Chapter 32
by Heavenly CatChapter 32: When Alive, Even a Thorny Path Is Walked (1)
When dawn broke, only Bang Jin-bo and the merchants who had been caged remained alive. Not a single bandit had survived.
Though they had been spared, the merchants' faces were drained of color with fear. They dared not even breathe loudly as they gazed upon Dam Ho, who stood alone in the center of the clearing.
He stood upon the blood-soaked earth.
The corpses of the bandits lay scattered around him. That was the only way to describe it.
None who had faced Dam Ho's fists retained any semblance of their former shape. They had burst apart as though struck directly by thunderbolts, or their flesh and bone had been torn away in a single motion.
Though these were men who boasted of having weathered every trial the world could offer, never had they witnessed such a scene.
"A-a demon…"
Someone muttered involuntarily before hastily clamping a hand over his mouth, fearful that Dam Ho might have heard.
But contrary to his worry, Dam Ho stood motionless in the clearing, seemingly unsure of what to do next.
Dam Ho's gaze was deeply sunken.
This was the carnage he had wrought. Over a hundred people had perished miserably at his hands. And yet, not the slightest tremor stirred within Dam Ho's heart.
Dam Ho closed his eyes briefly. Only then did he realize what his flaw was.
'Is this what I have lost?'
Twelve years of subterranean existence had stripped him of normal human emotion.
The corpses strewn at his feet were proof of this.
Dam Ho opened his eyes and looked toward the caged merchants. They averted their gazes, their faces twisted in fear.
Dam Ho proceeded to break open each cage one by one. Though they had regained their freedom, the merchants could not bring themselves to step outside. They had been utterly overwhelmed by Dam Ho's intense presence.
After smashing open all the cages, Dam Ho approached Bang Jin-bo. Even then, the boy stood as though his soul had departed, staring blankly, unable to move.
Dam Ho's hand came to rest upon Bang Jin-bo's shoulder. Only then did Bang Jin-bo look up at him.
His bloodshot eyes brimmed with tears that soon spilled over and streamed endlessly down his cheeks.
"Uwaaah! Brother!"
Bang Jin-bo wept uncontrollably.
Dam Ho watched him in silence.
He was a boy who had lost his father. The magnitude of the loss and grief he must feel was not easily guessed.
All Dam Ho could do was watch.
Meanwhile, the merchants who had been caged slipped out one by one, casting wary glances about them.
Having regained their freedom, they too seemed moved by Bang Jin-bo's emotions and began to shed tears.
"Uwaaah!"
In an instant, the clearing descended into chaos, filled with the sound of weeping.
They did not cease their crying until a considerable time had passed. Several people rose and began to move.
They gathered the goods that the bandits had plundered and loaded them back onto the carts. Seeing this, the rest joined in the effort to organize the wagons.
Their appearance as they worked was bizarre to the extreme. Yet Dam Ho watched them without a word.
At last, once all the goods had been loaded onto the wagons, one of the merchants approached Dam Ho and bowed.
"On behalf of all the merchants, I express my deepest gratitude to the great hero for saving our lives."
"Mm!"
"Thanks to you, we have been granted our lives. How might we repay this kindness?"
"I don't require anything."
"But—"
"I did not come here to save you. I came for that boy."
Dam Ho's gaze turned to Bang Jin-bo, who was still crying.
"So there is no need to concern yourselves."
"Very well. We understand."
When Dam Ho spoke thus, the merchant could say nothing more. Part of him was relieved.
He was the eldest among those present. With Trading Company Master Cho So-gwang dead, he was now the leader.
He bore the responsibility and duty of leading the survivors back to the Central Plains. Sentimental attachments and emotions had to be set aside.
He needed to settle the situation swiftly so that the survivors could take responsibility for the families of the deceased. That was how merchants survived.
The merchant bowed to Dam Ho and then approached Bang Jin-bo.
"Jin-bo, let's go now."
He tried to console the boy, but Bang Jin-bo could not stop crying. He tried to pull him by the hand, but Bang Jin-bo stood as motionless as a statue.
In the end, the merchant gave up trying to comfort Bang Jin-bo and returned to the others. After consulting with them for some time, he came back to where Dam Ho and Bang Jin-bo stood.
"Great Hero! We must be on our way. Might I trouble you to escort us to the Central Plains? We will repay you generously."
"I refuse."
"Great Hero?"
A troubled expression crossed the merchant's face. But seeing Dam Ho's resolute eyes, he could not muster the courage to press further.
Though he now appeared utterly ordinary, he was the man who had just killed over a hundred living bandits. If he wished, he could dispatch the merchants and their entire party in the time it took to eat a meal.
The merchant changed his approach.
"I apologize for the difficult request. Then we shall make our way to the Central Plains on our own."
His thinking was simple.
He would return to Toro Banner, hire more itinerant swordsmen and guards, and set out again. Fortunately, most of the goods were intact, and the horses the bandits had ridden numbered over a hundred, giving him the means to hire protection.
The merchant approached Bang Jin-bo again and urged him to come along. But Bang Jin-bo still could not move, and the merchant's expression grew pained.
They could not afford to waste any more time like this.
"If you keep this up, we'll have no choice but to leave you behind. Is that what you want?"
"I… I… uwaaah!"
Bang Jin-bo burst into tears once more.
At that moment, Dam Ho stepped forward.
"I will take Jin-bo with me."
"You, Great Hero?"
The merchant looked at Dam Ho with surprise. But the surprise was brief, and he quickly bowed his head.
"Very well. Then I shall entrust Jin-bo to you."
"And one more thing."
"Please, speak."
"Leave one horse behind for me."
"As you wish."
The merchant agreed without even asking why. The bandits had ridden over a hundred horses. Leaving just one behind was still an enormous gain.
Moreover, with Bang Jin-bo's father, Bang Woo-gwang, dead, traveling to the Central Plains with a young child without a guardian was an uncomfortable burden.
Even upon reaching the Central Plains, there would be problems—compensation to be paid, a livelihood to be arranged. The cost of taking care of Bang Jin-bo, who now had no connection to the trading company, was too great.
In that case, handing Bang Jin-bo over to Dam Ho was not a bad option.
"Jin-bo, follow the Great Hero. He will take good care of you."
He pressed a few silver coins into the still-crying boy's hand. It was merely a token gesture, but he would have felt guilty without even that much.
Without waiting for Bang Jin-bo's response, the merchant hurried back to his party. They quickly departed the hellish place.
The merchants pulling their wagons did not look back. In an instant, the dozens of wagons and horses vanished from Dam Ho and Bang Jin-bo's sight.
Dam Ho did nothing.
Fwoo!
The black horse that had been nearby approached and rubbed its head against Dam Ho's cheek. Dam Ho gently stroked the horse's neck.
Bang Jin-bo eventually collapsed from exhaustion, having cried for so long.
Dam Ho lifted Bang Jin-bo onto one of the horses the merchants had left behind. They had been considerate enough to leave the finest one.
Dam Ho mounted the black horse and led Bang Jin-bo's horse away from the clearing. Only a desolate atmosphere remained.
shortly afterward, wolves drawn by the scent of corpses appeared in the clearing. They began to gorge upon the fallen.
After the wolves came the crows. The bandits' corpses thus became fodder for the beasts.
It was a while as the wild creatures feasted upon human flesh.
Shriek!
Caw!
A piercing sound cut through the air, followed by the wolves' mournful howls. Startled, the wolves fled in every direction, and the crows burst into flight.
A group of martial artists had appeared.
Each one radiated an extraordinary aura as they surveyed the devastated clearing with furrowed brows.
They dismounted in unison.
The man who appeared to be their leader had a cold gleam in his eyes. He looked to be in his late thirties, and from his body emanated a fierce spirit that made onlookers flinch.
At his waist hung a sword sheath inscribed with a grotesque demonic pattern that sent chills down the spine.
The leader stood before a corpse he presumed to be Dong Ja-chu. His eyes glinted icily.
"So Dong Ja-chu ended up dying here."
His subordinate approached.
"The entire Blood Wolf Corps has been wiped out."
"And the goods?"
The subordinate shook his head. The leader's expression grew even colder.
"How many were the culprits?"
"The beasts have severely mutilated the corpses. It is difficult to determine."
"Find them no matter what."
"As you command!"
The subordinate replied and hurried back to the scattered bandit corpses. He examined them meticulously.
Meanwhile, the leader knelt on one knee before Dong Ja-chu's remains.
"A pity. He was still a useful hound. This will cause complications for the Mountain Lodge's plans."
Dong Ja-chu himself was unaware, but he had been quite an important figure. The dirty work he had handled had allowed operations to proceed smoothly thus far.
As the leader gazed down at Dong Ja-chu's corpse, his eyes shifted slightly. He had spotted something glinting beneath the man's waist.
The leader reached out and picked up the gleaming object.
"The… Myoan Stone?"
His voice trembled slightly. The Myoan Stone was a treasure so rare it could shake even his iron composure.
His gaze turned to Dong Ja-chu.
The Myoan Stone was not something Dong Ja-chu could possess. That meant he had attacked someone who carried it and taken it by force.
"Perhaps he provoked the wrong person."
If someone carried the Myoan Stone, they might well be a figure of considerable power.
There were beings in this world who should never be provoked. Perhaps Dong Ja-chu had trespassed against one such person.
"Even so, the crime of killing the Lodge's hound cannot be forgiven."
The leader rose.
His name was Gyeong-cheon-saeng. He possessed such a cruel temperament that he had earned the epithet "Ghost Sword, Blood Demon."
His eyes burned with killing intent.
***
Dam Ho had brought Bang Jin-bo to the large rock where Bang Woo-gwang's body lay.
The sight of his father's corpse caused Bang Jin-bo's legs to give way.
"Ah… Father! Ugh!"
Bang Jin-bo collapsed upon his father's body and wept without restraint. Dam Ho watched the boy's grief in silence.
He must face the reality of his loss and overcome it. If he turned away now because it was too painful to watch, only greater agony would remain in the future.
Bang Jin-bo spent the night beside his father.
As dawn was about to break, Dam Ho finally spoke.
"Now you must let your father go."
"Brother?"
"It is time to let him rest."
"But…"
"He has earned the right to rest."
Dam Ho's words carried a strange persuasiveness, and Bang Jin-bo nodded unconsciously.
Bang Jin-bo rose unsteadily. After gazing at his father's corpse for a moment, he began gathering nearby stones and piling them upon the body.
His palms split and bled. His fingernails loosened. Yet Bang Jin-bo uttered not a single word of complaint as he built a grave for his father from stone.
Dam Ho looked upon him and murmured.
"Even so, you are fortunate. At least you can build your father's grave with your own hands."

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