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heyy if i used Gyo-ryong it means River Dragon King
TSBIRBV Ch 98
by berryChapter 98 Heaven above, SuzhouâHangzhou below (10)
âDid⊠I do well?â
Once Zhang Qi withdrew, Yegyeol pressed close to Haryang and asked. Taking the discipleâs shoulderâhis signal that the other partyâs presence had recededâHaryang this time stroked his hair and answered,
âPerfectly.â
Beaming at Haryangâs praise, Yegyeol felt the same firstâtime thrill as ever.
âNow the merchant will gather the workshop artisans to pry out their dyeing methods.â
âAnd thatâs when we swoop in and find those Zhang Qi siphoned away.â
The backâandâforth looked for all the world like a seniorâjunior con ring.
If Kunlunâs founding investigator knew, heâd beat the ground and wailâbut what could be done?
One had been expelled; the other had been willingly âkidnapped.â
âAmong them, we ask the one tied to Seonye Workshop if anyone knows Old Huang, and itâs done.â
âRight.â
Haryang smiled ambiguously. His plan did not end at merely locating the workers Zhang Qi held; there was no need for Yegyeol to know that.
âFeels like itâll go well.â
Zhang Qiâs hasty retreat, his efforts to keep currying favor even under such highâhanded treatmentânothing suggested an unexpected turn. Only one element of the plan dissatisfied Yegyeol.
âStillâsenior brother only a chief steward? Canât we switch back even now?â
Before meeting Crooked Ear, Haryang had told Yegyeol that he must meet as master of Cheonghae.
Naturally, Yegyeol had objected. With Je Haryang, the true master of Cheonghae, present, why step forward himself?
Also, he thought Zhang Qi might recognize him. With the jump across worlds, Yegyeolâs face was closer to his boyhood.
It wasnât that Crooked Ear frightened him now. He only worried that he might ruin Haryangâs plan.
âIf Iâm the master, then what will senior brother do?â
âCall me the steward.â
Until stepping into that meeting, Yegyeol had begged him to change his mind; Haryang would not bend.
No matter how one looked at it, it was odd. What master keeps a chief steward like Je Haryang?
As expected, Crooked Ear addressed Haryang as âmaster.â
Yegyeol had thought to keep quietâgood timingâbut Haryang, showing displeasure, put him forward, defeating his aim.
A pity.
âNo.â
Haryang was firm. With the time they had shared, Yegyeol knew he would not retreat.
âBut hearing honorifics from senior brother⊠feels strange.â
In truth, âfeels strangeâ barely covered it; it wasnât some cute sensation. And he could hardly say it reminded him of the Black Ghost.
Heâd liked the Black Ghostâs rough voice, but hearing respectful speech in Haryangâs own smooth tone kept pulling his thoughts down dark paths.
It wasnât hard to insert senior brother into those nights spent with a blindfold. The flushed face, the ragged breathsârecalling them felt like sacrilege.
Having dealt with the Black Ghost, he hadnât realized what it would feel like to profane one heâd always looked up to.
And Je Haryang was even his benefactor.
He felt like irredeemable trash. Being trash himself didnât matter; but to wrap it up and present it to his guideâdizzying.
âSenior brother himself brazenly breaks the strictures, then faces me with serenityâŠâ
A low chuckle from Haryangâs lips shook Yegyeol from his thoughts.
âRegrettably, thatâs something the disciple must endure.â
Though he spoke as if sorry, a quiet smile glinted in his eyes.
The Black Ghostâs laughâits living vibration along his body, that heavy scent that muddled his headâflashed up, and Yegyeol started.
âPerhaps a guileless esper playing the con was overreach.â
Like many who meet a guide, his selfâawareness was a wreck; swallowing his burning regret, Yegyeol reminded himself this was no time to drift.
Fearing he might lose his last thread of reason and do something to his senior brother, he hastily changed the subject.
âCrooked Ear didnât recognize me.â
In his mind, Crooked Ear was always immense.
When he was powerless, Crooked Ear and Pit Viper loomedâshaking down children as they threatened.
Even reborn, even awakened as an esper, past memory could not be overlaid anew; Yegyeol had feared Crooked Ear without thinking.
If he ran, theyâd chase him anywhere in the Central Plains and cut his legs, his arms, his nose, his earsâso theyâd said. If a beggar dared make a family, theyâd belong to the Red Blood Sect.
He could hear the snigger: heâd make three generations beg.
The day he left Hangzhou following a beggar from the Beggar Sect, he kept looking back, thinking Pit Viper or Crooked Ear might be pursuing.
The old Beggar Sect man asked if he had regretsâif he wanted to go back.
Shaking his head, Yegyeol said he feared the heterodox martial men whoâd used him would chase him. The old man was kind to the child, but Yegyeol didnât sleep easy a single day until Kunlun.
Climbing the snowy mountainâuntil he met Je Haryangâfear clung to his heels.
Reborn, he had less time to shed that fear than to despair at a world without Je Haryang.
And now, Yegyeol faced the fear of childhood.
Yet, to his surprise, the Crooked Ear he met againâZhang Qiâwas not so huge.
A wellâfleshed man where once thereâd been a gaunt, hard, sharp oneâbowing to Yegyeol, shocked at offending the Cheonghae master, fawning and rubbing his palms.
âLike a fly.â
At that idle observation, Yegyeol realized his fear had vanished.
He also realized heâd been tense ever since witnessing Seonye Workshopâs ruin. From the moment he saw it, heâd wanted to run.
An urge beyond rational explanation. He was now an Sâclass esper with a guide; without laying a hand on him, he could fry Crooked Ear like a bug.
Cleanup would be troublesomeâbut there was BamBam, too.
Still, he was afraid. Afraid Je Haryang would be dragged into his misfortune, he had drawn the conclusion to flee.
âDid senior brother know?â
His gaze settled on Haryang.
Those eyes were calm and composed. He seemed to see right through every impression and change within Yegyeol.
âHumans are easily fooled. If they must look up at what they always looked down upon, they fail to recognize it.â
âTruly, your forethought runs deep. This disciple doesnât know how to keep pace.â
Seizing the moment, Yegyeol stuffed in flattery as he brightened his eyes.
âForethought.â
Haryang let out a low laugh.
âIn truth, I considered none of that.â
ââŠPardon?â
Startled, Yegyeol looked at him.
âThis elder brother is petty; I simply didnât want to see my disciple bow his head to such vermin.â
If he failed to recognize himâgood; if he did, that had its own meaning.
At the tender whisper, Yegyeol felt faint.
âEven if Iâd been recognized⊠still all right?â
âDid I not promise to grant whatever you wish? There is no need to bow to the man because your identity must not be exposed. Not for any reason.â
Only now did Yegyeol grasp the cause of his senior brotherâs inscrutable behavior; the corner of his eye trembled.
Haryang was angry at the injustice Yegyeol had once taken for granted. He disliked even that Yegyeol had grown inured to it.
Yegyeol felt strange.
âFor just that⊠you would risk the plan going awryâŠâ
To him, bowing to Crooked Ear had been too natural; it aroused neither shame nor anger.
Yet Je Haryang minded even that.
âI⊠ah, IâŠâ
Yegyeolâs words broke off. An unnameable feeling battered his chest, muddled his head. Unconsciously tightening, then releasing his grip on Je Haryangâs hand, he stole a glance at him.
âMadâ! How can one grip a guide with esper strength!â
But there was no trace of pain or agitation on Haryangâs face. The gentle expressionâthe soft, kindly gaze that was always his when he looked at Yegyeolâtouched his cheek.
Heâd never thought affection had a visible shape, but just now, it felt as if it wore his senior brotherâs face.
âI donât know why senior brother is so good to me.â
Pure honesty flowed from Yegyeolâs lips.
Haryang answered as if heâd been waiting.
âYou saved my life, didnât you.â
He knew well it could not be explained by that alone.
Only, that was all the excuse Haryang could offer. All elseâmotive and feelingâwas black and murky, not fit to be set before his disciple.
âBy that reckoning, you have already saved my life. Do you remember?â
Yegyeol reached back to a story very far away.
â
An old saying goes: Heaven above, Suzhou and Hangzhou below.
If there is paradise in heaven, there are Suzhou and Hangzhou on earth; so was Hangzhou called another world within the Central Plains.
And yet, beneath those splendid eaves, there were those who starved to death.