Pa-pa-pa-pang!
A tightly clenched fist burst the empty air again and again.
This wasnât fistwork without inner power. A fist steeped in stout inner force was a weapon in and of itself. Fistwork at the pinnacleâeach punch with strength enough to bore through a log and smash stone.
Even sweating buckets, the merciless fist practice didnât stop. If anything, the longer it went the more it caught momentumâfist-speed climbing ever higher.
Tiiing!
In the midst of long fist practice, Yeon Hojeong hooked the fallen spear with his instep and flicked it up into his hand.
In one natural motion he gripped the spearâand swept it with a terrifying rush.
Puh-puh-puhng!
The long spear spat fire.
A spear is a heavy weapon, a long weapon. Itâs easy to throw a single powerful strike, but hard to unfold linked-chain techniques.
But Yeon Hojeongâs spearwork was different. However he swung, he drove in explosive blows in a torrent, and the gaps between one attack and the next were shockingly narrow.
After sweeping the spear for a long while, he reversed his grip on the shaftâand hurled it.
Puuuck!
The spear punched through a thick log and buried itself in the earth.
Frightening power.
âHuff... huff.â
It was practice so intense it wrecked his breathing. As Yeon Hojeong drew rough breaths one after another, a deep blue aura shimmered over his body.
His ragged breathing settled to normal at once. Even if True Qi made oxygen uptake easier, the speed was excessive.
âHoo.â
Yeon Hojeong sank down onto the flat ground.
A weighty voice came to him.
âIs your training finished?â
He lifted his head.
In the distance, his father stood with his hands behind his back.
âYouâre here.â
âIt looks more like venting than training.â
â......â
âTo restore a disordered breath that quickly is very difficult. Extreme physical tempering seems to be working.â
âI see.â
It was a fine moonlit night.
Under a bright downpour of moonlight, Yeon Wi came and sat beside him.
âYouâre a proper master now. Worthy of being called a top master.â
âThank you.â
There was no true feeling in his voice. For him to be pleased at something this smallâthe future drawing near was far too horrific.
Yet Yeon Wi showed simple astonishment at his sonâs realm.
At nineteen, a realm higher than the heads of the clanâs armed units.
No matter how advanced the arts heâd learned, the growth rate was inexplicable. Among the rising talents of the Seven Great Clans of the day, was there anyone his age whoâd built this level?
Setting Shaolin, Wudang, and Mount Hua aside, you wouldnât easily find it even among the Nine Sects and One Union. Considering his level half a year â NĐŸvĐ”lŃgÒ»t â (Only on NĐŸvĐ”lŃgÒ»t) ago, this pace would be hard to find even combing the histories of the martial world.
Despite such an astounding feat, the son wasnât satisfied. If anything, he wore the look of a man for whom this was still far off.
Not that he didnât know how outstanding his realm, growth, and skill had become.
In a passing tone, Yeon Wi said,
âSomething weighing on you?â
Yeon Hojeong couldnât answer.
He could have said there was nothingâthat it was simply part of training. But in this state, he didnât want to lie to his father.
âIt was excessive.â
âSir?â
âYour killing will.â
Yeon Hojeongâs eyes trembled.
âYou felt it.â
âIf I couldnât feel that, how would I be called clan lord of the Yeon?â
He had been reining his killing will without pause. He might leak it unconsciously, but he didnât scatter it indiscriminately.
But Yeon Wi was Yeon Wi. Considering the distance from the Clan Lordâs hall to the guest quarters, his sensitivity beggared belief.
âWhat is it that makes you that angry?â
Yeon Hojeong looked at Yeon Wi.
Under the moonlight his fatherâs face, unlike usual, looked a touch kind.
For an instant, his chest surged.
âThere are men aiming for the main house.â
He wanted to say it. At least for this moment, he wanted to tell his father everything.
But he couldnât.
Outwardly indifferent to others, his father was delicate enough to watch every move. He would try to learn how he knew, why he hadnât said it until now, and whether it was truly fact.
Regrettably, that wouldnât do. If history held, the Ming clanâs raid was less than a year away. It might come sooner.
âIâm just... stifled.â
âBy what?â
âMany things.â
Yeon Wi fell silent a moment.
There was something he wanted to tell his son. But looking at him now, it felt unnecessary to bring it up.
He drew a book from his bosom and handed it to Yeon Hojeong.
âWhat is this?â
âTake it.â
There were no characters on the cover.
Curiosity made him open itâand his eyes flew wide.
âItâs a hand-copied manual. Once youâve learned it all, burn it.â
âHow is this... to me...?â
âWatching your martial arts, I thought about what you lack.â
He had considered his martial arts. From a man who would never seem to do soâthat made his heart feel strange.
âYour arts assume no follow-upâthey go for a single decisive kill. At least, thatâs the momentum. Thereâs room for further tempering, yes, but your strong stamina has been the nourishment that births that explosive offense.â
â......â
âBut look. Just now your breathing broke badly. Why? Because the arts you unfold consume stamina too heavily.â
âThatâs true.â
âYouâll grow far more from here. But getting there is the problem. And if I hand you a footwork that excels at evasion, with your disposition youâll never retreat.â
A perfect read.
Yeon Hojeong could, if needed, choose flight, concealment, evasionâwhatever it took. But if he judged there was no need, he would press no matter what and fell the enemy.
His disposition simply did not retreat. It was battlefield martial skill: kill first to survive before you are killedâthat was his way.
âSo I prepared that.â
He looked at the three characters on the first page.
Reverse Dragon Palm.
Half a month ago, when he sparred with his father, his father had used this counterattacking art. Its power in a single strike was tremendous, but it showed its true worth when countering; it was one of the Yeon clanâs mainline arts.
âThe rivers and lakes are terrifying. No one fights you while considering your condition. You may manage just fineâbut isnât the martial world a place where even a first-rate can die to a third-rateâs knife.â
Yeon Hojeongâs eyes shook.
âYou knew?â
Yeon Wi shook his head.
âI didnât. Not until just now.â
â......â
âI was debating when to give it to you. Itâs a little late, but with your talent youâll be able to use it in real fights shortly.â
His grip tightened on the secret manual.
Truth be told, his fatherâs worry was needlessâbecause Yeon Hojeong possessed the Four Spirit Arts.
If Black Tortoise covered absolute defense, and White Tiger covered offense without retreat, then Azure Dragon handled evasion and counterattack.
Black Tortoise rarely saw use outside extreme situations; Azure Dragon did not. Its skill set buttressed his extreme dispositionâarts of many uses.
â......â
But no matter how superb a transcendent art the Four Spirit Arts might beâhow could it be more precious than his fatherâs heart in handing this down?
âI accept it with thanks.â
Yeon Wi rose.
âWhen do you plan to leave?â
Yes.
Yeon Hojeong intended to leave the clan.
If he stayed only within the clan, it would be hard to stop the Ming invasion. He would see and confirm with his own eyes, then fightâthat was the method he had learned in a life of battle.
âIf nothing arises, I intend to leave tomorrow.â
âTomorrow... tomorrow.â
Yeon Wi closed his eyes.
What his father was thinking, Yeon Hojeong did not know.
After a moment, Yeon Wi said,
âFollow me.â
****
Contrary to expectation, Yeon Wi took him out of the clan grounds.
The market street was quiet. Past midnightâof course it was. Aside from a few taverns selling drink late into the night, everything was dark.
Skirting Ancient Sun Pavilion and heading some distance from the river, father and son arrived at a small forge.
Tang! Tang! Tang!
Past midnight, and still someone was hammering. Even five streets away, the heat rolling out was tremendous.
Yeon Wi spoke.
âMaster Pyeon. Itâs me, Yeon Wi.â
Ting!
The hammering stopped.
A moment later, an old man with a white beard walked out from the forge.
Short, but with a body built like iron.
Despite the cold, his upper body was bare. Thanks to that, his bunched shoulders and thick chest were fully revealed.
âYouâve come?â
From the clear, ringing tone one might expect a rough manner, but his voice was unexpectedly calm.
âForgive the late hour.â
âNothing to forgive. And the young man beside you?â
âMy eldest son.â
Yeon Wi said to Yeon Hojeong,
âPay your respects. This is Pyeon Ilgang, Divine Smith.â
He didnât know who he was, but he was no ordinary man. Yeon Hojeong cupped his fists in salute with crisp form.
âIâm Yeon Hojeong. Itâs an honor to meet you.â
The old man smiled. For a man who had lived his life working fire and iron, his expression was as warm as a spring wind.
âNo doubt heâs your sonâthose eyes are fierce. Itâs like seeing you in your youth.â
âWas I like that?â
âPeople were afraid theyâd get cut if they got too close. Still, compared to your son you were a gentleman. If you were a treasured blade, your boy is a divine swordâhis edge is honed to a hair.â
A hint of a smile touched Yeon Wiâs lips.
Pyeon Ilgang looked at Yeon Wi as if surprised. He had never once seen anything like a smile on Yeon Wiâs face.
âSo you have aged after all.â
âSo it seems.â
Pyeon Ilgang looked Yeon Hojeong up and down.
âCurious. The eyes are a mirror image, but the aura is wholly different. Even as your son, he isnât still.â
â......â
âNot a sword... an axe?â
Yeon Hojeongâs eyes flashed.
Pyeon Ilgang wasnât a martial master. He had learned inner work, but only as nourishing arts. Even so, at a glance heâd picked out Yeon Hojeongâs main weapon.
âImpressive.â
Whatever the field, once you reach the realm of a true craftsman, the eye with which you see the world is different.
A good smith is a warriorâs friend. From this aloneâseeing his temperament at a glanceâyou could guess Pyeon Ilgangâs skill.
âSo the piece I ordered half a month ago...?â
âYes.â
âHeh-heh, Iâm seeing many unexpected sights tonight. So you didnât put a sword in the eldestâs hand, when heâs the one to inherit the clan?â
Yeon Wi shook his head.
âSoâis it not ready yet?â
âHardly. I finished two days ago. It wasnât forging anewâjust reworking an existing piece.â
âBring it.â
âWait here.â
A moment later, Pyeon Ilgang returned carrying a weapon.
Yeon Hojeongâs eyes widened at the sight.
âHeavy is heavy. You mean to grip and swing this? Youâve built tremendous skill for your age.â
Thud!
The vibration that traveled into the ground was immense.
It was an axeâan axe, but enormous.
A war axe: a thick shaft about six feet long, its axe-blade as big as a grown manâs torso. Its shape and size were near identical to the axe Yeon Hojeong had used in his past life.
âTake it.â
As if bewitched, he took the haft.
The weight pouring through his arms was tremendous.
âHeavy. Heavy, but...â
The feel coiling into his hands was perfect. Call it consonanceâthe match was flawless for gripping and sweeping.
He looked to Yeon Wi.
âA heavy weapon takes on its wielder more than any common saber or sword. Your arts are excessively extremeâunless itâs the moment you must, donât swing this.â
Yeon Wi gave Pyeon Ilgang a nod.
âYouâve worked hard.â
âHeh, hardly work. Had I known it was a gift for your son, Iâd have inspected it once more.â
With trembling eyes, Yeon Hojeong looked at his father.
Yeon Wi turned.
âLetâs go.â
Watching his fatherâs back as he set out first, Yeon Hojeong bowed his head to Pyeon Ilgang.
âThank you.â
Pyeon Ilgang smiled.
âItâs a very sturdy fellowâwonât break easily. Use it well.â