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heyy if i used Gyo-ryong it means River Dragon King
TSBIRBV Ch 54
by berryChapter 54 The Beast-Faced Tiger (4)
It was impossible to tell whether it was a sob, drunken rambling, or hollow laughter.
âPardon?â
Yegyeol barely kept his head from snapping toward Samrang as he asked again.
âWhat do you meanâdied?â
Senior Brother is alive and well, he thought. With no time even to rub his stiff neck, he stared at the Beast-Faced Tiger in taut silence.
It wasnât Je Haryang who had died back thenâit was this side. And unless resurrection had become the new fashion in Jianghu, how could Je Haryang still live?
âThere was a calamity. A truly dreadful one.â
Whether anyone else sobered at his words or not, the Tiger-Freak pressed on, drunk and relentless.
âDo you mean the Kunlun Massacre?â
Anxious, Yegyeol asked bluntly.
âYou look young, but it seems you know of those days.â
Even drunk, his gaze was sharp as it raked Yegyeolâs face. Having spoken more boldly than intended, Yegyeol let a rueful smile serve as his patch.
âIâm a trader out of Qinghai. A Kunlun knight-errant saved our villageâitâs only natural people there worried for him after the Kunlun Massacre.â
The chivalrous past of Senior Brother made a perfect excuse anywhere.
âAh. Yes, yes⊠Thatâs right.â
Peng Munhyeong nodded slowly.
âAs you guessed, he fell during the Kunlun Massacre. The Demonic Sect rose, and Kunlun clipped their heels. But the orthodox wanted to postpone an all-out war at any costâso they turned their backs on Kunlun.â
âA dangerous thing to say.â
Yegyeol lowered his eyelids and whispered. The Tiger-Freak chuckled.
âDangerous indeed. Thatâs why they call me âRabid Tiger,â isnât it? No one heeds the raving of a madman.â
So he knew the name they gave him.
Was all that reckless rampaging Samrang had recounted actually calculated? He didnât seem a crafty sort, but his depths might be surprisingâor perhaps that clever younger brother of his did the thinking.
âAbandoned by the orthodox, Kunlun stood alone to the end. The âKunlun Cloud-Dragon,â master of the Yongbong Gathering, led at the front.â
Up to this point, what he said matched what Yegyeol knew.
âThanks to him, the Kunlun sect leader survived and claimed afterward that his disciple yet lived. He begged the Martial Alliance repeatedly to send men to rescue the Cloud-Dragon, kidnapped by the Demonic Sect.â
âSuch⊠secret history.â
Stunned, Yegyeol murmured. If true, how had the Demonic Sect treated the young heroâheart and new pillar of Kunlun?
No. He yanked his thoughts back from the brink.
Senior Brother is alive. And even ifâŠ
But is mere survival truly life? His hand clenched into a fist beneath the table.
âIn his twilight years, the Kunlun leader finally admitted the disciple was dead. No matter how strong a warrior, at that ageâwhen the sect he bore collapsed and his dearest disciple was lostâhe would want to deny reality.â
Kunlunâs current leader, Baekun Zhenren, was Baekyang Zhenrenâs senior martial brother. He had recognized Je Haryangâs talent despite his relatively late entry and treasured him as a disciple. As Yegyeol recalled, he was a man of lofty virtueâwarrior and Daoist both, widely respected.
Then⊠did Baekun Zhenren knowingly declare him dead? Why?
Baekyang had said Je Haryang was expelled. But this outsider, Peng Munhyeong, said he was dead.
There was only one reason to let the world believe that a talent who could have set Kunlunâs future on a rock had died.
He had become the sectâs shame.
How could the man once venerated by all Kunlun fall to someone all must hide?
The Demonic Sect.
The trail led again to the Hundred-Thousand Grand Mountains of Xinjiang.
Dizziness threatened as Yegyeol gripped his cup too tight. Should he, back then, have done more than throw himself to save Senior Brotherâshould he have slit that demonâs throat?
Even so, it would not change Je Haryangâs past. It was only his own selfish wish for retroactive satisfaction.
âI couldnât believe it,â Peng said softly. âThe Kunlun Cloud-Dragon was a truly good man. As a boy, I picked fightsâdreaming of beating the greatest prodigy even just once. He made me ashamed of that. Had I had the chance, I would have spoken more, learned moreâbut before I could, the man I most respected died.â
Now Yegyeol could no longer be sure his face was steady. He only prayed the mask he had honed would hold.
Since rebirth, all who met him felt something uncanny. The endings were always the same: rejection, or retreat.
To avoid being cast away, he had to deceive those around himâand to do that, he had to deceive even himself.
âThe Kunlun Cloud-Dragon,â he said, evenly. âHe must have been a great knight-errant.â
As always, he whispered to himself:
You were born in a village saved by the Cloud-Dragonâs hand, raised on the tales of Je Haryang the hero.
Slowly, he blinked and called up the countless lines of wuxia he had devoured in his first lifeâborn into Jianghu, trained in arts, rose high, suffered betrayal and defeat, then at last overcame, took revenge, won love, and found happiness.
All those false stories in which Je Haryang alone was never the protagonist.
âYes. He was,â Peng murmured.
A dream-bright light warmed his face; there was not a trace of falsehood in it.
âA great knight-errantâand more than that, a good man. Such people all leave early. He should have lived longer.â
To see a stalwart middle-aged warriorâs eyes redden made Yegyeolâs heart roil.
âHe was the kind of talent who could have breathed new winds into a long-stagnant Jianghuâand yet he left so soon. Heaven is heartless.â
Peng drained his jug and tossed it aside. The waiter scowled; Yegyeol set a silver ingot on the table. Enough to make even a crawling cur seem a cute pup.
Startled, the waiter slipped to the kitchen and returned with fresh dishes and another full jar, presenting them to Peng.
The arrival of new wine after the last was emptied seemed not to surprise him; he simply lifted it to his lips again.
âYou too, Senior Peng, are a fine knight-errant,â Yegyeol said.
âI only chase anotherâs shadow,â Peng repliedâtoo bitter for mere modesty.
Yegyeol slid him a plate heavy with meat.
âPlease eat. Even the greatest warrior will come to harm if he drinks on an empty stomach.â
Anyone who praised Senior Brother would find their table piled high with meat.
âHa. Never thought Iâd be fed by a young master young enough to be my son.â
âThink of it as payment for your stories. Youâve told secrets no one else in the Central Plains would share today.â
âDid I?â
Peng frowned at his cup, pained.
âThatâs the trouble with drinkâit makes men sentimental.â
He glanced at Yegyeol and asked,
âIs it that your village was too remote to hear of his death?â
âJianghu has knights like grains of sand in the Yangtze,â Yegyeol said. âOur elders likely thought his name may not spread so far.â
He narrowed his brow, murmuring as if to himself:
âOr perhaps, spooked by news of the Kunlun Massacre, they chose not to know.â
A bitter silence followed.
âStillâthere is a place that remembers a hero whom the Central Plains forgot. That gladdens me,â Peng said.
âHow could a person easily forget a kindness?â
That would be the way of beasts.
âJianghu forgot Kunlunâs sacrifice,â he said quietly. âForgot the lives that fell there.â
ââŠâ
Yegyeol held his tongue.
Sacrifice.
He had never expected his own death to bear any great weight in martial history. He only wanted Je Haryang to surviveâto shine in times to come.
But the manâs name had been buried under Kunlunâs eternal snows, never to rise.
An unnameable feeling surged and ebbed, again and again.
âThat is why Iâm glad of you,â Peng said. âItâs hard to find anyone, anywhere, with whom to speak of this.â
So his tongue was not simply loose; he felt a comradeship like Yegyeolâs own.
âAre there none who remember Senior Brother? Did you not say he was active in your era?â
Yegyeol thought of the many who had adored Je Haryang. He was not just Kunlunâs idol; as many envied him as admired him.
âThey avoid mentioning it because it hurtsâor call it bygoneâand some grow angry,â Peng said, desolate. âAs children they knew no better, but now they know the orthodox turned away, and feel the shame.â
âAye,â he said. âShame indeed.â