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heyy if i used Gyo-ryong it means River Dragon King
TSBIRBV Ch 89
by berryChapter 89 Heaven above, SuzhouâHangzhou below (1)
âTruly, nothing here has changed.â
At last, Red Thunder arrived in Hangzhou. Held in Haryangâs arms, Yegyeol glanced about.
A water city with a mood unlike Cheonghae or Sichuan, it dazzled as brightly as Yegyeolâs own childhood. Yet this city was at its most beautiful at night.
Swallowing a feeling too prickly to call nostalgia, Yegyeol surveyed the surroundings. True to a city famed for textiles, the colors and patterns of passersbyâs garments were especially eye-catching.
âWould the dyeing workshops still be here?â
There had been a certain heterodox gang that had taken cut-money from a begging child like Yegyeol back then, and whenever they gave chase, heâd hide amidst those bolts of cloth.
The sight of cloths in all colors rippling in the wind had been undeniably pleasing. But Yegyeol looked not to the sky, but down at the ground.
For things fair and lovely, soft and kind, were not his to claim.
Yet sometimes, when the sun was very fine, the light filtering through the cloth made colored shadows on the ground.
There were moments that were beautiful, unawares.
âGyeol?â
Startled by Haryangâs call, Yegyeol turned back to him.
âYes?â
He must have sounded odd, but his senior brother, without smiling, said calmly,
âShall we go straight to the lodging and unpack? Then go buy clothes.â
âAll right.â
Stray thoughts scattered easily.
Guiding Red Thunder, Haryang headed for a manor a little way off from Hangzhouâs center. At first, Yegyeol had thought theyâd go to an inn; before he knew it, they had left the noisy market far behind.
With high walls and quiet surroundings, this was clearly a residential area.
âThereâs a manor here too?â
He asked Haryang, who handed Red Thunderâs reins to the steward with a faintly reluctant tone. Haryang ahâd and nodded.
âComing for rest, we couldnât very well stay in a bustling place, so I procured something separate.â
In the Kunlun days, Je Haryang had seemed such a born ascetic that one could never have guessed he was from a prosperous house.
He hand-washed the few sets of robes he had and wore them neat, and used a sword inherited from the sect head.
To Yegyeol, who remembered that frugal senior brother, the man before him became more astonishing with every encounter.
âSenior brother⊠Iâll earn a lot.â
Perhaps doublingâno, triplingâcurrent production of cinnabar-red wood would do.
While Yegyeol was making meticulous calculations, Haryang burst out laughing.
âYou once said youâd make Cheonghae one of the Three Great Trading Houses of the Central Plains, didnât you? And even gift me a ship.â
His senior brotherâs eyes curved exquisitely.
âIâm very much looking forward to it.â
Once back, they would make refined-soaked wood and sell it immediately.
Yegyeol resolved this, checking he wasnât getting a nosebleed.
Even the famed âone glance topples a cityâ beauties would be outshone by that smile.
âSince youâve trusted and entrusted me, there will be no disappointment.â
Forcing his voice even, Yegyeol boasted.
Thinking back, from the moment they set out, his senior brotherâs mood had seemed particularly good. Yegyeolâs was the same, so he hadnât probed.
âDonât overdo it. If you stayed only in Sichuan, Gyeol, I would feel very lonely.â
âWho in the world are you competing withâŠâ
He knew full well he spoke so blithely to conceal that other identity of the Black Ghost. And yet to Yegyeolâs ears, it sounded as though, being the Black Ghost himself, he was jealous of the Black Ghost, and thus spoke.
âIf interpretations run so far afield, thatâs troublesome.â
Tormented by fantasies growing wilfully in all directions, Yegyeol suffered. He had barely wound halfway around his senior brother; it would be bad to lose judgment already.
This was not a sprint but a marathon. He had only just cleared the hurdle of âdo not break the sect-brother bond.â
âEven after a decade and more returning to the Kunlun Sect, I kept thinking of senior brother.â
All his life, the reason Yegyeol had longed for Kunlun had been to prove that Je Haryangâs existence was there.
There had been a time when he seriously worried, What if this is a hallucination conjured by a mind broken by awakening? So he hunted down every scrap on Mount Kunlunâand even leafed through martial novels.
Even knowing those around him thought him mad, he could not give up. Reality lapped up to his chin; standing on tiptoe, he needed somethingâanythingâto cling to.
Perhaps that was why he longed for senior brother beyond need, and embellished him until he nearly went mad.
If he could dream without end, the protagonist of that dream would surely be Je Haryang.
Lowering his eyes, Yegyeol spoke quietly.
âSo I will always return to senior brotherâs side.â
âI seeâŠâ
Sweeping back Yegyeolâs fallen hair, Haryang whispered,
âI never did well by you, and yet you followed me strangely.â
âHow can you say you never did well? Senior brotherââ
Yegyeol moved to protest, but Haryang hadnât finished.
âI am still lacking. To return what I have received from you, I am far too lacking.â
âPlease donât only say âtoo lacking.ââ
Reaching out, Yegyeol drew Je Haryangâs wrist closer. Haryang yielded, and Yegyeol set his hand upon his chest.
âYouâre alive. I hear your heart, and itâs warm⊠right?â
âYes.â
âYet you keep trying to fill me to overflowing, so it feels like I receive far more than I give.â
Haryang lowered his gaze. He said not a word, but his face looked displeased.
Yegyeol took a small delight in realizing he could now read some of his senior brotherâs expressions.
If they spent more time together, longer and more often, he would surely learn more.
At the thought, his chest swelled.
âOur views are precisely opposed.â
âThen we must narrow the gap, slowly.â
At Yegyeolâs grin, Haryang reached out unthinkingly and ruffled his hair.
Like treating a younger sibling, the touch was dearly affectionate, and though Yegyeol swallowed a grumble, he yielded docilely.
âWhen will you start to find me uncomfortableâŠâ
He wished heâd be more self-conscious, and find him more daunting than now.
Whatever his inner thoughts, Yegyeol lowered his eyes beneath the mask of a meek disciple.
Satisfied with how thoroughly he had mussed his discipleâs hair, Haryang changed the subject.
âTruth is, this manor has a fine bathhouse. I hear the house was built where a hot spring rises.â
âTruly a water city,â Yegyeol murmured, nodding.
He had spent his childhood in Hangzhou, but had never seen a hot spring; curiosity stirred.
âShall we go in together?â
Perhaps for that reason, when Haryang made such a suggestion, he didnât understand for a moment.
âNo. Iâm fine.â
Yegyeol spoke before he could think. His brain didnât have time to processâhis instincts answered.
He worried the refusal had been too blunt, but he truly had no confidence he could keep his wits if he shared a bath with his senior brother.
âIâve been clinging to Red Thunderâs back for days; Iâm a bit tired. Iâll wash lightly and turn in early tonight.â
Still, to avoid giving his senior brother room to misunderstand, he rattled it out in one breath. His disciple having refused decisively, Haryang looked regretful.
âMy, myâyou must be very tired. Then another timeâŠâ
âRest well, too, senior brother!â
Half-bowing, half-not, Yegyeol bolted past him.
There is one thing an esper must never trust in life.
That is oneâs own reason when facing oneâs guide.
As his disciple fled the scene, Haryang looked down at his hands.
âToo impulsive.â
Hearing his disciple say he would not leave, that they should close the gap slowly, he had moved without thinking. Only at the last instant did he realize, and deliberately limited himself to mussing Yegyeolâs hair.
Knowing why Yegyeol had kept his distance, he had prattled about hot springs for that very reason.
Annoyed by the thought that, while he was in Hangzhou, his disciple might circle Sichuan waiting for the Black Ghost, he had brought him hereâonly to do something that might make Yegyeol avoid him in the days to come.
It was foolish in the extreme.
âIt feels like being back in childhood.â
He liked the way his disciple looked up to him, and so strove to look good. Haryang had never known what a young Yegyeol could possibly give up for him. He had been only a foolish boy drunk on a passing fancy.
Haryangâs luck had been good; Yegyeolâs had been abysmalâthat they met at that time.
Years passed; Haryang forgot that boy. Yet upon meeting Yegyeol, the past became the present too easily and swayed him.
Always watching his disciple; smiling more; and doing things outside the bounds of what he could controlâthese all shared the same grain.
âYour Excellency of the Pavilion, I greet the sky.â
The steward who had, with a gentle face, introduced the manor, appeared before Haryang now alone. The middle-aged man knelt, looking like an emotionless puppet.
âWhere is Yang?â
Despite the hair-raising nature of it, no agitation touched Haryangâs voice.
âHe works as an undertaker in Hangzhouâs back alleys. A child who visited as a patient confirmed the hidden mark on his wrist.â
âGood. Well done.â
Those taught by the demonic physician were all of them vicious. Even when he thought he had killed them all, somewhere another lived.
In recent years, Haryang had not slackened in uprooting the manâs roots, and the garden he cultivated was now clean.
Only, this one had fled the demonic physicianâs service while the man still lived; only recently had he been able to find his location.
âShall I bring him?â
âNo.â
A chilly curve touched Haryangâs lips.
âI shall go myself.â
The night was far too long to be spent listening to the sorrows of a boy who had been nothing if not frail.
Footnotes
- âHeaven above, SuzhouâHangzhou belowâ: A famed saying praising Suzhou and Hangzhou as earthly paradises; frames Hangzhouâs allure as a water city.