Rate on NU
heyy if i used Gyo-ryong it means River Dragon King
TSBIRBV Ch 68
by berryChapter 68 The Bride Lies Sleepless (6)
An esper in the Central Plains was a frail creature who couldnât even requisition a private plane. Yet Je Haryangâs disciple, Yegyeol, was the sort of ability-user who could borrow a near-spirit-beast-grade horse handled by his lordâs men.
The moment he could stand, Yegyeol went looking for Red Thunder. He worried Hongyeoâwho had recently brought him to Black Spotâs Sichuan branchâmight already be far away, but fortunately, Hongyeo was still in Chengdu.
When Yegyeol asked to borrow Red Thunder to deal with the one who had laid him low, Hongyeo readily passed him the reins.
For some reason, persuading the favorable Hongyeo was easy. The next barrier, however, was Samrang.
âPerfect time to crash his dayâjust when heâs riding high,â Yegyeol said.
âThat man is finished anyway,â Samrang replied, shaking her head as she recalled their lordâs rage. Tang Seoak had always been fated to be torn apart by the Jiaolong King someday; this incident merely shortened his span.
âI want to watch him despair up close,â Yegyeol said.
âArenât you from a Daoist sect?â Samrang asked.
Yegyeol spread his hands. âIâm Senior Brotherâs disciple.â
She flinched. He likely said it unthinkingly, yet it was the right answer, however unintended.
Shaking her head, Samrang let him goânot so much out of respect for his will as out of curiosity about his character. Either way, persuasion succeeded, and Yegyeol rejoiced.
As for the last barrierâSenior Brotherâhe didnât know. After the meeting where the Black Ghost hinted that Black Spot would handle Tang Seoak and the mercenary in its own way, Yegyeol hadnât seen him again. If Haryang had objected, Yegyeol wouldnât be standing here at all.
Since coming to the heartlands, not a day seemed to pass without relying on Senior Brotherâs grace. He had become master of Qinghaiâs largest guild thanks to Haryang; even being taken hostage by the Jiaolong King and released was due to Haryangâs network.
Yegyeol remembered his past resolve to flaunt an esperâs competence and felt conflicted. Not a word the senior espers at the Center had said was wrong. Espers were just pretty garbage.
I might be the most guide-dependent esper in history.
Red Thunder moved like literal red lightning. A few saw them pass, but with his face covered and his speed high, no one could recognize him.
Yegyeol reached the rendezvous with the Jiaolong King at the last possible moment and met Wang Hotak. Thus he could safely play the hostage, as if heâd been kept in Jiaolong hands the whole time.
âDone with your business? Then get lost,â Wang Hotak said, flapping his handânear-taunt. The Azure Corps stood their ground, calm.
Namgungâs warriors were no cowards, nor ignorant of pride. Their young lord had not yet issued an order.
âSince you count well, let me say it plainâharbor any other thoughts and youâll get whatâs coming,â Wang said, a jocular face cut by a cold smile. âThe black water of the Yangtze swallows rich and poor alike.â
Will you endure such insults? came Tang Seoakâs voice in Namgung Unâs earâjust as heâd been waiting to send it. He didnât truly burn at the provocation. He whispered that Qinghaiâs guild master and the Jiaolong King were in league.
He was certain that Mun Yegyeol, poisoned, could not walk out of the Kingâs hands so hale. Namgung might not, but the young heir would suspect Tangâs plotting. Stir a young manâs competitiveness and plunge the scene into chaosâthen plot for the aftermath.
âSend my regards to the riverâs mistress,â Un saidâand withdrew.
âMaster Namgung?â Tangâs call was thick with confusion. Un did not turn; he supported Yegyeol and led him away from the bank. Tang, masking his dismay, blended into the Azure Corps and followed. Wang Hotak knew his face, being Yeon Soshoâs man.
Only after leaving the reeds entirely did Un inspect Yegyeol closely and issue orders.
âCaptainâescort the guild master with me. Vice-captainâwatch the perimeter; see if we are followed. Third squadâmove ahead and clear the road.â
âBy your command!â
As Namgung Un examined Yegyeol, Tang Seoak strode up.
âSoâAzure Namgung has chosen to compromise with river pirates?â
âWe came to rescue a hostage,â Un answered coolly. âThat is my purpose on this river. Master Tang seems to think otherwise.â
Yegyeol started; Unâs tone toward Tang was more imperious than expected. So he wasnât wearing the heirâs title for show, he thoughtâwondering how such a âgoodâ nature, like Senior Brotherâs, would navigate this harsh Jianghu.
Tang held his tongue. No longer Tangâs field captain, not even carrying the clan headâs writâhe was not Unâs equal. He had even slipped out of Sichuan in secret. The gamble that needed success had failed. What cards remained?
His shadowed gaze slid to Yegyeol. âI am glad you return so unscathed, Master Mun.â
Yegyeol said nothingâonly trembled the hand that rested on Unâs back for support. Un gave him a questioning look.
ââŠWhat happened while you were hostage?â he asked gently.
Yegyeol bit his lip. âI⊠would like to speak only to Master Namgung.â
The voice was thin as thread.
âIs there something you cannot say before me?â Tang demandedâYegyeolâs blatant avoidance drying his lips. He had to block Mun from speaking with Un alone. In this fog where nothing could be seen, one thing was clear: the Qinghai guild master was not on Tangâs side.
âPlease⊠understandâŠâ Yegyeol murmured, tugging Unâs sleeve, feigning evasiveness. Un stepped to place himself between them.
âThe guild master needs rest,â Un said.
âThen Master Namgung should let him restâinstead of prying into enemy matters from a man who has barely caught his breath,â Tang shot back.
The air tightened with tension; it was little short of accusing Un of being blinded by merit and handling a civilian roughly. The Azure captain stepped forward, hand on hilt. Tang smiled thinly insideâhit me a few times if you like. Blur the focus first; then begin the workingsâŠ
âIt was you!â Yegyeol cried, as if he could no longer bear itâvoice ragged with pain. âOur merchant shipâcaptured whole by the Jiaolong shipâbecause of you!â
Tangâs eyes flew wide. Struck before he could ply his arts of slander and intrigue, his mind rang.
âHow could I seek your harm? Tang and Qinghai have long had friendly ties,â Tang said, aghast at finding himself accused. He kept his tone even, but seeing a bookish whelp who knew not a single form take cover behind Un to denounce him pricked his inferiority and stoked his anger.
âBut after I became guild master, I hired Yikseon Gate and Okhyeong Gate for escort!â Yegyeol blurtedâthen went pale, slapped a hand over his mouth, and hunched behind Un.
âNoâno. Forget what I said. To speak ill of a great clanâs blood on the say-so of river scumâhostage-life must have driven me mad,â he whispered, shoulders shaking with suppressed sobs, jaw set.
He looked the very picture of a young guild master determined to swallow secrets lest pressure fall on his companyâchoosing silence for Qinghaiâs sake.
âIt was I who erredâpressing him so when he has yet to steady himself,â Un said at once.
ââŠYou donât mean to believe him,â Tang asked, desperate. From the first entanglement with Mun Yegyeol, one calamity after another had frayed his nerves.
âThere will be a thorough inquiry,â Un said, holding Tangâs gaze. âI swear it.â
The words were formalârespecting an equal. Yet Tang could not rejoice. He knew Un meant to make it a matter of clan to clan.
What now?
Back in Sichuan, Tang Seoak moved swiftly. First, he shifted a portion of his guilt onto Tang Eonbo. She had long served as his hands and feetâan ideal scapegoat. In the cell, Eonboâwho had adored her cousinâlooked up at him, face vacant.
âCousin⊠no, isnât it? You would cut me off so completely?â
âIf I shoulder everything alone, I die. If we divide the burden, we both live,â he said gently, as always, coaxing her to unify testimonies and keep her mouth shut. But for once, his sweet words failed.
âCousinâŠâ
Her face crumpled, tears falling. âI have borne your burdens all alongâand now, for that, I sit in a cell. If we âboth live,â what changes? Next time the same thing happens, youâll throw me away just as easily.â
âEonbo,â he saidâgentle but stern, the tone of old. To her, it carried no weight.
âI pity you,â she said.
Tang ground his teeth. âYou, tooâdo you pity me?â
â â â