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heyy if i used Gyo-ryong it means River Dragon King
TSBIRBV Ch 99
by berryChapter 99 Heaven above, SuzhouâHangzhou below (11)
It was a rainy day. With no passersby, there was no begging to be done, and the quota went unmet.
On that particular day, Crooked Earâs mood was foul. Rainy days, heâd say, made the ear sliced off by some orthodox âheroâ ache.
Beaten until the dust all but rose, Yegyeol fled while Pit Viper tried to restrain Crooked Ear. He had no intention of dying as the target of some heterodox thugâs temper.
âOn a day like this, theyâd beat me even if I paid upâŠâ
When their mood soured, they declared they needed an example and took to violence against the children. However frightening and hateful, there was no escape. Even if he left Red Bloodâs turf, some other heterodox would be waiting for him. With levies owed them, there was no way to save money.
Yegyeol was always hungry. Even if he tried to put aside an emergency coin to buy food, it was impossibleâthe glares said the money wasnât begged for but picked from pockets.
At times, the ordinary common folk were more cruel than the heterodox fighters. The heterodox, needing to use children like Yegyeol, at least dealt with him, but the ordinary avoided beggars like him. They resented the nuisance, thinking he might cling.
âWhat should I do?â
If he grew older like this, even living off alms would end. Quickâwitted and nimble even at a young age, he was precisely the sort Pit Viper meant to turn into a pickpocket. If he ran, the heterodox networks of Hangzhou would ensure he was caught again; they would tally food and bed as debt and collar him for life.
Thus he would run errands for such trash and, before twenty, die in a backâalley brawl.
That was the fate given this boy.
The sound of rain drummed like tinnitus at his ears. Pain was already far away.
More vivid than pain was weariness. He was boneâdeep weary.
It was wearying to rub the dented edge of the coppers heâd begged and calculate whether he might avoid a beating today; wearying to be asked by strangers where his parents were; wearying to be offered leftovers and asked if he wouldnât join the Hao information network; wearying that even if he filled his belly somehow, hunger would return.
He was so tiredâand the thought that tomorrow would come anyway was wearying.
Then came the plink of a raindrop bounding off.
He lifted his head at the anomaly and saw a young lord. Whether he knew or cared that his costly silks were getting soaked, the boy tilted a paper umbrella over Yegyeol.
âItâs rainingâwhat are you doing here?â
Even in youth, his carriage was impeccably proper, his features refinedâhe would be handsome in time.
âSheltering from the rain.â
âThe eaves are narrow; youâre getting soaked.â
âNever mind meâgo on your way.â
âYour face is flushed. Do you have a fever? It wonât take long; come with me to see a physician.â
âI said⊠Iâm fine.â
Yegyeol made a deliberately fierce face. Pit Viper would sometimes say the missing children had been seized and sold by traffickersâthat they would be slaves for life, or end up on the tables of wealthy perverts.
He didnât believe everything the man said. But since the vanished never returned, Yegyeol distrusted strangers.
âThough⊠it does feel like I have a fever.â
In a downpour, the rain had sounded distantâwas that not mere tinnitus, but the herald of high fever?
Resigned to death, Yegyeol buried his face in his knees and curled up.
He knew he should move to where the rain was lighter, where it was dry and warm, but other children had surely taken the good spots.
More than anything, he had no strength to move.
âThat wonât do.â
The young lord scooped Yegyeol up.
âAâare you mad! Put me down! Down!â
His voice was loud, but his struggles were weak. With the scrape of nails, a line scored the boyâs cheek. Startled, Yegyeol stopped resisting; the young lord, unfazed by pain or displeasure, gripped him more firmly.
âI wonât be able to hold the umbrella⊠Weâll go quicklyâbear with it a little.â
Hunched to shield Yegyeol as much as possible, he ran through the rain.
He was fast. Faster than the nimblest alley rat. The way he lifted Yegyeol with those armsâclearly, he had learned martial arts.
âHow did someone like this end up in a back alley?â
Yegyeol, forgetting his weariness, looked up at the question rising in him; but he could find no answer in the face set straight ahead.
They entered an inn so large Yegyeol could never have dreamed of it. A server rushed out and hurried the boy to a side building.
âMy goodness, young masterâhow did you get so drenched?â
A middleâaged woman ran out and rubbed the boyâs face roughly with her own garment.
âMadam prepared rainâclothes, and yet you left with just a paper umbrellaâ!â
âNurse. Make up the bed and warm the room. Then bring a physician.â
âBut, young master, where did you pick up such a smeââ
âNurse.â
He cut her off, firm.
âHave you brought back a child?â
She was likely going to say he stank. Yegyeol took no wound. Such words were nothing new.
But that a boy heâd never met would take his side and scold her felt strange.
âFetch the physician first.â
âRight away. Oh, if the madam hearsâŠâ
Muttering, she rushed out.
Dumped on the bed, Yegyeol looked around.
It was another world. Whether it was feverish hallucination, or truly the most expensive, splendid things heâd ever seenâhe couldnât tell.
As he flopped down, dizzy, the young lord wiped his face with a hot wet cloth brought from somewhere. The hands were clumsy to the point of comedy. But perhaps from the constant rain, his body was shaking, and even that bit of warmth was welcome.
Having managed to wipe his face, the young lord asked,
âWhat is your name?â
âWhat do you want with it?â
The surly tone jumped out. He knew standing on ceremony in some unknown young lordâs quarters wouldnât help, but this was too important to Yegyeol.
Pity is warm and gentle, and easy to get drunk on. But if pity had weight, it was less than a featherâs. One must not give meaning or hope to a feeling given as easily as it is withdrawn.
Living onâleft in that distance aloneâwas Yegyeolâs burden.
He was a fineâbred young lord. So even if heâd been shocked by a beggar brat and brought him here, he wouldnât take responsibility for long.
âI wish to know what to call you.â
The childâsoothing tone rankled.
âGutter rat. Beggar brat. Ragamuffin. Blackâhaired beast. Halfâwit. Thieving trash.â
The more Yegyeol reeled off, the more the otherâs face hardened.
âCall me whatever you like.â
That should quiet him, he thought, smirking. But the other was a tougher opponent than heâd thought.
The boy took Yegyeolâs hand and held it gently. There were scratches everywhere; the nails were blackâyet he did not hesitate.
Soft.
âMy name is Haryang.â
Haryang?
He didnât know the meaning, but it suited the upright young lord.
âI donât know what a good name isâwould it be all right if I call you Aso for a time? It means âlittle one.ââ
Whoâs little?
Yegyeol disliked being small for his ageâpoor food and sleep had stunted him. Pit Viper would intentionally starve children, saying small bodies moved more nimbly.
âMun Yegyeol.â
He blurted it outâit was too late to take back. Haryang smiled brightly, not in the least upset by the crooked answer.
âMun YegyeolâYegyeol, is it.â
âWhat a strange young lord,â thought Yegyeol.
A pleasant scent came from him, so close.
âWhat is that smell?â
It was unlike the stink of Hangzhouâs alleys, the musk drifting from brothels, or the reek of wine and blood from Crooked Ear and Pit Viper.
Calm and kindâperhaps the scent of sunlight. A little cool, and somehow sparkling.
To hide the ticklish thought, Yegyeol lowered his eyes and shut his mouth.
âItâs a very good name. Do you remember who gave it to you?â
He didnât ask if it was the parents; asking whether he remembered who had given itâthat pleased Yegyeol, and he answered docilely,
âAn old man.â
Under a bridge, heâd met an old man who gave him a name.
Claiming he could read the heavens, the man called the beggar boy Mun Yegyeol.
âIs that my name?â
âYes. In a manner of speaking.â
Sensing instinctively that this was something even Crooked Ear and Pit Viper could not take, the boy made that name his own.
This was the first time heâd told another. If he told, heâd be ridiculed for a parentless orphan daring to give three characters like he was somebody.
But the young lord called Haryang did not seem the sort. That was a relief.
âA man to be thanked.â
Not knowing how to respond, Yegyeol glanced aside.
Right then, the nurse returned with a physician.
âYoung master, Iâve brought the physician.â
Footnotes
- Red Blood Sect and heterodox networks: In wuxia settings, heterodox gangs (sapa) run territorial, exploitative systemsâlevies, child exploitation, coercionâforming informal âtaxâ regimes in backstreets.