Bang Seojin.
Eldest daughter of the Bang family, and like me, a child born of a concubine.
A household where there were three children and three different mothers.
A spectacular mess of a family where the man called Father got old without ever growing up, just running around chasing women like a lunaticâand in that mess, as far as I was concerned, she was pretty much the only thing you could call hope.
Bang Seojin, age thirteen.
The nickname she went by back then wasâ
Liaoningâs Greatest Prodigy.
At just thirteen, youâd think, âWhat could she possibly have done?â
Back then, it actually fit.
At thirteen, sheâd beat a grown martial artist past twenty like a dog.
If local Black Path bastards showed up, sheâd just pick up a wooden sword and wipe them all out.
There were even people who saw my sister swinging her sword and said a dragon had been born in the Bang family.
Yeah. Even now, thinking back on it, my sister was a genius.
If she wasnât, thereâs no way to explain half the shit she pulled.
Granted, her personality was a raging disasterâsheâd blow up without caring about fire or water, which was a bit of a pain.
Even taking that into account, she was more than worthy of being called a prodigy, a genius.
Who was it again? I think it was the Murong Clan Head.
There was something he said after seeing my sister.
âIt wonât be long before thereâs no one in the Central Plains who doesnât know the name of the Bang familyâs eldest daughter.â
Thatâs what he said.
Thatâs how much of a genius she was.
âAnd that was the Clan Head of the Murong Clan saying it, no less.â
If the master of one of the Five Great Clans had given that evaluation himself, then my sister was definitely a genius.
Knowing that, Father pinned every last hope he had on her, calling her the only ray of hope, but......
âGod, fuck this family.â
âIâm done! I quit!â
The sister theyâd called their hope watched the household get more and more fucked up and finally couldnât take it anymoreâshe bolted.
She left so fast that nobody in the family even realized she was gone.
She just left behind a single letter and disappeared.
Thanks to that, all the despair and frustration Father had ended up turned on me.
â......Bitch.â
My fist clenched on its own.
If you were going to run, you could have taken me with you. You just ran off on your own?
CRUMPLEâ
The letter crumpled in my hand as I squeezed it.
âCalm down.......â
First, I had to calm down. I repeated the words in my head.
There was a lot I needed to think about after seeing my sisterâs letter.
Now was not the time to be dwelling on the past.
I smoothed out the crumpled paper and looked at it as I thought.
âFirst off......â
The crest stamped on the letter.
That was the problem.
âWhy does it have the Beggar Clan Masterâs crest......?â
According to Yoo Cheongil, this wasnât just some ordinary Beggar Clan emblemâit was the Beggar Clan Masterâs.
A crest belonging to someone that big doesnât just get slapped on any random letter.
âWhat the hell is going on?â
Why was it stamped on my sisterâs letter?
And thenâ
âHow did she even know I was in Sichuan?â
For this letter to have been entrusted to the Martial Alliance meant someone had sent it and it had arrived.
How had she known to send it here?
That was the part I found most puzzling.
This was a sister I hadnât had a scrap of contact with in almost ten years.
And that sister had borrowed the name of the Beggar Clan Master to send a letter to where I was.
âGiven how long Iâve actually been in Sichuanââ
When I thought about how short that period was, there were only so many options: either she was nearby, or...
âShe had some way of hearing about me.â
What the hell?
âWhat have you been doing all this time?â
Same father, different mother.
What the hell had that woman been doing with her life?
âEven if she ran away, I never thought sheâd live a normal life.â
After everything Iâd seen, I didnât think my sister was the type to go live as an ordinary person.
If anythingâ
âIt was weird
no
rumors about her ever reached me.â
The fact that she was living quietly was what felt strange.
â......Knew it.â
So she wasnât living some peaceful, average life after all.
That was what it felt like.
â......Tch......â
I clicked my tongue softly as I read the letter.
âLooks like Father was right.â
His words about how my sister would send a letter came to mind. Back then heâd told me to contact him immediately if she did.
â......Tell him and sheâll kill me, huh?â
Apparently my sister had predicted that, since sheâd written the warning clearly in the letter.
I could say I wasnât scared of some warning from a sister I hadnât seen in ages.
â......But with that person, you never know what sheâll do.â
The memory of that fear Iâd felt in front of her deranged temper tightened around my throat again.
Remembering how insane her personality was, I had zero faith sheâd have grown up normal.
And then, at the endâ
âThe Dragon-Phoenix Gathering, huh?â
The last line among the few words written there.
If anything was going to stick in your head, it was that part.
She said the Dragon-Phoenix Gathering would be held soon, and that I should meet her there.
That was how the letter ended.
â......And how the hell did she know that.â
That was the part I really couldnât understand.
âIsnât that supposed to be top secret?â
A martial festival for the younger elites, held every five years by the Martial Alliance.
You could predict it, sure, since the cycle was about due, but...
The way she flatly asserted it would be opening soon was what felt off.
âAnd the stuff about the Beggar Clan Master too.â
I couldnât help feeling a sort of worried, not-worried concern that maybe she was involved in something strange.
RUSTLE.
Thinking that, I folded the letter neatly and tucked it into my robes.
Then I looked at the branch chief in front of me and spoke with a smile.
âIâve confirmed the letter. Thank you for your consideration, Branch Chief.â
âAh, not at all. It was simply something that had to be done.â
The branch chief forced a smile at my words, but his eyes were still on the letter Iâd just put away.
He was clearly bothered by the Beggar Clan Masterâs crest on it.
âYour words alone are more than enough. I canât afford to take up any more of busy menâs time, so I should take my leave as well.â
âAh. No, Iââ
âPardon me for the intrusion.â
Before the branch chief could say anything else, I cut him off with a bow.
If I got any more tangled up here, itâd only get more annoying.
Once Iâd said my piece, I wrapped things up. At that point, the branch chief couldnât very well keep holding me and, with clear regret, let me go.
I stepped outside.
*****
[Dragon-Phoenix Gathering, huh......]
The moment we came out, Yoo Cheongil muttered.
[Right, there was something like that.]
His gaze was steeped in nostalgia, like he was reminiscing about the distant past.
Just when I was wondering if he had some special memory tied to itâ
[It was a good place for beating down all those punks calling themselves âgeniuses.â Not a bad place at all. Thereâs nowhere better for blowing off steam when youâre all pent up.]
â.......â
I had no idea how he could say something that violent with such sentimentality, but Iâd already decided not to try to understand how that old man thought, so I just ignored him.
[But youâre saying itâll be opening around now, are you?]
Heh heh heh.
Yoo Cheongil let out a chuckle that sounded ominous as hell. He clearly had some weird scheme brewing again.
âItâll be fine this time.â
At least the Dragon-Phoenix Gathering shouldnât be a big problem.
This old man probably didnât know, butâ
âBlue Moon Sect canât participate in the Dragon-Phoenix Gathering.â
As a sect considered directly affiliated with the Martial Alliance, Blue Moon Sectâs disciples canât take part in festivals the Alliance holds.
With that condition in place, the Dragon-Phoenix Gathering didnât really mean much to me.
Deciding that, I chose to think about it lightly and leave it at that.
What Iâd forgotten, in that moment, was one small thing.
That I was a bastard with absolutely dogshit luck.
*****
I made my way slowly back [N O V E L I G H T] to Tang Clan. Iâd have liked to look around the county a bit more, but the gazes following me were too sharp; I didnât have a choice.
âFunny how they
say
Iâm free to walk around.â
They told me not to worry and feel free to go wherever I wanted, but the eyes tracking me from behind were so fierce there was no way I could really relax.
Escort and guide? My ass.
That was straight-up surveillance.
On top of thatâ
âDo Hyeong and Cheon Eujin said it wasnât this bad for them.â
Apparently I was getting special treatment; every time I went anywhere, they tailed me so hard it made me sick of it.
Granted, while it was suffocating, it wasnât like I couldnât understand it.
The situation fit too perfectly.
âNot only did I open someone elseâs secret treasury door like it was nothing,â
A surprise attack broke out inside that treasury.
And the Poison King just so happened to be trapped by the enemyâs scheme.
âAnd then a younger elite killed the leader of the attackers.â
Anyone else would be calling that person a hero.
âBut from a political and rational point of view, Iâm the most suspicious one there.â
Given that position, I couldnât really blame the Poison King for how he was handling things.
âThat doesnât change the fact that it pisses me off, though.â
I couldnât help but be irritated.
âTch.â
I clicked my tongue. The moment I stepped back into Tang Clan, the people whoâd been following me scattered.
So the surveillance zone was only outside the clan? Orâ
âThere could still be eyes on me without me noticing.â
They might be hiding their presence and watching me.
So yeah, this really was a tigerâs den.
âThe fortunate part isââ
If Iâd been alone, it mightâve been a problem, but in this regard, there
was
someone with me who was helpful.
[There donât seem to be any Tang Clan martial artists nearby.]
At Yoo Cheongilâs words, I felt a bit of relief as I walked on.
The place I arrived at was the training ground.
Today, Do Hyeong and Cheon Eujin had asked to practice together, so Iâd tried to arrange my schedule to match.
âFor the next few days.â
According to the Iron River Master, there were only a few days left until Full Moon was completed.
Heâd said it would be at most five days.
Which meant that once that was over, Iâd be able to go back.
âLetâs take it easy for just a little longer.â
So for now, Iâd just stick to the bare minimum of what Iâd decided to do.
It wasnât like I had any more business to stir up in Sichuan anyway.
If anything, my work was to gather up everything that had already happened and make it my own.
âFor now......â
Until the Poison King called for me again, I didnât have anything else to doâso it was time to focus on training.
On the newly learned Blue Moon Sword Dance.
âAnd on trying out the Divine Sword.â
The special-grade weapon Tang Yeran had poured her whole being into repairing.
The Heavenly Demonâs beloved sword, and the Divine Sword that was now supposed to become my own cherished blade.
It was time to actually use it.
CLACK. My hand settled on the Divine Swordâs hilt at my waist.
Just like before, it fit my grip so well it was almost addictive.
I wrapped my fingers around it lightlyâthen, remembering something, I asked Yoo Cheongil a question.
âBy the way, are you sure itâs really okay for
me
to use this?â
The sense of wrongness still lingered.
âI mean, Iâm on the orthodox side, and Iâm using the sword of the Heavenly Demon Cultâs Heavenly Demon.......â
You could say what was left of my conscience twinged, just a little.
Especially since it was Yoo Cheongilâthe man whoâd killed the Heavenly Demonâwhoâd told me to use this thing. I really didnât get that.
âIf it were Full Moon, at least thereâd be some justification.â
If he told me to use that brute of a saber, that would be its own problem, but at least thereâd be a reason.
A disciple using his masterâs sword.
Who would complain about that? With that justification, Iâd have plenty to say back if anyone tried to argue.
The Divine Sword wasnât like that. Even if the chances of anyone finding out were low, I still didnât get why heâd entrusted it to me.
So I tried to pick out just that part and keep pressing him about it.
âWhy this one.......â
I trailed off mid-sentence.
Something was off about Yoo Cheongilâs expression.
He didnât answer a single word of what Iâd asked and was staring off somewhere.
Seeing that look, I couldnât help tensing up.
As the tension shot up to the limit, all the hairs on my body stood on endâ
[Half a step back. Tilt the sword on a diagonal, spine toward northwest, left side.]
I heard Yoo Cheongilâs voice.
The moment his words reached me, I took the stance.
And in that instantâ
KIIIIIKâ! CLANG!!!
An attack from someone came crashing toward my sword.