Yeon Wi stepped into the Clan Lordâs hall and went straight to work.
But the documents wouldnât come into focus. A moment ago, the words his son had said wouldnât leave his mind.
âEven if my aim is different, my heart is always here.â
His eyes grew deep.
For the aim to be differentâmeant his sonâs gaze truly faced the world.
âIt is truly difficult, wife.â
He thought of the wife who died not long after bearing Jipyeong.
âI wanted to raise our two sons splendidly so I wouldnât be ashamed before you who went ahead. But I used being a clan lord as an excuse and only ever came down hard on our child.â
He remembered it vividlyâhimself roaring at Yeon Hojeong when the boy was small.
Thinking back, Yeon Hojeong had only been six. An age to laugh at a spring butterfly, yet he spent his days under his fatherâs scolding and training.
Back then, Yeon Wi realized it. Watching his firstborn grow thinner by the day, he understood there was a problem with his own way.
So when he taught the second, he never drove him. Though the boy feared his fatherâs few words, Yeon Jipyeong still grew up kind and sound.
But Yeon Hojeong was different.
Jealous of his younger brotherâs talent, he went crooked before anyone realized it. He cast aside martial training and started haunting taverns.
Yeon Wi couldnât bring himself to chastise that son. Because he was the one whoâd raised him so. He was the one who should have taught him that martial arts werenât everything, and instead he narrowed his sonâs world.
Time passed, and Yeon Wi realized one more thing.
When the boy first started to go astrayâthat was when he should have seized him. In short, he rebuked when he should have soothed, and looked on when he should have held on.
Iâm a failure.
He truly thought so. Which is why he never felt he had the face to meet his firstbornâs eyes.
âBut, wife. That same Hojeong is now growing into a man. He has come this far on his own, without anyoneâs help.â
When his son changed, Yeon Wi couldnât hide his quiet joy. He himself hadnât done a single thing for the boy, yet the boy had suddenly grasped something.
Too rough at times, yesâbut each day he lived with a heart that pounded at his sonâs splendid growth.
And yet that splendidly grown son says he has no thought of becoming master of the Yeon Clan.
âCome to think of it, I can see why.â
A bitter taste rose in Yeon Wiâs mouth.
âWho could I blame? Itâs all my own lack. If I had shown Hojeong a responsible figure, he wouldnât have turned his eyes outward.â
What was past had already passed. He could see he couldnât change his sonâs heart.
He looked toward the window.
He saw his sonâs back, heading for his quarters. He looked truly stalwart.
â...Well. If your heart is at least here, that is a relief.â
That was enough. To have grown under an unworthy father and yet leave his heart with the clanâjust for that alone, Yeon Wi thought he ought to be grateful.
He stood there staring out the window for a long time.
âClan Lord. Chief Steward.â
âCome in.â
The door opened and Tae Gyeong entered.
âGoodness, the cold still bites.â
âIt does.â
âSoâdid your bout with the First Young Master end well?â
Yeon Wi said nothing.
Feeling suddenly awkward, Tae Gyeong pulled a letter from his breast.
âHere, the thing you mentioned before.â
âLet me see.â
Yeon Wi unfolded the letter, and his eyes deepened.
âTruly tenacious.â
âHas the Mo Yong Clan still not given up?â
He looked at Tae Gyeong.
The man certainly had quick eyes. A bit frivolous at times, but the shrewdness he showed and his quick execution left nothing lacking in a Chief Steward of the Yeon Clan.
On a sudden thought, Yeon Wi asked:
âWhat do you think?â
âDo you mean the Mo Yong matter?â
âYes.â
It was rare for the clan lord to ask his thoughts on business of this size.
Tae Gyeong answered at once.
âMy thought isâit would be good to join hands.â
âYour reason?â
âThe Mo Yong Clan is, with our main house, counted among the Seven Great Clans. If we join hands with such a house and expand our ventures, we can accumulate more wealth.â
â...â
âAhâof course I know you have little interest in riches, Clan Lord. But each year you spend a fortune for those afflicted by floods, do you not?â
âThe more wealth we build, the more peopleâs livelihoods we can save?â
âExactly. In living in this world, money is indispensable.â
There was sense in Tae Gyeongâs words.
Yeon Wi weighed it. His sonâs affairs were his sonâs affairs; business was business. If they could contribute more to public welfare, it wouldnât be bad to take Mo Yongâs hand.
Onlyâ
âIs it because you think thereâs a chance the Mo Yong Clan harbors another intention?â
âThe Seven Great Clans are not the same as the Nine Sects and One Union. They walk the orthodox road, but they strive to fortify their standing as power clans. Most are frantic to swell their influence.â
âMm.â
After a brief think, Tae Gyeong clapped his hands.
âAh! Thenâwhat about this?â
â...?â
âHave you heard of the current clan lordâs daughter of the Mo Yong Clan? They say she excels not only in martial talent but in wit, and her character is very lovely besides.â
âThe girl called Mo Yong Yeonhwa?â
âYou knew?â
The names of children of the Seven Great Clans were, of course, known.
âAnd that girlâwhat of her?â
âWhat of betrothing the First Young Master to the Mo Yong daughter?â
Yeon Wiâs eyes flashed.
âA marriage?â
âYes. Granted, it might seem excessive to push a match over a single venture, but no one knows the future. If this venture becomes the occasion for our two houses to move forward together, might it not help the people even more down the line?â
Yeon Wi shook his head.
âThis is a matter of human rites. I wonât go so far as to marry off a child over something like this.â
It was common to strike a marriage to secure cooperation between houses. But he had no particular wish to do so.
âBut Clan Lord, it could also be good for the First Young Master.â
âFor Hojeong?â
âYes. Of late the First Young Master has changed greatly. But when you pass the clan to him, wonât he need someone at his side who can help?â
â...â
âIf sheâs the Mo Yong clanâs gifted daughter, she could be of ample help.â
Tae Gyeong didnât knowâYeon Hojeong had no interest in the seat of clan lord.
Yeon Wi was about to shake his head, then suddenly thought of Yeon Hojeong.
â...His aim is set on the world?â
Yeon Hojeongâs change had been abrupt.
Of course, he didnât think Hojeong would revert to how heâd been. Even so, Hojeong was nineteen. An age when it was hard to know the world.
He didnât know what his sonâs dream was, but having someone at his side who could give firm supportâcertainly wasnât a bad thing.
After chewing it over, Yeon Wi nodded.
âIâll give it some thought.â
âSince weâre on the subjectâthe sooner the better.â
âI know what you mean.â
Tae Gyeong bowed his head.
âMy apologies. I overstepped.â
âIâm the one who asked. Itâs fine.â
âAhâyes.â
âYou may go.â
âYes, then.â
When Tae Gyeong left, Yeon Wi fell into thought.
âA marriage, is it?â
****
Back in his quarters, Yeon Hojeong lay down on his bed as he was.
âYoung Clan Lord?â
He hadnât imagined his father might be thinking of naming him Young Clan Lord.
He let out a small, involuntary laugh.
âYou really never can tell with people.â
In truth, even in his previous life he hadnât wanted to be Young Clan Lord. He just exploded with inferiority when he heard they meant to name his younger brother instead of him.
Now was different.
He knew his limits. He could rally the rough Demonic Path rabble and forge them into an eliteâbut leading an orthodox clan was beyond him.
Naturally heâd thought his father would give the heirâs seat to his brother. Given how rough he himself looked since changing, heâd thought it all the more.
âAs clan lord I wanted to test your capacityâyet as a father I grew frustrated seeing your will wasnât bound to the clan.â
He closed his eyes.
âIâm sorry.â
He figured his father must be thinking this way: that though he was rough, someday he would walk the same road; that blood couldnât be denied.
But that was wrong.
He was his fatherâs bloodâbut heâd lived a hell that shredded even blood ties.
For someone like him to become master of the Yeon Clan would be misfortune for everyone.
âBesides, I have something I must do.â
The fiend who annihilated his clan.
The task before him was too large and heavy. Just recognizing it and preparing for it was enough to split his head.
And that wasnât all.
âI also have to stop the stirrings of the Three Teachings.â
By taking part in the younger-generation gathering, heâd grasped something big.
The world now wouldnât flow like the history he knew. The reason: he was moving differently than in the past.
The same for the Three Teachings. They might appear later than scheduledâor earlier.
Noâhe couldnât even rule out the possibility they had already seeped into the Central Plains.
âThe Three Teachingsâespecially the Cult of Perversityâdonât compromise. Their blind hatred was nearly akin to faith. To stop those kinds, both Black and White paths will have to join hands.â
Lost in thought, he scratched his head.
Trying to think ahead for the first time in a while made it feel like a cramp was seizing his brain. He had a plan of sorts, butâ
âIn fifteen days, when the Rear Beggar arrivesâthatâs when it begins. Until then, Iâll focus as much as possible on myself alone.â
He let out a breath.
He really did need to rest today.
The next morning.
When Yeon Hojeong walked out onto the Grand Training Ground, he came upon a curious scene.
âDo you take training for a joke?â
âNo, sir!â
âThen why donât you listen?â
âWeâre sorry!â
âI told you plainly. From meals to rest, everything is calculated to the letter.â
â...â
âAre you planning to rebel?â
âNo, sir!â
âOr whatâdo you not trust me?â
âN-no, sir!â
A man stood with his hands clasped behind him, one Flying Hawk Squad unit lined up before him.
Yeon Hojeongâs eyes brightened.
âThe Flying Hawk Captain?â
It was Kang Yun, the Captain of the Flying Hawk Squad who, on the day he returned to the past, had slipped into the Ancestral Hall with Yeon Jipyeong and confiscated their rice balls.
Kang Yun spoke in a cold voice.
âI am stronger than you. It means I broke through the realm youâre treading more than a dozen years ago. I know, one by one, exactly how you need to train.â
â...â
âGiven that I personally drafted this schedule, why arenât you following it? Do you not want to get stronger?â
âWeâre sorry!â
âOr did you want to stand out? Or was your sleep time too long? Do you feel power surging up?â
âNo, sir!â
He breaks the opponent down completely.
In crude terms, Kang Yun was grinding his subordinates. But the sight wasnât good.
âDeviating from a schedule built on precise calculationâby itself, thatâs a serious breach of discipline. Youâve steeled yourselves, I trust?â
â...â
âWhy no answer? Are you deaf?â
âNo, sir! Weâre sorry!â
Kang Yun snorted.
âJoint responsibility. Today, until midnight, you will train the Flying Hawk Sword Method. No meals or rest. Since youâve got the stamina to train without sleep, you can digest at least this much, canât you?â
â...â
âWhy no answer? Donât want to do it?â
âN-no, sir!â
âYou start now. Bring the iron-core wooden training swords.â
Faces across †NĐŸvĐ”â ight †(Read more on our source) the Flying Hawk line went pale.
The iron-core wooden swords weighed over ten catties each. To swing that all day with no rest?
âWhat are you doing! Move now!â
Just thenâ
âStop.â
Kang Yun turned.
Yeon Hojeong was standing there with a deep frown.
âWhat is thisâsome third-rate street tough? You really are doing the whole act.â