Chapter 60
Gentle Beast
Gentle Beast Chapter 60
The door slammed open, hitting the wall with a loud bang.
. . .
The other side was empty and quiet.
Looking around at the houses across the street, the doors were all closed, like no one had come back at all.
Ryanâs brow stretched, then he turned to Winter and eyes glinted coldly, âIf you day saw those words again, you wonât live long.â
Winter touched the top of his head, âYour female is at the back of the mountain and wonât hear it anyway. . .â
Ryan looked at him and his dark blue eyes seemed to carry a stormy sea.
Winter immediately shut up and respectfully said, âYes, Chief.â
*
On the other side, beyond the hill.
JÇ XiÇo Åu was âthrownâ out of her space and dropped onto her knees, palms pressed against the rough grass. Her thoughts were in disordered.
All she could think about was Winterâs words.
They were deceiving her?
What did they mean, Pat wasnât dead?
Why did Ryan do this? Didnât he promise to help her find Pat. . . were they fake?
JÇ XiÇo Åu tightened his fingers and raised his eyes to find that she had reappeared at the back of the mountain.
Just as Ryan pushed the door, she hid in her space reflexively.
ââNow that she had been âmovedâ by the space?
JÇ XiÇo Åu remembered the last time she had used the spaceâs teleportation that she had almost been killed by Laurence.
Why did she do it this time? Every time her mind began to fluctuate wildly and wanted to escape something, her space would make the decision for her?
JÇ XiÇo Åu was utterly confused.
âHey, why are you still here?â a voice called out to JÇ XiÇo Åu from overhead, suddenly interrupting her thoughts. n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
JÇ XiÇo Åu looked up and saw Suzanna standing in front of her carrying a bamboo basket. There were two grey hares inside, and in her other hand, she dragged a few palm leaves. She looked in a rush to get home.
JÇ XiÇo Åu hesitated, â. . . whatâs wrong?â
Suzanna pointed to the sky. Heavy dark clouds hung over the valley, looking as though rain could fall any moment. âRainy season is coming. There will be torrential rain over the next few days. The terrain is low here. If you donât hurry back, then heavy rain will come and youâll drown.â
JÇ XiÇo Åu stood up, âBut I havenât spoken to Walker yet. . .â
âTheyâve already gone home long ago!â Suzanna said the truth. Once the sky darkened, Walker, Joel and Selwyn left. âWho else do you see here? Youâre staggering on the floor. . . by the way, why are you lying here?â
JÇ XiÇo Åu tacitly didnât tell the truth, âI went home to get a few things, accidentally fell over.â
Suzannaâs mouth curled, undisguised disgust, âYou really are useless, canât even walk without falling.â She said so while reaching out a hand to lift her off the ground, âThe rain hasnât started yet, youâd better hurry and go back with me.â
JÇ XiÇo Åu slightly stalled. Going back meant facing Ryan, and she wasnât ready to face him yet. . .
JÇ XiÇo Åu looked up at the distant peaks and the black clouds rolling over, the hazy fog a sign of the oncoming rainstorm.
Suzanna urged her, âHey, can you walk?â
JÇ XiÇo Åu have her hand to Suzanna and nodded, âEn.â
Suzanna walked quickly home, and JÇ XiÇo Åu hurried to catch up with her, soon reaching her doorstep.
Rain was already beginning to fall, and they hit the ground, like ink from above.
Ryanâs house was at the end of the road and Suzanna told JÇ XiÇo Åu goodbye, planning to go on home.
âWait a minute, Suzanna,â JÇ XiÇo Åu suddenly stopped her, her dark eyes full of sincerity, âI have a question for you.â
Suzanna raised the palm leaf over her head. Her kitchen roof was leaking and she wanted to use it for repairs. âWhatâs the problem.â
JÇ XiÇo Åu weighed carefully, âIf. . . i mean, if Winter deceived you, would you be angry with him?â
Suzanna immediately said, annoyed, âWhat? Did he deceive me of something?â
âNo, no. I mean, if.â JÇ XiÇo Åu hurriedly waved her hand, fearing that Suzanna misunderstood, âHe isnât lying to you. Itâs just an analogy.â
Suzanna calmed down, the raindrops hitting the palm leaves over her head giving a crisp sound.
âIt depends on his reasons. If itâs for my sake, I wonât dispute about it. If heâs guilty and wanted to hide something, Iâd certainly be angry.â
âIf he deliberately concealed news of your family? Like Scarlet. . .â
âHe dared to do that, and Iâd immediately be looking for another spouse!â
JÇ XiÇo Åu: â. . .â
. . .
Saying farewell to Suzanna, she stood at the gate in front of Ryanâs house. The rain was getting heavier and heavier.
JÇ XiÇo Åu raised her hand to knock on the door and it was soon opened from inside.
Ryan stood at the doorway, a thick circle of mud on the edge of his boots, as if he had been looking for her.
JÇ XiÇo Åu raised her face but, before she could speak, she shivered and sneezed.
âWhere have you been?â Ryan immediately took her into his arms and covered her head with his hands, striding into the house.
JÇ XiÇo Åu rubbed his nose and dropped his eyelashes, âI went to the hill to teach Walker and the others about gunpowder. . . â
âI went down to the hill and Walker said you were coming back for something,â Ryan said.
When he said that, Ryan stared at JÇ XiÇo Åu to see all of her expressions.
JÇ XiÇo Åu restrained her emotions and clamped her fingers on Ryanâs shoulders, âI met Suzanna on the way. Suzanna said the rainy season was coming soon. I didnât come back to get something, instead walking with her. Her roof is leaking and she needed to pick up some palm leaves to fix it.â
Those were what JÇ XiÇo Åu guessed after seeing the leaves in her hands. She hadnât actually told her those details.
Ryanâs face eased slightly and walked into the house, taking JÇ XiÇo Åuâs blanket from the side cabinet and wrapped her in it. âAs Suzanna said. Itâs going to rain for the next few days. Donât teach them for the time being. Itâs best to stay at home.â
JÇ XiÇo Åu looked at him, âWhat about you?â
Ryan: âIâm going to lead the tribe on a hunt tomorrow.â
JÇ XiÇo Åuâs hands under the blanket were cold and she couldnât find the words, âYou arenât afraid of the rain?â
âThe rainy season has little effect on animals.â
JÇ XiÇo Åu nodded and stopped talking.
Ryan stretched out his hands to rub the rain off her lashes and found her face was cold. He went to rekindle the fire and took her into his arms, sitting in front of the fire. He wrapped up her little hands. âCold?â Her body trembled slightly.
JÇ XiÇo Åu buried her head and she subconsciously moved closer to him, nasally voicing, âEn.â
Ryan heard that and simply turned into his animal form, wrapping up her entire body.
The body temperature of leopards were high, running even forty degrees or higher.
Soon afterwards, JÇ XiÇo Åu forced her head up from under him, âEnough Ryan. . . Iâm getting hot.â
Ran touched her hands and it wasnât as cold, so he let her go.
Switching back to his humanoid shape, Ryan asked her, âWhat do you want to eat tonight.â
JÇ XiÇo Åu sat up and thought hard, âBraised eel.â
She had watched her mother cooking and it left a bit of an impression. She told Ryan how to do it and finally, asked expectantly, âWill you?â
The words in Ryanâs mouth âwonâtâ were quickly taken back and he said instead, âIâll try.â Then he added, âNo eel, catfish will do?â
Eel only lived in eastern Bornia, thousands of miles from here.
JÇ XiÇo Åu paused and said with regret, âOkay.â
Ryan turned and walked out the door.
JÇ XiÇo Åu sat cross-legged next to the fireplace and soon heard the sounds of cooking in the kitchen.
Ryan had no experience with human food and was very unskilled. The only thing he could cook was the stewed catfish soup from when JÇ XiÇo Åu was sick.
. . .
Sure enough, she soon saw the kitchen chimney billowing out smoke.
JÇ XiÇo Åu did not go back to help and went to the bedside cabinet, taking out the stone Winter had brought back.
The stone was still engraved with lines that JÇ XiÇo Åu couldnât understand. At the beginning, JÇ XiÇo Åu had been thinking hard about it for a long time. What did it mean? Now that she knew, perhaps there was no âmeaning.â
ââThis was just the cover they used to lie to her.
*
Ryan came out of the kitchen and walked into the bedroom to see her standing in front of the cabinet, motionless.
When Ryan saw what she was holding in her hand, his face slightly changed and his voice was low, âWhat are you looking at?â
JÇ XiÇo Åu turned her head and pursed her lips, shaking her head, âNothing, just looking at it.â
Ryan saw there was nothing abnormal in her expression and his mood sank, putting the bowl on the table. Just before he could speak, JÇ XiÇo Åu scuttled behind him without warning, âRyan, my map. Did you throw it away?â
Ryanâs actions stilled.
JÇ XiÇo Åu looked at him, clearly, âWhen my compass was broken, was it you?â
When the compass was bad, JÇ XiÇo Åu felt it was strange. Why couldnât she use it?
The map that was later drawn was placed in her backpack, no one had moved it, but it could not be found.
She wasnât dull, but she had been unwilling to speculate about it.
She had always believed in Ryan, and even when Winter told her Pat was dead, she never doubted him.
Today, however, she heard him and Winter talking about Pat and how they were deceiving her.
JÇ XiÇo Åu didnât get Ryanâs response and stubbornly asked again, âIs it not?â
After a long time, Ryanâs voice was heavy, âYes.â
JÇ XiÇo Åu swayed and raised her face, throat choking, âPat isnât dead, is he?â
âRight,â Ryan said.
âSo why did you lie to me?â
Ryan bent over and slowly raised his eyes, âI wanted you to stay here with me and be my spouse forever.â
JÇ XiÇo Åu shook her head, her emotions a bit out of control, âI can stay beside you. . . but it cannot be this way. You canât lie to me. Patâs obviously not dead, whyâd you lie to me that he was dead. . .â
When she learned that Pat was dead, that feeling of helplessness and desperation, she still remembered.
JÇ XiÇo Åu could not accept that Ryan apparently knew what she cared about most but still cruelly deceived her.
How could he be so selfish if he just wanted her to stay?
Ryan clasped her shoulders, blue eyes staring at her, âIf I didnât say that, would you willingly stay?â
JÇ XiÇo Åuâs silence was answer enough.
Ryan lifted the side of his mouth, cold and cruel, âThat is also my answer.â
Perhaps this sentence triggered her, perhaps Ryanâs attitude was too strong. JÇ XiÇo Åu suddenly broke free from Ryan and ran outside.
Outside it was pouring rain and just the short distance from the bedroom to the door, JÇ XiÇo Åu was drenched.
JÇ XiÇo Åu had her hand on the door, but she didnât have the time to open it. She was caught from behind by the shoulder and Ryan pulled her back into the room.
âLet me go, you let me go!â JÇ XiÇo Åu desperately struggled, her voice whimpering with tears, âRyan, I hate you!â
Ryan paced and asked, âThis is why you didnât want to mate with me?â
JÇ XiÇo Åu said, âYes. I donât want to mate with a leopard!â
Ryan suddenly stopped, his face separated by the rain, and was dark and difficult to distinguish.
. . .
*
That evening JÇ XiÇo Åu had trouble going to sleep, and Ryan felt helpless. He simply lifted a hand to her neck and knocked her out.
The next day, JÇ XiÇo Åu woke up and Ryan was no longer at home.
The heavy rain was still falling outside and was even heavier than the night before, falling from the sky like pillars.
JÇ XiÇo Åu dressed and wanted to go out and take a look.
However, when she placed her hand on the door and pulled gentlyââ
The wooden door didnât move.
JÇ XiÇo Åu tried again but it still didnât open.
She quickly realized that the door was locked from outside.
Ryan locked her up at home?
JÇ XiÇo Åu was shocked and frustrated. Originally, after a night of thinking, she had calmed down a lot. But now, looking at the closed wooden door, there was a certain kind of panic.
Why did he lock the door? Afraid she would escape?
She had thought about it last night. It was rainy season, and she couldnât have gotten far even if she fled.
If they could, they should try to communicate with each other. No matter what, it was wrong of him to deceive her.
But now. . .
JÇ XiÇo Åu staggered over to sit in a chair and inadvertently touched the backpack next to her. The contents were all spilled out.
Flashlight, selfie-stick, taser, mobile phone. . .
The phone was knocked onto the floor, and had just powered back on, the screen lighting up.
JÇ XiÇo Åu picked up everything and put them back into her backpack. She planned to wait for Ryan to come back and try to talk to him.
However, JÇ XiÇo Åu waited until six that afternoon from six that morning and Ryan did not return.
JÇ XiÇo Åu looked at the minute hand on her watch and her mood sank bit by bit.
Did he deliberately not come back, or was there something wrong?
At 5:59pm, the second hand passed through the final frame and the sky outside darkened, becoming night.
JÇ XiÇo Åu stood up and walked to the window to prepare to close the window.
Suddenly, there seemed to be a familiar sound.
JÇ XiÇo Åu motions stiffened, and she waited. But the sound continued.
The ringing bell was the most common melody.
ââFrom her backpack.
JÇ XiÇo Åu quickly left the window and took her phone out of the backpack. Even if she couldnât see the âCaller IDâ, she clicked the answer button and put it to her ear.
She was afraid the phone would suddenly hang up.
The person on the other side didnât seem to think that they would get connected. They froze, and a soft voice asked with excitement, âÅu, is that you?â
JÇ XiÇo Åuâs hands holding the phone trembled, and, very slowly, she asked inconceivably, âMo, Mom?â