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heyy if i used Gyo-ryong it means River Dragon King
TSBIRBV Ch 90
by berryChapter 90 Heaven above, SuzhouâHangzhou below (2)
There was a place in Hangzhouâs back alleys concealed even within concealment. A man lived there, known by word of mouth for cleanly handling bodies whose origins could not be traced. He conducted his trade in secrecy, yet not a day passed without customers.
Moonlight filtering through the single window was dim, and so a candle was lit to take its place; it danced, casting long, ominous shadows upon the opposite wall.
Two among the living, and one among the dead.
Their shadows tangled as if one body, keeping vigil through the long night.
When the shaggyâhaired man spread a mat over the last corpse, he wiped the sweat from his brow.
âJinpal, thanks for calling me again today.â
After watching the porter, who hauled goods for three bronze cash, gather up the matting, the man lifted the curtain and stepped into the back room.
Todayâs work was done.
Inside, there were no windows; a dark, musty odor lingered. Perhaps its source was himself, who had been handling a corpse moments before.
By habit, he took out a bottle of liquor and raised it to his mouth, then sat against the wall. Once, he wouldnât have put to his lips such cheap rotgutânow it seared his throat.
It had been ten years since Jinpal had hidden himself in Hangzhouâs alleys to tend the dead.
All his life he had handled human bodies, but knowing nothing of how to mend them, he could not be a physicianâand if he had used the knowledge learned from his master, his tail would have been stepped on and he would have been murdered.
Thus he chose to handle not the living, but the dead.
At first, it had been hard even to earn a dayâs food for a dayâs labor. But once word spread that he could neatly put back together even bodies crushed in strife among the heterodox, he could at least drink rotgut daily.
âTo live at all, even like thisâŠâ
Eyes reddened by sleeplessness blinked a few times. The reality of still being alive drove Jinpal into insomnia. Though daily he faced the deaths of others, the fear that his turn would come would not leave him.
As he gauged when sleep might finally come, the shaggyâhaired man fainted outright.
When he opened his eyes again, his head was unnaturally clear. As Jinpal wondered why, he realized he was not alone.
âHâhâhuhâ!â
He could not even scream.
A fair, handsome man in white stood before him. If the place had not been Hangzhouâs back alleys, he might have thought him an immortal descended from some lofty height; such refinement clung to him.
This was no hallucination. In Jinpalâs visions, the other was always a low, crawling verminâor a redâeyed, ravening ghost.
âIt has been a while.â
Not the harsh, ironâtinged raspârather, a voice deep and mellow.
Even that poured terror into the shaggyâhaired man. That a being so utterly ruined in these rivers and lakes had returned in such wholeness could mean only one thing:
Rebirth and transformation.
âDo you remember this sovereign?â
âIâIâI, IâŠ!â
Struggling to push out a few words, his vision blurred with tears. Ancient fearâhis lived pastâpressed Jinpal down.
They say resentment trails a long tail that cannot be shaken even across the Central Plains. Though he had come all the way from far Xinjiang to Hangzhou, he had, in the end, been overtaken.
âMâmercyâŠâ
The shaggyâhaired man struck his head to the floor. Even as he spoke, he knew there was no such thing as mercy here.
He had watched every step of the trampling and breaking that left not a shred of goodness in that manâand at times, lent a hand.
All to forge a blade solely for the cult!
âFrom the look of you, you remember. Good.â
How could he forget?
Je Haryangâthe man who had crawled from the lowest state to become, at last, a Heavenly Demon.
Jinpal remembered the young Taoist of Kunlun. Among the prisoners seized from Kunlun, he had stood out by far.
Wei JiâMugang, proclaiming he would dedicate the glory of victory to the Heavenly Demon, conducted a splendid triumph, lining up prisoners to display his feats.
Among the Kunlun Taoistsâaged and youthfulâarrayed in a row, one man stood out.
The nape of his neck reddened by the desert sun, yet his skin pale; hands and feet bound, yet not cringingâsomehow detached. Even with his robes stained by sandstorm, blood, and sweat, he looked neatâand so the eye was drawn to him again and again.
A man in whom not even defeat could be glimpsedâlike a pine evergreen in all seasons.
If snapped clean, would he break?
âYou have quite an eye, Eighth.â
Seeing his disciple stealing glances at a prisoner, the master stroked his beard.
âThe Kunlun CloudâDragon. The finest spoils our cult has obtained this time.â
Je Haryang.
The young dragon of Kunlun, named whenever one discussed the greatest postâpurchase talent of the age and a future world number one.
âThis will be amusing for a while.â
The demonic physician, having looked down upon the prisoners, laughed and went to see the cult masterâto obtain permission to âuseâ both the Kunlun CloudâDragon and his senior brothers.
Wei JiâMugang fumed at the demonic physicianâs request for his spoils, but in the end the Heavenly Demon favored the master. Thus, Je Haryang, the Kunlun CloudâDragon, and the Kunlun martial artists were placed under the demonic physicianâs charge.
As the demonic physicianâs eighth disciple, Jinpal, tasked with tending the prisoners, gained the chance to watch Je Haryang up close.
At first glance, he was obedient. He did not refuse the demonic physicianâs harsh demands to test human limits, and even while his fellows refused meals, he doggedly took his.
It was to save his disciple, who had come upon Je Haryangâs back across the desert.
To save his dying fellow, the Kunlun CloudâDragon obeyed the demonic physicianâs orders, and with the time thus gained, circulated his qi to gather inner strength.
At first, Jinpal thought it was a frenzy to escape and watched Je Haryang closely.
âA man in shackles of black iron cannot possibly escape the Sun and Moon Divine Cult with that trickle of gathered inner force.â
He sneered inwardly. But Je Haryang poured the inner strength he had gathered into the body of the dying fellow.
No âspiritual healerâ could possibly save him; yet he fought to chain a brother whose breath faded with each day to this world.
An intriguing desperation.
While others, exhausted, slept, the man who carved his own flesh and blood to share it bore, by day, his comradesâ naked blame.
âHow can you, failing to defend Kunlun, become a running dog of the demonic cult to preserve a paltry lifeâlicking their toes?â
Even as he received raw anger whole, Je Haryang never offered a single explanation.
Jinpal found that delightful.
The next day, Jinpal received a pouch of medicine from his master.
âFeed it to the Kunlun CloudâDragon.â
âWould he not take it if simply given?â
âEighthâthink of something more amusing. I trust your wit.â
At his masterâs words, Jinpal conceived a âfun amuseÂment.â
âYou there.â
He called Je Haryang, who was returning to where the prisoners were confined.
âSince my master has his eye on you, I give you this.â
It was a rice ball wrapped in bamboo leaf.
âIt would be a pity if a special experimental subject broke too soon. It contains a tonic to bolster your strengthâeat it alone.â
With a smile upon his lips, he spoke; the other accepted silently and tucked it into his breast. As he bowed his head and withdrew, Jinpal was pleased.
For the sake of an experiment, he had been feeding him only one meal a day for several days. Je Haryang never touched the food Jinpal offered, as if hunger meant nothing.
Late that night, Je Haryang tore off small pieces of the food Jinpal had given and placed them into the mouth of his fellowâlittle more than a walking corpse.
âDisciple, try to eat this, hm?â
Even as half was spat back out and half swallowed, the Kunlun CloudâDragon never once grimaced. Perhaps due to such devoted care, the Kunlun CloudâDragonâs disciple remained bedridden, but aliveâbarely.
But now, it would change.
After eating the âspecialâ rice ball Jinpal had given, the Kunlun CloudâDragonâs disciple rose the next day, and on the second day, stood on both feet.
âSenior brother, I see Kunlun.â
And on the third day, could not open his eyes. The words he had babbled in fever on the second day became his last.
ââŠDisciple.â
Je Haryang, holding the body from which warmth had gone, murmured vacantly,
âDisciple Mun.â
Without a single tear shed, in a voice moist and trembling, Jinpal smiled sweetly.
âSenior brother. Please let him go.â
âSehyeon endured long enough.â
âSenior brotherâŠâ
Those senior and junior brothers who, terrified by being dragged to the demonic cult, had blamed Je Haryang, gathered to comfort him. The youngestâlooking one, at his side, wept torrents of tears that Je Haryang could not shed.
Je Haryang was the first to gather himself. Approaching Jinpal, he bowed his head.
âPleaseâsee that this child can be buried.â
âThat is not for me to decide.â
The master had said he wished to make a jiangshi.
To that offhanded addendum, Je Haryang knelt.
âPlease. I beg youâsir.â
âI will consider it.â
With that bit of swagger, he left the prison. He saw the senior brothers swarming to Je Haryangâs side.
âRise, senior brother,â âThe ground is cold,â âYou must find strength,â âAt least Disciple Munâs soul will return to Kunlun.â
Hearing their soft murmurings, Jinpalâs lips curled.
âAs if.â
They were the very ones who, desperate to live, terrified by being dragged to the demonic cult, had eyed Je Haryangâwho seemed specially treatedâwith suspicion and blame. Yet when the disciple for whom the Kunlun CloudâDragon alone had struggled died, only then did they feel guiltâhow loathsome!
Still, this would suffice to fulfil the masterâs command. Light of heart, Jinpal sought the demonic physician.
ââŠNow, if we tell the subject what was in that rice ball, guilt will devour him. He will neither discard it, nor give it to another.â
As he wrote for a while in his journal, the demonic physician spoke without turning.
âYou sound most entertained.â
Jinpal did not deny it.
So what if he was the greatest among the postâpurchase talents of the age, spoken of as a future world number one?
Here he was, crawling on the ground, begging for mercy beneath the feet of the demonic physicianâs eighth discipleânothing at all.
âThe Kunlun CloudâDragon already knew his disciple would die. He simply could not let go; what he feels now is only the residue of what he could not relinquish.â
The master seemed not especially moved.
âEighth, watch what your master does.â
The demonic physicianâs whisper left a baleful aftertaste.
âIt will surely be amusing.â