for a patient to seek comfortâbut truthfully, he simply didnât want to let go. Even with his eyes covered, he could sense where his guide was as naturally as a bird senses the wind.
âWould that be too much to ask?â
âOf course not.â
Haryangâs voice was gentle. He stepped closer, took Yegyeolâs hand, and even helped him sit up. Yegyeol leaned back slightly, the solid warmth of Haryangâs chest steadying him.
âAlright, Iâll check your pulse now. Donât be startled,â said Samrang.
Her fingers were icy cold when they touched his wristâso cold it sent a chill up his spine. He let her take his pulse only because Haryang was near; otherwise, he might have instinctively recoiled.
ââŠOh? Am I really this good of a physician?â
Her tone was oddly flippant for someone making a diagnosis.
âYour meridians were all twisted before, but after a few days of rest, youâre practically fine! Even your bones have mended. How strangeâŠâ
âSo heâs healed?â Haryang asked, his voice taut with hope.
âStill a bit weak, but yesâheâs like someone recovering from a bad cold. A few laps around the training yard, a good sweat, and heâll be right as rain!â
That ridiculous prescription made Yegyeol doubt whether Samrang was a real doctor at all. Surely Haryang hadnât brought a fraud into his home?
âWe should check his eyes too. Whereâs the nearest physician?â
âThe closest is in Hongye. Itâs a three-day ride, night and day.â
Hongyeâanother unfamiliar name. Yegyeol stayed silent, listening.
âWasnât there one about a day away?â Haryang asked.
âHe moved to Sichuan after that gang incident a few days ago. The worldâs gone strangeâno place is safe anymore.â
Samrang clicked her tongue.
âThen tell Hongye to fetch the physician. If they doubt your word, say Iâve given permission.â
âYes, sir.â
She left. The sound of the door closing confirmed her departure.
âIs that woman not a physician, then?â Yegyeol asked.
âSheâs not, though sheâs skilled in many things. She assists with my trading business.â
âHow long have you known her?â
For a brief moment, Haryangâs handâsteady on Yegyeolâs shoulderâpaused before gently lowering him back down.
âYou are⊠very curious.â
It wasnât reproach, merely a quiet observation, spoken almost to himself.
Yegyeolâs heart skipped a beat, but as Haryangâs hand stroked his hair soothingly, he relaxed again.
âA few years now,â Haryang added.
A few years.
Vague, noncommittal. Not as if he meant to hide anythingâmore like it simply hadnât mattered enough to count.
Yegyeolâs curiosity deepened.
How much time has passed since I died?
He couldnât wait for the physician to arrive. Once the bandages came off, once he could look into his senior brotherâs eyes again, he would ask everythingâevery question heâd swallowed until now.
He squeezed Haryangâs hand tightly.
âStay with me until I fall asleep.â
Sleep was creeping up again, heavy and soft.
Before darkness claimed him, Yegyeol saw, through the blur of his bandages, the faint nod of Haryangâs silhouette.
A faint smile touched Yegyeolâs lips as he drifted into slumber.
Haryang watched him for a long time, eyes lingering on the peaceful curve of his mouth, until the shadows lengthened and twilight began to settle outside the window.
He lifted a candle that one of the servants had left nearby and placed it beside the bed. But when he reached for a match, he found none. Clicking his tongue softly, he stared at the unlit wick.
He could have gone to fetch oneâbut he remembered the promise he had made.
I wonât leave him alone.
Checking that the bandages were secure, Haryang raised one hand.
A flame bloomed in his bare palm.
Sam-mae-jin-hwaâTrue Flame of the Threefold Focus.
Only masters who had reached the deepest level of cultivation could wield it. And here was Je Haryang, the so-called fallen disciple of Kunlun, conjuring that divine fire just to light a candle.
Carefully, so as not to wake Yegyeol, he touched the living flame to the wick. Only when the candle burned bright enough to banish the dark did he let the fire die in his hand.
Then he sat by the bed, the flickering light painting gentle gold across Yegyeolâs sleeping face.
For the first time in years, peace settled over him. As if all the chaos and noise of his life had dissolved into nothingness.
He often found himself imaginingâif that boy had lived, grown up naturallyâwhat would he have become? It was a habit, one of the few that comforted him.
He could not envision his own future, so he filled his lonely, endless years by dreaming of someone elseâs.
Perhaps that was why, the moment they met again, heâd recognized Yegyeol instantlyânot as a child, but as someone who had lived, changed, survived.
What had his disciple endured in all this time?
He had never been able to accept Yegyeolâs death. He had never gone to seek the body, never dared to confirm what his heart refused to believe.
By the time he finally had the freedom to chooseâto face itâit had been far too long.
So he buried that boy and the memory of that bloody day deep within his heart, never expecting to meet him again.
And yet here he wasâalive, though scarred and broken in ways that defied reason. His body bore marks of violence, his meridians twisted and dantian gone, the strength he once had reduced to frailty. His youth frozen, his eyes haunted by nightmares born from darkness.
And his impossible recoveryâŠ
âSleep well,â Haryang murmured, his cool eyes softening as he brushed a hand over Yegyeolâs cheek.
âNo more pain. No more nightmaresâŠâ
He could remember no lullaby worth singing. But if he could tear apart the darkness that hunted his disciple in sleep, that would be enough.
For Je Haryang, that was enough.