"Sins are passed through blood to the next generation."
These were the words the Amwang had heard from his father when he was young.
The sins of their ancestors, passed down through their lineage, piling burdens upon the descendants.
The words Amwang heard most often from his father were apologies.
[âIâm sorry for bringing you into this world.â]
[âI should never have had you.â]
Hurtful words, perhaps, but Amwang understood as he listened.
The circumstances left little room for anything else.
A monster who longed to be human had given birth to another monster.
The child born wished to be human, but their blood was too strong for that.
This was the will of his father.
Regardless of his regrets, Amwangâs monstrous birth had been a product of his fatherâs wishes.
When Amwang turned twenty, his father passed away.
He died as he had lived, always apologizing to Amwang. Yet, for some reason, his father died with a smile on his faceâa happy one.
As Amwang knelt before his fatherâs gravestone, his own expression was blank.
It wasnât that he wasnât sad.
The emotions were there, but they werenât strong enough to twist his face into grief.
Only then did Amwang realize that he truly was a monster.
At the same time, he thought he understood why his father had smiled as he passed away.
âAre you happy now that youâve passed it on?â
He spoke to the gravestone.
The curse of this bloodline was cruel.
It crushed emotions, sometimes warped appearances into grotesque forms, and granted extraordinary physical abilitiesâbut only to further prove oneâs monstrous nature.
His father had called it the Curse of Dragonâs Blood.
A curse bestowed by dragons.
To possess the blood of dragons but fall short of becoming one, degrading into something hideous.
This did not scare Amwang. He didnât care about becoming a dragon or not.
The problem with this curse was singular.
Because one couldnât become a dragon, they longed for it, yet also cried out to live as human.
And yetâ¦
The curse also made them despise humanity, to view humans with contempt and disdain.
It was a curse that encapsulated contradiction, driving its bearer into chaos.
This was the essence of the Curse of Dragonâs Blood.
Worse still, if the bloodline awakened fully, voices would begin to echo in oneâs mind.
âServe the dragon.
A voice, belonging to no one in particular, spoke endlessly.
You, who cannot become a dragon, serve one instead.
A relentless voice that plagued its victim daily, no matter how exhausted or desperate they became.
There was only one way to escape this curse.
The answer was to have a child and pass the curse onto them.
The vicious bloodline made death impossible for its bearer unless someone else took on the burden.
Amwangâs father had borne a child for this reasonâto escape the curse by passing it on.
Only by doing so could one finally find release in death. It was a merciless curse.
His mother, who had borne him, died in childbirth.
His father, up until the moment he died, had never spoken about her.
When Amwang turned twenty and awakened the curse, his father passed away.
The man who had apologized endlessly for his entire life died with the happiest smile imaginable.
What remained now was the life of Amwang, cursed and awakened at twenty.
Kneeling before his fatherâs grave, Amwang made a vow.
He would break this curse.
He would not pass it onto the next generationâhe would find a way to face death himself.
And so, he lived.
âServe the dragon.
Even as the words echoed in his ears, he endured.
âKill those inferior creatures.
His emotions dried up and withered.
As a monster, his gaze toward humans grew colder.
This indifference made it easy to kill.
Amwang had a talent for killing.
Moreover, the "power" contained within his curse made harming others effortless.
Though he did not revel in his power, he used it consistently.
Over time, he became known as the Amwang, the pinnacle of assassins.
Others began to flock to him, forming the Cheolya Assassination Squad.
That had been over a hundred years agoâ¦
âWait, hold on⦠What?â
I interrupted, cutting off the Amwang mid-explanation.
He stopped speaking and turned to look at me.
I stared back at him, confused by what Iâd just heard.
ââ¦A hundred years ago? Did you just say it was a hundred years ago?â
âThatâs correct.â
The Cheolya Assassination Squad had been formed a century ago?
It wasnât unheard of for someone of Amwangâs caliber to live that long, butâ¦
âBased on his story, it seems like heâs lived even longer than that.â
The tales he recounted hinted at events far older than a century.
ââ¦Senior, how old are you exactly?â
âI stopped counting after one hundred and fifty.â
ââ¦â
I clamped my mouth shut at his nonchalant response.
One hundred and fifty?
I was certain Iâd heard that correctly.
One hundred and fifty years old, and he hadnât bothered counting since.
âBut he looks so young.â
Despite his actual age, the Amwang looked far from it.
While Paejon had undergone a rejuvenation technique, the Amwang didnât appear even close to middle age.
Even with his now-transformed skin, back when he had white hair and pale eyes, he had looked like a strikingly handsome young man.
To learn he was over a century and a half old left me dumbfounded.
While I stared blankly at him, the Amwang offered further explanation.
âThe curse does not allow death.â
ââ¦So, it grants immortality?â
A curse that denied death. Was it really a curse or a blessing in disguise?
âIf you canât die of old age, then what about being killed? Surely, thatâs possible.â
If death was the goal, someone else could always deliver it, even if self-harm was impossible. Poison, for instance, or other methods should work.
As the thought crossed my mind, the Amwang explained:
âDeath is not permitted by those of inferior species.â
âHa⦠What an absurd story.â
I couldnât help but curse aloud.
What kind of lofty species imposed such a ridiculous curse?
And worseâ¦
âA descendant of Yeon Ilcheon.â
A member of the family that had saved the worldâthe Golden Heaven Yeon Ga.
To think their bloodline was burdened by such a curse. Why?
ââ¦Do you know why this curse was placed upon your lineage?â
âIt is said to be a punishment from the Great Dragon.â
The Great Dragonâs wrath had cursed them with the Curse of Dragonâs Blood.
The Great Dragonâ¦
The answer came to me naturally.
âThe Blood Demon.â
The only being I could reasonably associate with dragons was him.
If anyone had cursed Yeon Ilcheonâs bloodline, it had to be the Blood Demon.
I gathered my thoughts, and then finally asked the Amwang the question Iâd been holding back.
"But, Senior..."
"Yes?"
"Could you⦠maybe treat me a bit more casually?"
For the love of everything, could he stop kneeling like that and speaking in overly formal tones? The sudden shift to polite language was so unsettling it was driving me insane.
âWhy are you doing thisâ¦?â
â...â
The Amwang was silent for a moment, thenâ¦
âHm.â
Letting out a brief hum, he moved slightly.
And thenâ
ââ¦!â
Before I knew it, the tip of his dagger was at my throat.
No, it hadnât actually touched me. He stopped just short of my skin.
âWhat theâ¦?â
I hadnât even noticed his movement, and now I could feel the cold killing intent radiating from him.
It was clear he had intended to kill me just now⦠and yet, he didnât follow through.
Looking at him for answers, I saw him withdraw the dagger as he spoke.
âI cannot harm you, nor can I act without offering you the utmost courtesy.â
ââ¦What happens if you donât?â
âI must.â
I see.
So even if the Amwang didnât want to, he was compelled to act this way toward me. He couldnât attack me either.
Was he demonstrating that for me just now?
I rubbed my neck lightly, the lingering chill still annoying me. The fact that I hadnât even reacted irked me further.
ââ¦Fine. I understand what youâre saying.â
I got itâhe was under some kind of curse.
I also understood that he was a failed dragon and that my transformation into a dragon made him behave this way toward me.
âSo, what exactly is it that you want from me?â
What was it the Amwang was hoping for? I needed to know precisely.
He asked me to break his curse, didnât he?
He had begged me to free him from his curse, butâ¦
How am I supposed to do that?
Even if he asked, I had no idea how to go about it. Even if a method existed, I needed to know it first.
How can I break it if I donât even know how?
Caught in this situation, I could only stare blankly as the Amwang spoke.
âThey said it could be resolved by meeting a dragon. That they would know how.â
At his words, I frowned.
â...Who told you that?â
That it could be resolved by meeting a dragon? If this was based on the logic that a dragon had placed the curse, so a dragon could remove it, that was one thing.
But if someone had told him this, it was a different story entirely.
With a grave expression, I pressed the Amwang for an answer.
âTaechun.â
He gave a simple response.
âThe master of Taechun told me this.â
âTaechun⦠Taechun?â
My eyes widened at the name.
If he meant Taechun⦠could it be�
ââ¦Are you referring to the Taechun Magyeong in the northeast?â
The Taechun Magyeong.
It referred to the open dimensional rift near the Black Dragon River, at the border of Zhongyuan.
Unlike gates like Magyeong Gate or True Magyeong Gate, which spewed out monsters, Taechun Magyeong was relatively stable.
It was one of the few open dimensional rifts managed by the Martial Alliance, and it was the furthest from civilization.
Butâ¦
âThe master,â he said.
The term âmasterâ struck a chord. If the Amwang referred to someone as the master, thenâ¦
âThe master of the Taechun Magyeong, then.â
It was akin to saying the ruler of a world.
The Amwang had met the master of Taechun and been told that meeting a dragon could break his curse.
âWho the hell is this person?â
A being from another world, speaking about dragonsâit was bizarre, to say the least.
âThis⦠is this related to why youâre here now?â
âYes.â
His response came without hesitation.
Why the Amwang was hereâwhile part of it might have been due to Paejonâs request, something else seemed more pressing.
âAnd the Black Dragon Sword?â
The reason I came to Sichuan in the first place was because of the Black Dragon Sword.
The Amwang had been the one to destroy its grotesque form in a single blow.
Could that be connected as well?
âThe Taechun said so. To break the curse, I must meet a dragon. And so, it offered to tell me the dragonâs location.â
The Amwangâs overly formal tone grated on my nerves, but I didnât bother to correct him.
âThat was the deal.â
ââ¦The deal?â
âTo eliminate the deviant apostle.â
An apostle?
If the Black Dragon Sword was the reason for his actions, thenâ¦
âThe apostle of Taechun, then?â
Based on what I was hearing, the Black Dragon Sword had been the apostle of this otherworldly master.
While I didnât fully understand how that worked, it seemed to make sense.
âSo the sword survived because of this master.â
The sword, supposedly killed by the Sword Sovereign, had somehow returned to life. If an otherworldly being had intervened, the pieces fit.
Still, a few questions remained.
âThen why didnât you deal with the Black Dragon Sword immediately?â
Why did the Amwang go all the way to the Shinryong Hall to eliminate it? I couldnât understand.
The Amwang, tilting his head slightly, answered plainly.
âIt was the most effective method.â
âSpecifically?â
âTo approach the Black Dragon Sword. It happened to need my help, so I used it.â
ââ¦!â
Hearing this, I finally realized the truth behind the black barrier that had enveloped the Shinryong Hall.
ââ¦That barrierâit was your doing?â
I had thought it felt strangely familiar every time I saw it.
âItâs similar to the barrier he used to kill me hundreds of times.â
The barrier the Amwang had erected during my training, covering the night skyâit was the same.
It explained why he had suddenly appeared at the Shinryong Hall.
To gather information to find the dragon, he had acted on Taechunâs request.
ââ¦And in the process of fulfilling that request, you met me?â
âYes.â
At the Shinryong Hall, he had encountered me and sensed our connection.
Curious, he had followed Paejonâs suggestion and joined us. And now, here we were, with me having fully transformed into a dragon.
So that was it.
âWhat a ridiculous chain of coincidences.â
I immediately dismissed the thought.
This wasnât a coincidence.
There was no way this was mere happenstance, no matter how much I might wish otherwise.
âTaechunâ¦â
Perhaps this mysterious being had foreseen my transformation into a dragon.
Perhaps it had deliberately sent the Amwang to ensure our fates would intertwine.
Though it was pure speculation, I couldnât shake the feeling that I was right.
âAbout your curse,â I finally said.
âI donât know how to lift it.â
I was honest.
There was no point in pretending otherwise.
â...â
The Amwang remained expressionless.
What was this? Had I guessed wrong?
Looking at him curiously, I saw him speak once more.
âIt doesnât matter.â
ââ¦What?â
I paused, confused by his response.
How could it not matter? After begging me to break his curse on his knees, he now said it didnât matter?
âIf you cannot break my curse, I have another request.â
âAnother request?â
What else could he possibly want from me?
âWhat is it?â
I asked cautiously, wanting to know before deciding whether to refuse.
The Amwang answered without hesitation.
âHere and nowâ¦â
His words made me hold my breath.
ââ¦Please kill me.â
ââ¦!â
The dry, desolate tone of his voice sent chills down my spine.
âThisâ¦â
Hearing his words, I finally understood.
From the very beginning, this was what the Amwang had truly wanted.
Even his request to break the curseâ¦
It all boiled down to the same thing.
From the start, what he had sought from me was simple:
âSave me by granting me death.â
He had always wanted to die.