As the summer days approached, my routine didnât change much.
It would be stranger if things shifted just because of a little heat.
All that changed was my growing awareness of the passing time with the weather.
âHahâ¦â
I exhaled deeply after an intense training session, letting my body cool down as I stared straight ahead.
Unlike me, taking a moment of rest, the air in front of me was filled with heatâthe heat of energy released by martial artists.
Clang! Clang, clang!
The sound of intense strikes echoed. The wind was thick with qi, mingling with the tension.
Where was this coming from? The sound came from Namgung Bi-ah and Jamryong, who were engaged in an intense sparring session.
Why were they sparring all of a sudden? Well, it became a trend after the incident with Baekryeongeom.
I was watching the scene with amusement.
âThis is the first time.â
A sparring match between the two.
Jamryong and Namgung Bi-ah.
In my previous life, these two would have never met.
By the time Namgung Bi-ah made her proper appearance in the martial world, Jamryong had already passed away.
And now, seeing them sparring right before my eyes was nothing short of fascinating.
Andâ¦
âItâs quite intense.â
Their sparring match was fierce. The last duel with Baekryeongeom was similar, but this felt different.
Their skill levels were almost identical, and it showed.
Both of them were at the peak of the Jeoljeong stage, just before breaking into the Hwagyeong stage.
Clang! Their swords clashed, sparks flying into the air. The traces of their sword energy left clear marks in the air.
Moreoverâ¦
âTheyâre fast.â
Both focused on speed in their swordsmanship, and their reactions were remarkable, both in terms of physical speed and mental sharpness.
My gaze shifted to Jamryong.
Though I didnât know much about Jamryongâs martial arts, one thing was clear.
âHis movements are rough.â
For a Taoist practitioner, his movements were unrefined.
Was this typical of Wudang?
âNo, itâs not.â
Itâs just that heâs unique. That much was obvious.
Even compared to other Taoists, his style was distinctly different. Just looking at Yeongpung, known as the Sword Dragon, was enough to see that.
Even though Maehwa Swordsmanship wasnât particularly rough, Yeongpung maintained a polished form.
Jamryong, on the other handâ¦
âHeâs a madman.â
He barely adhered to the principle of âwavesâ that Wudang pursued, moving unpredictably. His nickname, Jamryong (Hidden Dragon), probably stemmed from this wild style.
Such erratic movement could only be managed by a genius.
While most martial artists struggle to stay within the form of their martial arts, Jamryong seemed to break free of those constraints, moving at will while still keeping within the basics. It was something only a genius could pull off.
Namgung Bi-ah was no different.
Crackle, crackle! Lightning qi continuously surged from Namgung Bi-ahâs body. I couldnât help but smile at the sight.
âSheâs improved again.â
The intensity of her lightning qi had increased.
It meant that her internal energy had grown. How was she improving so much every time I saw her? Was she secretly taking some kind of elixir?
âEven her controlâ¦â
The unnecessary movements in the currents of her lightning qi had reduced. Namgung Bi-ah was growing more accustomed to controlling it.
And beyond thatâ¦
âHer mastery of the Imperial Sword Style has deepened.â
Her grasp of the Namgung familyâs secret sword technique had also improved.
Namgung Bi-ah was trulyâ¦
âImproving day by dayâ¦â
âSheâs beautiful, isnât she?â
âBecoming more beautifulâ!?â
I was startled by the sudden voice and quickly turned my head.
There was Baekryeongeom, smiling at me.
âUgh!â
I jumped in surprise and backed away. Baekryeongeom, noticing my reaction, feigned a hurt expression.
ââ¦Why are you acting like youâve seen a bug?â
âYou canât just sneak up on me like that⦠I was shocked!â
âIf Iâm to be your bodyguard, I have to be stealthy, right? Canât go around making noise.â
âWhy would you do that to the person youâre supposed to be guarding?â
âThey say you have to fool your allies to fool your enemies.â
I sighed deeply at her innocent smile. That saying wasnât meant to be used like that.
âWhat is wrong with this woman?â
She always had a way of popping out unexpectedly, making my heart skip a beat.
I looked at her with displeasure. She seemed to enjoy having startled me, her smile smug and annoying.
When I first met her, she wasnât this bad⦠I have no idea how things ended up like this.
As time passed, my relationship with Baekryeongeom had shifted slightly.
To put it simply, I started seeing her differently.
For one, she was someone I could treat more casually.
ââ¦What should I call this?â
As a junior, I could be a little informal with her, as long as it wasnât outright rude. She didnât seem to mind.
In a good way, she was broad-minded, and in another sense, she was a bit dull.
Once I realized that, I could treat her more freely.
âBesidesâ¦â
I glanced at Baekryeongeomâs shoulder, where a geumje (forbidden restriction) had been placed with her consent.
âI canât believe she really went through with it.â
When she said she didnât trust herself, I suggested placing a restriction on her, and she actually agreed.
For a martial artist who had reached the Hwagyong stage, placing a restriction on their own body was extremely dangerous. But Baekryeongeom had accepted it without hesitation.
I wasnât sure if she understood what I could do with it, but she had agreed nonetheless.
Because of that, she hadnât caused any incidents like before, but it did lead to one change in our daily interactions.
âWhat do you think?â
âWhat do you mean?â
âWho do you think will win, between those two?â
Another change was that Baekryeongeom had started talking to me more often.
We were together frequently because of her role as my bodyguard, so it wasnât surprising. But the problem was, it made things a bit chaotic. Baekryeongeomâs personality led her to ask strange questions, like the one she just asked.
âWho do I think will win?â
I furrowed my brow slightly at her question.
It was a difficult one. Jamryong and Namgung Bi-ah were surprisingly evenly matched.
Both of them were at the peak of their abilities, on the verge of breaking into the Hwagyong stage. For two people who had just crossed the threshold of adulthood, it was an impressive achievement.
ââ¦Iâm the exception.â
I was an anomaly, having traveled through time. I wasnât a genius to begin with.
Reaching the peak stage typically took a martial artist until their thirties, after years of dedicated effort.
Reaching the âmature peakâ stage after about ten years of additional effort showed why the younger generation was known as the âMeteoric Generation.â
As for those twoâ¦
âTheyâve already surpassed the limits of the Meteoric Generation.â
Who would win between them?
â...â
It was hard to say. They both looked evenly matched to me.
Butâ¦
My gaze lingered on Namgung Bi-ah.
Crackle! Lightning surged from her blade, leaving marks in the air.
As I had mentioned earlier, her lightning qi was far more powerful than when I had first seen it.
âHmm.â
However, her lightning failed to penetrate the flow surrounding Jamryong. It couldnât break through the defensive waves of Wudangâs ultimate technique.
âHeâs good at deflecting it.â
Jamryongâs sword, though rough, didnât stray from the principles of Wudang.
He deflected and absorbed the attacks.
Jamryongâs sword absorbed the energy of Namgung Bi-ahâs attacks and then unleashed it again in rapid counterattacks.
Namgung Bi-ahâs precise control was impressive, but Jamryongâs ability to absorb and reapply the energy was equally remarkable.
Watching them made me chuckle.
âDamn geniuses.â
Geniuses were always a source of annoyance for me. After shaking my head at them, I focused again on the duel.
Even though I claimed not to know who would win, I had a gut feeling about it.
My gaze returned to Namgung Bi-ah.
Without any sign of distress, she continued the duel, but I knew the outcome.
âThis duel⦠Namgung Bi-ah will lose.â
Baekryeongeom, hearing my confident response, widened her eyes in surprise.
âThatâs unexpected. Youâre more decisive than I thought.â
âYou already had the same thought, didnât you? Thatâs why you asked me.â
Baekryeongeom grinned as I looked at her with a slight frown.
âI thought youâd defend your people and say otherwise.â
âThis is different.â
âBut youâre not denying that sheâs one of your people, are you?â
â...â
I didnât respond to Baekryeongeomâs teasing words and turned my head away.
The duel was still ongoing, but my furrowed brow wasnât about to relax.
âWhatâs going on?â
On the surface, Namgung Bi-ah seemed fine, but both Baekryeongeom and I could tell something was off.
Though her destructive power and control were flawless, there was something wrong with the duel itself.
There was a hint of a simma (inner demon) affecting Namgung Bi-ahâs movements, something subtle but unmistakable.
Why was someone who had lived solely to wield the sword now plagued by an inner demon?
I pondered the mystery.
I recalled the Margrave of the Sword from my previous life.
Her only goal was to see the end of her sword, and in that path, there had never been room for any inner demons.
But now, Namgung Bi-ah was showing signs of one. Why?
As I mulled it over, I glanced at Baekryeongeom.
Sensing my gaze, she looked slightly awkward as she spoke.
âWhat? What were you going to say?â
âI wasnât going to say anything.â
She knew it too.
After that sparring match with Wi Seol-ah, Namgung Bi-ah, and Tang So-yeol, something had changed in Namgung Bi-ah.
Had that duel awakened something in her? Was that why she was now struggling with an inner demon?
Even if that was the caseâ¦
â...â
There was nothing I could do about it. And there was no reason to blame Baekryeongeom.
If anythingâ¦
âWhy am I relieved?â
Despite my concern for Namgung Bi-ahâs inner turmoil, I also felt a strange sense of relief.
Perhaps it was because, in my previous life, she had only pursued the end of her sword, never living a truly human life.
Now, seeing her struggle with an inner demon made her seem more human, like she was leading a different life this time.
âOf course, itâs probably not a good thing for her.â
Still, seeing Namgung Bi-ah wrestle with her emotions was strangely reassuring.
And I believed in her.
I believed that she would overcome her inner demon without too much difficulty.
Baekryeongeom, watching me, pouted in dissatisfaction.
âI donât like that look on your face.â
âSuddenly, out of nowhere?â
âYouâre looking at her with that âproud mentorâ expression. It reminds me ofâ¦â
âOf who?â
âNever mind, forget it.â
Why did she stop mid-sentence?
As I exchanged a few more words with Baekryeongeom, the sound of clashing swords echoed again.
Clang!
With a sharp, piercing sound, the sparring match came to an end.
As expectedâ¦
The tip of Jamryongâs sword was at Namgung Bi-ahâs throat.
She had lost.
Namgung Bi-ah stared at Jamryong in shock, her eyes wide.
Seeing that, I turned away.
Baekryeongeom called after me as I began to walk off.
âWhere are you going?â
âIâve seen enough. Iâm going to wash up.â
âYouâre not going to check on her?â
âThereâs no need. Sheâs better off alone right now.â
Even if I could intervene and help with her problem, I didnât want to.
I wanted Namgung Bi-ah to overcome this on her own and stand on her own two feet.
I believed she would.
This Namgung Bi-ah from this lifeâshe would be able to do it.
âNo, even in the previous life, she could have.â
The Margrave of the Sword could have, too.
I just hadnât known it then.
As I made my way toward the valley, I heard Baekryeongeom muttering behind me.
ââ¦You really shouldnât resemble him in this way.â
âWhat was that? Who do I resemble?â
âNothing, forget it. Oh, want me to wash your back?â
âNo thanks.â
I quickly walked away, refusing her offer with disgust in my voice.
That woman must be insane.
Shaking my head, I disappeared toward the valley.
Baekryeongeom, left behind, watched me walk away, a bitter smile on her face as she whispered to herself.
âYou really do resemble him⦠way too much.â
Her voice was filled with longing.
******************
Ignoring Baekryeongeomâs nonsense, I made my way to the valley to wash off the sweat that had soaked into my body.
As I hastily removed my upper garment, the dampness from my sweat became apparent.
Despite reaching the seventh stage of Guyeomhwaryun (Flamewheel Art), which had made my body so resilient that normal training no longer drew a single drop of sweat, here I was, drenched.
It was a sign of how grueling the training had become.
I frowned, thinking about the insane old man who was behind this torturous training regimen.
âThat crazy old geezer.â
Paejon was indeed a madman.
It didnât hit me at first when he told me to drill through a cave using the Tuapa Cheonmu, but it certainly did once I entered the second stage of training.
I was sparring with Paejon every single day. When I started training with the Dark King at night, I thought Iâd at least get some rest during the day.
Until you master one form, weâll spar daily.
The sparring never stopped.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
And the problem didnât end there.
âHe expects me to spar while maintaining the Tuapa Cheonmu technique?â
It was ridiculous. As if the pain wasnât already enough to make me faint, he expected me to fight while keeping the technique active, which meant taking hits while enduring the agony.
âAnd yet, here I am doing it.â
I twisted my aching body, a faint, bitter smile forming. As expected, it was unbelievably painful.
âWhat a crazy martial art.â
Maybe the technique was insane because the person who created it was also insane.
Just using it caused immense pain, and taking a hit while using it only multiplied that pain.
Paejon claimed it was because I hadnât fully integrated the technique.
In hindsight, it made sense why he warned me not to use it in real combat without his permission.
âIf I got injured while using thisâ¦â
It wasnât the injury that would kill me. The pain alone might stop my heart.
Every time I sparred with Paejon, I doubted whether this was even training. All my mental energy had to be focused on enduring the pain.
âAnd after all that, he expects me to play with the Dark King at night?â
Ha. It was absurd.
If sparring with Paejon was torture, sparring with the Dark King was a living nightmare.
âYep, a nightmare. Thatâs exactly what it is.â
For over a month now, since I started training with the Dark King, the number of times I âdiedâ in our sessions kept increasing.
The first day, I died nine times. Now, itâs easily over twenty deaths a session.
It was as if the Dark King was trying to tell me something: no matter how hard you try, youâll never reach me.
Mentally, it was exhausting. There didnât seem to be any way out.
âWhat am I supposed to gain from this training?â
Paejon wanted me to realize something through all this, but I wasnât feeling any closer to understanding.
What exactly was I supposed to learn from repeatedly dying?
No matter how much I thought about it, I couldnât figure it out.
âItâs tough.â
My mind was tired, and that fatigue was seeping into my body. I tried to push aside these thoughts and ignore my weary mind.
Eventually, I arrived at the valley.
Just as I got there, I noticed someone coming out, presumably having just finished washing.
My eyes widened when I realized who it was.
âHm?â
âOh.â
It was Wi Seol-ah.
Her hair was still damp, indicating she had just finished bathing.
âMasterâ¦!â
Wi Seol-ahâs face lit up as she saw me, her smile as radiant as ever.
It reminded me of when she used to serve me as a maid, with her wet hair framing her face just like now.
Without thinking, I stepped closer and used the towel I had to dry her hair.
âUh? M-Master? Eek!â
âYou shouldâve dried it properly before coming out.â
If she went out like this, I could imagine how many men would stare at her with those damp, enticing locks. Why did she always overlook such things?
Some things never change.
As she let out a soft squeak in surprise, Wi Seol-ah quietly leaned into my touch, seemingly enjoying the rough way I was drying her hair.
Unbelievable.
âYou like this?â
âYes⦠I do.â
ââ¦Ah, right.â
I didnât know how to respond to her sincere reply, especially since I was only half-joking when I asked. As I dried her hair, another thought crossed my mind.
ââ¦I shouldâve just used my heat to dry it.â
I couldâve dried her hair in seconds with my qi. Why was I bothering with this?
Realizing my mistake, I pulled the towel away and released some heat from my body to quickly dry her hair.
Wi Seol-ah looked a bit disappointed as the warmth enveloped her.
âMake sure you dry your hair properly next time. What were you thinking?â
âI was just about to dry itâ¦.â
âThatâs a lie.â
Caught by my words, Wi Seol-ah hesitated for a moment before nodding slightly. She still wasnât very good at lying.
Feeling a bit guilty for calling her out, she looked a little downcast, so I chuckled and offered,
âWant some yakgwa?â
â...!â
Her eyes sparkled at the mention of yakgwa, but she quickly turned her head away, feigning disinterest.
âIâm not a child anymoreâ¦â
âThen what was that reaction?â
âI didnât react at all.â
She still loved sweets, apparently. Why she was pretending otherwise, I had no idea.
Watching her, I couldnât help but smile inwardly.
It felt like some of the tension that had been building up inside me was finally starting to ease.
But then, Wi Seol-ahâs expression shifted as she reached up and gently touched the skin beneath my eyes.
Her hand was cold, having just come from the water.
âWhatâs wrong? Is there something on my face?â
âNo⦠Itâs just⦠Master, are you alright?â
âHmm? What do you mean?â
ââ¦You look really tired.â
Her worried expression took me by surprise.
I looked tired? Me?
âDoes it show that much?â
Now that I thought about it, a lot of people had been asking if I was okay lately. Something mustâve been off with my expression.
Realizing this, I forced a smile.
âIâm fine.â
â...â
Of course, Wi Seol-ah didnât seem convinced.
âWell, what can I do? Iâll just have to endure it.â
When things get tough, you just endure. Thatâs all there is to it.
âItâs just that Iâve been having some nightmares lately.â
âNightmares?â
âYeah.â
Nightmares. Iâve been having some pretty awful ones every night. Even for me, dying so many times was a bit too much.
It was exhausting. Thatâs how I felt.
As Wi Seol-ah continued to touch my face, I suddenly asked her a question.
âYou⦠no, Seol-ahâ¦.â
âYes?â
I almost called her by her full name but stopped myself.
Why was it so hard to call her by name?
âItâs nothing serious⦠but what do you think one should do when theyâre having nightmares?â
It was a trivial question, unrelated to the nightmares themselves.
Why was I even asking her this?
I was just embarrassed to call her by name, so I tried to change the subject.
Wi Seol-ah, unaware of my embarrassment, tilted her head in confusion as she thought about my question.
Her hair swayed with each movement, catching my attention.
âA nightmareâ¦?â
âYou donât have to think about it too muchâ¦.â
âWell, wouldnât you try to wake up first? Since itâs a scary dream?â
I chuckled quietly at her simple response. She was right.
If itâs a nightmare, the first thing youâd try to do is wake up.
âHuh?â
Suddenly, her words struck a chord within me.
âIf itâs a nightmare, you wake up.â
For some reason, that idea resonated deeply with me.