Pae Yulâs eyes went wide.
âWhat is thisâwho the hell are you people?â
Ga Deoksang brought his hands together in a cupped-fist salute.
âWe greet our martial uncle.â
Behind him, the three othersâtwo men and two womenâalso bowed their heads.
â...?â
Pae Yul froze, flustered.
He was already shocked theyâd shown up [N O V E L I G H T] with blood speckled all over their clothes, but what was this about folding at the waist like they were about to bury their faces in the dirt?
Why am I your martial uncle?
The words almost burst out on their own.
But right before he actually said it, Pae Yul barely managed to recall what Yeon Hojeong had told him before they split up.
Weâre descendants of the Martial Ancestor Sect. Weâre senior and junior brothers and sistersâand youâre the martial uncle in our cover. Weâll set the tone, so you just have to play along.
What is this, some kidsâ game?
And yet, hearing someone call him âmartial uncleâ for real made the feeling... strangely complicated.
Pae Yul cleared his throat.
â...Good. You made it.â
The awkwardness dripped from his voice. Only then did the four of them straighten up.
âBut whatâs with the blood?â
Ga Deoksang smacked his lips.
âSome random trash was tailing us. Second caught almost all of them, but the leftovers tried to run, so we split up and each grabbed one.â
Second... who was âSecondâ...?
Tang Sang-a stepped in smoothly, reading the room instantly.
âIâm sorry. If Iâd been more thorough, you wouldnât have had to get your hands dirty.â
âHey. Donât say that, martial sister. They were way too well-hidden. And who wouldâve expected someone to be on our heels in the first place?â
âStill... who do you think it was?â
âNo idea. Going by how petty it was, it feels like some White Path punksâbut the White Path doesnât have much pull in this region.â
âThen itâs probably the Dark Path.â
âProbably.â
Je Gal Ahyeon slid into the conversation, playing the airheaded youngest like it was second nature.
âBut wonât this turn into a problem for us? Weâre going to meet Dark Path people right now, arenât we? What was the name againâYang...?â
Yeon Hojeong clamped a hand over Je Gal Ahyeonâs mouth on reflex. Je Gal Ahyeon smacked Yeon Hojeongâs shoulder like she was suffocating.
Yeon Hojeong spoke flatly.
âThatâs confidential, martial sister.â
âMmph!â
âI told you before, didnât I? A lot of people ruined their lives because they couldnât keep their mouths shut. You need to be more seriâurk!â
Yeon Hojeong staggered.
Je Gal Ahyeon had driven her elbow into his stomach.
Je Gal Ahyeon spatâptoo, ptoo.
âYou didnât even wash your hands! Where do you think youâre putting them?!â
âCough!â
âHuh? Are you okay?â
âIâm not okay, you littleâ!â
Pae Yul stared at the four of them with bleary eyes.
These idiots are having the time of their lives.
Times like this, it was the duty of an elder to step in. Pae Yul spoke in a slightly stern voice.
âThere are a lot of eyes on us. Watch yourselves.â
âKff!â
Pae Yul shot Ga Deoksang a murderous glare.
Ga Deoksang hastily wiped the grin off his face and cleared his throat.
âMy apologies. I choked.â
âYou. Iâll see you separately.â
â...Yes.â
Yeon Hojeong scanned the surroundings.
This isnât bad.
This tavern was huge. Even this late, a decent number of people were still scattered around, sitting and drinking.
Ssssh.
From Yeon Hojeongâs fingertips, the Azure Dragon Qi spilled out in fine threads.
Among the Four Spirit True Qi, the Azure Dragon Qi was the most sensitiveâand as soft as the Black Tortoise Qiâmaking it ideal for delicate work.
The formless qi spread in every direction.
Nine.
There were nine people in this broad tavern who had cultivated Inner Qi.
That wasnât as many as heâd expected. If anything, it was normal.
Even if the Dark Path had quietly taken control of all of Hunan, this was a small city planted on the far western edge of the province.
And the Dark Pathâs high-level ranks were thin to begin with. With that in mind, this number was almost on the high side.
Weâll climb from the bottom, step by step.
Yeon Hojeongâs gaze drifted to Tang Sang-a.
Tang Sang-a was chatting with Je Gal Ahyeon, laughing like whatever they were talking about was genuinely fun. The heads of their two houses were practically clawing at each otherâs throats, yet the children looked close enough to pass for real sisters.
You need to do your job as bait.
Yeon Hojeong had no doubt her presence would make their mission smootherâand far more efficient.
âAlright. Should we eat, too?â
*****
That night.
WHOOOOM.
Outside the bamboo grove beyond the outer wall, Yeon Hojeong sat in lotus position. Around his body, four colored currents revolved.
It looked like something out of a spirit tale. Black, white, red, and blueâfour different energiesâburned bright like fireflies, winding around him.
It was a mysterious sight. It didnât feel like qi that belonged to his body so much as the will of the natural world itself, shielding him.
Good.
Yeon Hojeong felt satisfied.
Now itâs balanced.
After returning to the past, the first thing heâd mastered was the Black Tortoise Qi. Naturally, that meant the Black Tortoise Qi had been the densest.
But the Four Spirit energies were bound together organicallyâeach one growing and being controlled through the others. Considering principles like Water birthing Wood, and Wood birthing Fire, it was only natural.
And once those four energies reached balance in both quality and quantity, the four of them began to develop together, gradually, as one.
In the Four Spirit Martial Arts, this state was called the âProper Form.â It meant every energy stood straightânone leaning too far, none dominating the rest.
That means Iâve crossed a stage.
After completing the Four Spirit Qi, the first gate he had to clear was Proper Form.
Yeon Hojeong had finished it only after breaking through that martial wall.
That was exactly why heâd refused to draw out every last drop of his energies until his body and True Qi reached their limits. Even the same kind of growth became more efficientâand granted deeper insightâwhen it happened from a higher starting point.
âWhew.â
He let out a light breath and opened his eyes. Then he picked up the long spear resting beside him.
Not bad.
After dinner, heâd bought an iron spear from a nearby smithy.
It was no lightweight, made from solid ironâbut to Yeon Hojeong, who swung a Mad Dragon (Axe) that weighed over eighty geun, it was nothing.
He gripped the middle of the shaft and spun it.
WOOOSH. WOOOOSH.
The sound of the shaft cutting the air in a circle was heavy, clean.
Good balance point. The headâs a decent length, too. I got lucky.
The Mad Dragon (Axe) was far too flashy a weapon. The Flood Dragon Chain wasnât any different.
With the name Green Mountain Tiger General already shaking the martial world, there was no way he could stroll around carrying those two signature weapons without drawing every eye on the road. So heâd chosen a spear.
The first thing heâd trained to handle an axe wasnât an axe at allâit was spear techniques. If he fought with a spear and barehanded strikes, he could narrow the gap between that and his full strength with the Mad Dragon (Axe).
Yeon Hojeong kicked off the ground.
PAAAAANG!
He covered the short distance in an instant, then unleashed spearwork overflowing with power.
THUD-THUD-THUD!
In a blink, spearheads multiplied into more than tenâeach one leaving the same mark dead center on ten bamboo stalks.
A flicker of surprise crossed Yeon Hojeongâs face.
I thought Iâd gotten rusty, since itâs been a while... but it feels like Iâve grown instead.
That, too, had to be the effect of Proper Form. With no wasted force, his spearwork had become more precise.
SHHHHHK!
The spearhead carved the wind, flashing with a clean gleam.
His movements were looser than usualâfluid, almost lazy.
It didnât look like practice.
It looked like a dance.
And yet the cutting and thrusting power of the spearhead never dulled.
Sssshâssshâsssh.
Bamboo leaves that had fallen to the ground surged up along the spearheadâs path.
Yeon Hojeongâs eyes burned.
THUMP!
He stamped the shaft into the earth, and dozens of leaves that had been gliding through the air along the spearhead shattered into fragments.
â...Mm. Good. Thatâs enough.â
He wanted to keep going for half a day, honestlyâbut he should stop here tonight.
âAre you going to call me âmartial uncleâ here, too?â
At the sudden question, a snort came from the darkest pocket of shadow in the bamboo grove.
âThereâs no one around. Drop that skin-crawling title.â
Yeon Hojeong smiled.
âYou never know.â
âYou, of all people, donât need to say it. And my senses arenât that shabby.â
âThatâs exactly why Iâm saying it. So I donât loosen up over that ânever knowâ and lose tension.â
âIf someone strong enough to muddle even our senses is already involved, doesnât that mean this mission is doomed?â
He wasnât wrong.
Yeon Hojeong folded his arms, still holding the spear.
âItâs late. Why arenât you asleep?â
âYou beat me to it, brat. I figured Iâd come out and get some training in.â
âI see. Iâm done for the night. Use it.â
âBefore that.â
PAAAAANG!
Pae Yulâs sword shot in like an arrow.
It was a flawless ambushâfast and sudden to the point of absurdityâyet there was no Killing Intent in it.
Which made it even more terrifying.
Yeon Hojeong unfolded his arms and flicked the butt of the spear up with his foot.
KRAAANG!
The sword that skimmed past the shaft halted.
TIIIIING!
Bamboo leaves spun along with the spear shaft as it rotated in place.
Yeon Hojeong caught the shaft in his hand.
WHOOOOM.
The wind died.
Pae Yul let out a sigh.
âLike I thought. Doesnât work.â
âThat was a clean ambush. Itâs been a long time since Iâve seen a sword strike with Killing Intent suppressed that completely.â
âCocky mouth. And what do you mean, âa long timeâ? Sounds like youâve lived a fairly bloody life yourself.â
Yeon Hojeong just smiled without answering.
Pae Yul stared at him, sword still unsheathed.
âDo you have something you want to say to me?â
âNot really.â
âThen can I go now?â
âNo.â
â...Huh?â
Only then did Yeon Hojeong read the hesitation on Pae Yulâs face.
Seriousness settled over Yeon Hojeongâs expression.
âIs something wrong?â
âItâs a problem, if you want to call it that.â
âWhat is it?â
Pae Yul went quiet again.
The hesitation only grew more obvious. Yeon Hojeong tensed.
After a short silence, Pae Yul finally spoke.
âIf weâre calling ourselves the Martial Ancestor Sect, then no matter what... we shouldnât be pulling out our signature arts, should we.â
âThatâs right.â
âAnd bringing the Tang Clan girl alongâitâs because itâs hard to read the patterns of hidden weapons, isnât it?â
âThatâs part of it.â
Pae Yul cleared his throat.
âAnyway. Watch this.â
â...Yes?â
SHHHHK!
Pae Yulâs sword cut through the air.
Yeon Hojeongâs eyes widened.
What the hell is this?
It was swordsmanship with lines too soft for Pae Yul.
Of course, that didnât mean it lacked power. If anything, it was the oppositeâhe used a flowing path to draw the enemy in, then answered with a single, killing counter. The technique was exquisite.
Did Azure Mountain Sect have something like this?
Then again, if you were one of the Nine Great Sects, youâd have more than one art that could stand shoulder-to-shoulder with your âmainâ signature technique.
Itâs less... brutally practical than his usual style, but the level of the swordsmanship itself is higher.
A moment later, Pae Yul stopped.
His face was slightly flushed. It wasnât like heâd get winded from showing off one set of moves.
âAhem! Well? What do you think?â
âIs that Azure Mountain Sect swordsmanship?â
â...Well. Yeah.â
Yeon Hojeong answered honestly.
âItâs an excellent sword art. It loses some of Azure Mountain Sectâs usual sharpness and extremity, but the trade is solid harmony. And the counters are incredible.â
âR-really?â
âYes. There are a few gaps here and there in the chained flow, but itâs too appealing an art to nitpick. The higher you climb, the more the practical edge will fill in, too.â
Pae Yulâs face brightened.
âYou think itâll work in real fights?â
Yeon Hojeong nodded.
âYou seem to understand that sword art deeply. It fits you like it was tailored.â
âHeh.â
Pae Yul actually laughed out loud.
âSo long as you saw it that way, thatâs enough.â
â...Yes?â
âAhem. Iâm going back first.â
âWhat about your training?â
Pae Yul didnât even answer. He vanished. His footsteps carried a weird kind of excitement.
Yeon Hojeong frowned.
âWhat the hell was that? He just confessed at me and ran like an idiot.â