Translator: FenrirTL
Editor/Quality Checker: Saphartlantis
Murim Term Consultant: Kopke
========================
Chapter 349: I Never Gave Permission.
Bih Sa-in stepped into the long corridor.
On either side of the path leading to the Unorthodox Alliance Leaderâs Hall, steel wolves stood as though they might pounce at any moment.
Whenever one passed through this corridor, a peculiar, stifling kind of aura could be felt.
Was that why?
There was a saying passed down that when an intruder entered, those steel wolves would move, tearing into the enemyâs throat until their own bodies were shredded to piecesâand maybe, just maybe, that saying might actually be true. 1
After passing through the corridor and opening the large doors, Bih Sa-in stepped inside to see a man standing at the far end of the Alliance Leaderâs Hall, his back turned. His physique was ordinary. Neither thin nor fat, his back looked like someone you could find anywhere in the markets.
But Bih Sa-in knew. That it was a back unlike any other in the entire martial world.
Unorthodox Alliance Leader Baek Jagang.
The number one master of the Unorthodox Alliance, and the absolute ruler of the unorthodox martial world.
Bih Sa-in was Baek Jagangâs disciple. His master had no blood relatives. The reason was simple: family weakens the heart. In other words, he believed his heart should remain unweakened. 2
Bih Sa-in, tense, walked down to the bottom of the steps.
As always, standing before the Alliance Leader made oneâs heart shrink and tense up.
âIt feels like itâs going to rain.â
Baek Jagangâs voice echoed throughout the Alliance Leaderâs Hall. He possessed a deep, resonant voice.
âItâll be the first rain of the winter, then.â
Normally, Bih Sa-in wouldâve responded stiffly with a âIâve returned.â But today, he answered the Alliance Leaderâs remark instead.
Though he didnât want to admit it, this was because of Geom Mugeukâs influence. Taking his advice to truly observe people, he had resolved to see the Alliance Leader differently from now on.
A different response drew out another different response.
âCome up here.â
Bih Sa-in climbed the steps and walked to where the Unorthodox Alliance Leader stood. It was his first time being summoned to this spot, where he could look down at the entire main division at a glance.
Only after standing next to him did he offer a formal greeting.
âIâve returned, my lord.â
Baek Jagang slowly turned his head to look at Bih Sa-in.
His eyes were as small as buttonholes. Truly, eyes so small they looked like mere dots. Bih Sa-in occasionally wondered whether those eyes might suddenly open wide one day. Maybe they were hidden. Thatâs how small they were.
Because of that, it was difficult to read his emotions through his eyesâbut conversely, the Alliance Leader could see straight into someoneâs heart with those tiny eyes.
âYou took care of the Black Snake Gang?â
But his voiceâwas better than anyone elseâs. Every time Bih Sa-in heard it, he wished he had a voice like that.
âYes, I eliminated the Black Snake Gang Leader and some of their leadership.â
âThe reason?â
What should I say?
If I were to answer honestly, I would have said this: Because the Black Snake Gang kidnapped children and committed atrocities.
But that wasnât the correct answer. Bih Sa-in might not have fully understood what kind of person the Unorthodox Alliance Leader truly was just yet, but at the very least, he knew that wasnât the right answer.
Bih Sa-in said what he believed was the correct response.
âHe acted arrogantly.â
Baek Jagang burst into loud laughter as even the tiny slits that were his eyes vanished completely. Though his eyes were small, his mouth was disproportionately large. So whenever he laughed heartily like this, it always gave the impression of a truly loud laugh.
Even if the Alliance Leader knew why he had really taken care of them, the answer had to be phrased this way. That was just the kind of man his master was.
âNow that things have reached this point, I plan to monitor external public opinion and gradually absorb the Black Snake Gang.â
Baek Jagang showed a satisfied expression. He was someone who would do whatever it took to strengthen the Unorthodox Alliance. And the root of that reason lay in the Demonic Cult.
âGeom Woojin will undoubtedly start a war to unify the martial world. We must prepare for that day.â 3
He was convinced that the Heavenly Demon of this generation would wage war.
âWhen that war begins, weâll be the first ones he strikes.â
âWhy us and not the Martial Alliance?â
âBecause the Martial Alliance wonât get involved in that fight.â
Baek Jagang predicted the Martial Allianceâs response like this:
âTheyâll never step in, hoping both we and the Demonic Cult destroy each other. Even if they wanted to help, do you really think theyâd join hands with us?â
The decision to support the unorthodox sects would draw fierce opposition from countless orthodox elders, and even if against all expectations, Jin Paecheon really wanted it, forcing it through wouldnât be easy.
âEven knowing that the loss of lips leads to cold teeth, theyâll still never help us. Even after all their teeth are pulled, theyâll mumble about negotiation with nothing but gums left.â
Hate was hateâbut Baek Jagangâs judgment remained cold and clear.
âIf, by any chance, war breaks out between the Demonic Cult and the Martial Alliance, we must support the Martial Alliance. The Demonic Cult will try to devour the martial world whole. The same applies for when you become the Alliance Leader.â
Thatâs how much Baek Jagang regarded the Heavenly Demon Divine Cultâand Geom Woojinâas a threat.
Bih Sa-in believed that the strength of the Alliance Leader lay in never clinging to useless pride. The Alliance Leader never overestimated the Unorthodox Allianceâs power. On the contrary, he proceeded with everything based on the premise that they were one step below both the Demonic Cult and the Martial Alliance. Bih Sa-in believed the strength of the current Unorthodox Alliance stemmed from the Alliance Leaderâs thoroughly realistic view. 4
âIâll bear it in mind.â
You donât need to worry about when I become the Alliance Leader. There wonât be a war in our generation. The problem is in this era, not the next.
Baek Jagang might have had a firm grip on reality, but Bih Sa-in also knewâknew that he too dreamed of unifying the martial world. He had never once said it aloud, but it was something you could sense.
That with those tiny eyes, he wasnât merely looking down at the Unorthodox Allianceâbut at the entire martial world. That he was biding his time, holding back again and again, for that one decisive strike. 5
âThereâs something Iâd like to ask.â
To handle this incident, Bih Sa-in had chosen the method of a frontal breakthrough.
âIs there a secret organization being raised within the main allianceâone I donât know about?â
âAnd why are you asking that?â
âI discovered that the Black Snake Gang had supplied kidnapped children to the main alliance through the Flowing Sword Gate. If this organization wasnât sanctioned by the main alliance, then someone must be fostering a private organization in secret.â
It was a serious matterâpossibly even graveâbut Baek Jagang didnât show any particular reaction. He simply stared at Bih Sa-in in silence.
âIf thatâs true, then this matter canât just be overlooked.â
Bih Sa-in didnât avoid the intense aura radiating from those tiny eyes of the Alliance Leader. There was no need to fear. He was the Alliance Leader, and he was his successor. In the past, he might not have dared to meet his gaze, but now, he received it calmly, as much as he could.
âYouâve changed lately.â
Bih Sa-in made no effort to hide his transformation. There were exactly two people in this world before whom he could not conceal his heartâGeom Mugeuk and the Alliance Leader before him.
âI left the alliance this time and met the Young Leader of the Demonic Cult and the Demon-Slaying Brigade Leader. They too are growing day by day. If I donât want to fall behind, I have to keep pushing myself.â
Was it that the Alliance Leader was pleased with how confidently he spoke? A wide smile spread across his large mouth.
Baek Jagangâs gaze turned once more to the window. As he stared at the thickening storm clouds, he finally answered the first question.
âI never gave permission for such an organization.â 6
* Â Â Â Â * Â Â Â Â *
Swaaaaaa!
Geom Mugeuk and Pyo Gigwang were hiding in the brush, watching the downpour. They had been fleeing the assassins in a mad rush and had taken a brief moment to catch their breath.
âYouâre more skilled than I expected.â
âDidnât I tell you? I said Iâd protect you.â
Heâd assumed it was just bold confidenceâbut clearly, it wasnât just that.
âIâm someone who protects the Young Leader. I donât go down easily to assassins.â
At the mention of âassassins,â something Geom Mugeuk had said earlier came to Pyo Gigwangâs mind.
âWhat kind of Alliance sends hired assassins after their own subordinates just for doing what they were told? In this filthy situation, where could you find room for loyalty?
Sensing that Pyo Gigwangâs heart was wavering, Geom Mugeuk seized the moment.
âDid he threaten to kill you if you didnât keep the secret?â
Pyo Gigwang slowly shook his head. That was the part that hurt the most. He was being treated like dog dung on the roadside.
âForgive my boldness, but I think I can guess why he chose you, Division Leader.â
âWhy?â
âBecause any normal person wouldâve jumped up in rageâbut you, Division Leader, you accepted this extermination attempt like it was expected. That man knew. He knew how someone buried in deep despair would react in this kind of situation.â 7
If thatâs why he had chosen him?
Pyo Gigwangâs face flushed hot. It was humiliatingâdeeply insulting to his pride.
At that moment, Geom Mugeuk signaled with a quiet âshhâ and then thrust his sword into the dense brush behind Pyo Gigwang.
With a short scream, a corpse fell forward.
âAn entire assassin unit came. Itâs probably because they realized you made contact with the Young Leader. Even if the Young Leader assigned a few escorts to you, the intention was clearâthey were determined to eliminate you.â
In other words, the mastermind was that desperate. The reason they didnât move in person was likely to avoid exposure. No matter how thoroughly they interrogate this assassin unit, they wouldnât find any trace of him.
âEven though an entire organization was mobilized, they still couldnât kill me, whom youâre guarding alone.â
âThatâs one way to put it. Letâs go. We need to move.â
The two of them ran once more along the mountain path.
More assassins rushed them. Pyo Gigwang had no idea, but they werenât running away.
Geom Mugeuk was deliberately tracking down the assassins and eliminating them. 8
These killers had been trained solely to take lives. They knew no fear.
But no amount of courage could bridge the vast gap in skillâgreater than the distance between heaven and earth. No surprise attack could land.
The way Geom Mugeuk dealt with the assassins was so plain, so effortless, that to Pyo Gigwang, it made the assassins seem unimpressive by comparison.
Heâs swinging so lightlyâhow are they not dodging that? Did an assassin really let a simple kick dislocate his jaw?
But when they turned their murderous intent toward him, their ferocity always brought the same cry to his mind:
âIâm really going to die this time!â
Who knew how many times he had screamed that inside?
And then, it happened again.
Pook!
A sword thrust into view before Pyo Gigwangâs eyes. Blood dripped from its tip.
It wasnât the assassinâs blade. It was Geom Mugeukâs sword, having pierced the assassinâs skull from behind.
It looked like he had thrown the sword in desperation to land the killâbut in truth, it was a flawless display of superior flying sword technique. 9
âAre you all right?â
âIâm fine.â
âI believe thatâs the last of the assassins.â
Pyo Gigwang was stunned. Run when told to run, duck when told to duck, dragged when pulled, toppled when pushed. And like that, the battle had ended while he was rolling around in the mud.
Itâs over? That means⊠I actually survived?
With a face full of disbelief, Pyo Gigwang looked at Geom Mugeuk.
Swaaaaa!
Geom Mugeuk let the falling rain wash the blood from his face and body.
Suddenly, that sight felt unfamiliar.
He didnât look like the youngest martial artist who had once excitedly nodded along to every word. Now, he looked like a true martial artist who had carved his way through the Sword Forest of Dosan, battle-hardened and weathered. 10
Maybe that was whyâhe somehow looked lonely.
âLetâs go.â
âTo where?â
Where were they supposed to go now?
But Geom Mugeuk already knew exactly where they needed to be.
âTo that bastard. We need to confront him. Ask him why he handled things like this. If he wanted things wrapped up, he shouldâve come and done it himself. Why send assassins? We need to ask him why he treated you like a joke.â
Geom Mugeuk was saying all the things Pyo Gigwang had wanted to say himself.
âI believe this operation wasnât sanctioned by the Alliance.â
For a moment, Pyo Gigwang flinchedâbut then shook his head.
âThat canât be.â
Now that the time had come, Geom Mugeuk finally shared the decisive point heâd been saving.
âIf this had been something the Unorthodox Alliance Leader had authorized, thereâs no way he wouldâve sent hired assassins. I heard it once beforeâthe Alliance Leader despises assassins more than anyone.â
â!â
In that moment, a memory flashed through Pyo Gigwangâs mind.
Back when he was the Black Dragon Division Leader, he had once spoken with his subordinates about that very thing. About how the Alliance Leader loathed assassins. About how, in the Unorthodox Alliance of this generation, no one from an assassin background had ever risen in rank. Heâd said that himself.
Goosebumps spread across his entire body. He had completely forgotten about it all.
After being injured, after stepping down from the division, after living like a broken manâhe had buried those painful memories under a pile of apathy, bitterness and resentment.
âIf that man really served the will of the Alliance Leader, he wouldnât have used assassins, would he?â
With that powerful doubt, a past conversation naturally resurfaced in his mind.
âDoes the Alliance Leader know about this operation?
âOf course. Thatâs why it must remain absolutely secret.
At the time, he had assumed, without question, that the Alliance Leader was aware. That was why that man had stepped forward. Thatâs why heâd believed the Young Leader shouldnât get involved. Because it was a classified mission, one even the Young Leader hadnât been informed about.
Why hadnât he ever questioned it?
He already knew the answer to that question in the depths of his heart.
It was because all he wanted was to escape that agonising situation. Because he wanted to escape, and then boast to those who had looked down on him, âLook what a grand task Iâve taken on, you fools!â
âIf this operation was carried out without the Alliance Leaderâs knowledge, then itâs treason.â
Pyo Gigwangâs heart sank. If that were true, then that man had dragged him into treason, and he had no excuses for his actions.
Pyo Gigwang felt completely lost.
âLetâs find out what the truth isâtogether.â
Just yesterday, Pyo Gigwang had believed he alone knew the truth. He had been a man no words could reach. But now, he was asking:
âCan we really do this?â
âYouâve already resigned yourself to death, havenât you?â
Yeah, thatâs right. Heâd lost count of how many times today heâd thought, This is it, Iâm dying, and closed his eyes. One more time wouldnât change anything.
Pyo Gigwang looked at Geom Mugeuk and gave a nod.
Now, the tide had turned.
âFrom this moment on, weâre no longer fish. Letâs become fishermenâcast the net together with me. And then, letâs hear what that fish whoâs been pretending to be the fisherman all this time has to say.â
1 : In the Divine Cult, itâs the Path of Blood, and here itâs the Path of Wolves. Wonder what it's like in the Murim Alliance. Weâll need to find a good name for the throne when it happens.
2 : Doing so leads to misanthropy and solitude, which is great for impartiality, but not so much about not turning into a tyrant. Then again, it is the Unorthodox Alliance.
3 : Not if Mugeuk has his word to say about it.
4 : Your master has a good head on his shoulders. It might not be a pretty worldview to possess, but at the very least he wonât be blind to reality.
5 : At this point, I wonder if itâs this era's natural course that led to so many influential people dreaming of unifying the martial world, or if itâs the masterminds behind Hwa Moogi that whispered that dream to their ears for decades to weaken them in a total war before their strike.
6 : *DUNDUNDUN* (Well not really, we already knew it XDXDXD)
7 : No matter what else can be said about the masterminds, they do have a great grasp over their victims' psychology. At least Mugeukâs level.
8 : Lol, itâs not the assassins who control the aggro, itâs the aggro who rush at them first XDXDXD
9 : And acting. Definitely some great acting there.
10 : I hope we get to visit one day, itâs only the second time this sword forest was mentioned but it sounds like a cool place ^^