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TSBIRBV Ch 52
by berryChapter 52 The Beast-Faced Tiger (2)
Samrang pressed her lips together, unsure what to say.
To speak that way while their lord livedâbetter to believe the Thunder-Sworded Dragon naive than to hear this.
At times, Mun Yegyeol was astonishingly bold, in ways that made his supposed Kunlun upbringing hard to believe.
The man Samrang knew could not be called simply âgood.â He was more complicated than that.
But this much was certain: he had never crossed the line.
Even now, he did not take his eyes off the Yangtze until he confirmed that all the flailing hostages, trapped by fire and panic, were under the Azure Sky Corpsâ protection.
âIn daily life, he seems unorthodoxâŠâ
He allowed his own caravan to be raided and fenced the goods, collared Green Forest bandits and made them subordinates, and casually proposed manufacturing lightning-struck jujube wood by hand.
Suspicious, just as Jinyoung had warnedâyet he didnât bother to hide it. On the contrary, that very frankness made him feel trustworthy.
âIf this were said before him, heâd call me a thick-headed killer-for-hire,â Samrang sniffed.
âTo think Kunlun would expel Senior Brother,â Yegyeol murmured, voice gone quiet. âSo he could no longer live as a martial artist and became a merchant instead.â
Expulsion meant never using what one had learned in the sect. At minimum the dantian was sealed; in more closed sects, they cut tendons and sinews.
Such a person fell not only from the martial worldâbut from ordinary life.
âLuckily, Kunlun is a Daoist sect; they donât sever tendons,â he thought.
Even so, lifelong surveillance followed. If signs ever suggested that the expelled one leaked techniques, a pursuit squad would be raised to kill them.
In the end, their fates were similar.
Suicide. Or murder.
âPerhaps Kunlun might have birthed the next Martial Alliance Chief⊠what a waste.â
He spoke pity, but the voice held a thin blade of irony.
It gnawed at himâstill not knowing why Senior Brother had been made to shed Kunlunâs robe.
âThe Martial Alliance Chief?â
For an instant, Samrangâs face twisted with a complex emotion. When Yegyeol glanced back, her expression was already smooth again.
âBy the way,â he brightened, âis Senior Brother injured anywhere?â
Even twenty years postmortem, heâd found no visible aftereffects. Though Haryang must have lost all the inner force piled up by Kunlunâs methods, he looked robust. Relief mixed with a bitterness at not knowing the pain he had endured.
Yegyeol wanted to know everything.
âHard to say,â Samrang answered softly. He searched her face, but found no crack to pry open.
âKnew it,â he thought, swallowing disappointment as he stood. The proofing for jujube wood was done; time to head back.
But he had barely taken a few steps when an uninvited guest arrived.
âHey, kid.â
A man with hair half white and half black stood with a loose, swaggering posture and called to Yegyeol.
âWhoâs been playing with fire out here?â
â â â
A maverick!
From the first glance, Yegyeol knew: a formidable master. He decided to play dumb.
âPlaying with fire? I wouldnât know.â
Not even a lie. What he used was lightning, not flame.
âPerhaps you mistook lightning for fire,â he added, gesturing at the fresh, still-warm lightning-struck jujube wood.
ââŠOdd. I could swear I smelled it,â the man muttered, raking his scalp.
Samrangâs eyes narrowed as she recognized that distinctive two-toned hair.
âWould you be the Tiger-Freak, Peng Munhyeong?â
At that name, Yegyeolâs eyes went round. He had heard it in his past lifeâone of the prodigies often mentioned alongside his Senior Brother.
A weirdo from the Hebei Peng Clan, famed for saber-art, who chose fists instead. But âfreakâ was no title heâd borne back then.
âSo in twenty years⊠how did a direct scion of the orthodox Peng Clan end up with a name like âTiger-Freakâ?â
âWhat brings a Hebei Peng hero here?â Samrang asked.
âI smelled fire,â the man said, wrinkling his nose, âand came to take any injured to a physician. If I was wrong, good. But the burnt stink is thick as soup.â
His eyes rolled wildly, scanning this way and thatâlanding, at last, on Yegyeol again.
âYou look familiar. Whose son are you?â
Before Samrang could answer, Yegyeol smiled politely.
âFrom a minor house. You wouldnât know it.â
âMm. The Central Plains are too wide; forgive an old manâs poor memory.â
Big as he was, he spoke like a childâsimple and direct.
âIâm heading down the mountain now. If it pleases you, may we travel together?â
Samrangâs eyes went saucer-wideâwhat was he thinking? Yegyeol, pretending not to notice, kept his gaze on Peng.
After a momentâs thought, the man said,
âEven if youâve troubles, I wonât lend money or my name. Iâll share a meal. If third parties cause a fuss, I wonât step in unless they aim at me. If thatâs acceptable, we walk together.â
The well-rehearsed cadence made Yegyeol glum.
âHow many times has he been burned?â he thought, as if hearing âNo door-to-door sales or religious proselytizing.â
âI wonât borrow money or names. Iâd like to buy you a meal as thanks. I have my own guards if trouble starts. I sought your company to hear how the martial world fares these days.â
âOh? That so?â
âYes. Iâm a trader; Iâm curious how Jianghu flows. If you like, weâll find a fine placeâgood meat and good wine.â
âWell then! Iâve been rude to a man wanting conversation. Forgive me. My younger brother said if I bankrupt the clan one more time trying to save âpoor souls,â heâll strike my name from the rolls.â
He laughed loud and free. Now Yegyeol understood the brotherâs threat.
âA most excellent brother,â he said dryly.
Samrang narrowed her eyes, baffled at Yegyeolâs intentâbut their lord had ordered to allow him freedom so long as safety was kept. She stayed her tongue.
âLetâs go,â Peng waved a hand broad as a pot lidâthen paused.
âI didnât catch your name, young sir.â
âJe Haryang,â Yegyeol said with a bright smile. âA small trader out of Qinghai.â
Samrang ducked her head to hide her eyes, suddenly too large, and stared at the floor.
âHas the bratâhas Young Master Mun gone mad?â
ââŠA fine name,â the Tiger-Freak murmured at last, nodding.
âCome thenâdown the mountain. Something may be burning; we should hurry.â
He moved like his namesake, tiger-swift.
His busy back looked like a man fleeing somethingâyet he kept glancing back to check Yegyeol.
âKeeping up well.â
Yegyeol wiped imaginary sweat.
âHard to match your pace, sir. Martial artists are extraordinary.â
âOh dear, was I too fast? Youâve never trained?â
The man seemed almost flustered at the hint of weakness.
âAs a child I was frail. My parents sent me to Kunlunâto learn health practices from the revered Daoists. But I barely crossed the threshold. No talent for entry, they said.â
âKunlun, KunlunâŠâ Peng repeated, a bitter smile twisting his lipsâthe look of a man grappling with old, knotted feelings.
âLong ago, a hero I knew was from Kunlun.â
Most of Jianghu had surely forgotten prodigies from decades pastâbut Peng remembered Je Haryang clearly.
âHe wears his heart on his face,â Yegyeol thought, hearing nostalgia ring like a bell.
He tossed bait and watched. Once they reached the village below, he would ply the man with drink.
No grand restaurant hereâonly a travelerâs inn, already lively with locals.
âIâll drop our packs in a room. Please, sit and drink,â Yegyeol said.
âIâll wait here,â the Tiger-Freak replied, settling.
Yegyeol led Samrang to a room. Once alone, she threw up a barrier of inner forceâusually to block attacks, but equally good at muffling sound.
âAre you very on edge?â
âYes. Approaching unknown masters lightly is dangerous. A hermit roaming the deep mountains isnât guaranteed to be kind.â
âNo need to worry.â
âI didnât expect you to give our lordâs name,â she said.
âMun Yegyeol should be on the Yangtze. I had no other identity to claim⊠so I gave Senior Brotherâs.â
Samrangâs eyes narrowed. He could have used Jin Sam. She knew it. If he chose Je Haryang, he had a reason.
Sure enough, he confessed:
âThe truth isâI know that man.â
â â â