Chapter 15
If she left now, it would be before the morning audience even began, so it wouldnât be hard to send the grumbling king away. The king seemed extremely reluctant to incur her displeasure â and she knew why.
It wasnât even the official start time yet, but already worn out, Seohwa leaned halfway against the wall and let out a deep sigh.
If thatâs a curse, then the pain must be considerable.
She didnât know much about curses, but she understood that what she saw was the curse itself. As Yongyong had said, it was fire â pure and simple. Which meant Ryeohwan was suffering searing agony every single minute, every single second.
Though⊠I doubt the pain is the only thing.
Recalling the expression on Ryeohwanâs face when he had blocked the assassinâs arrow, Seohwa furrowed her brow. She couldnât read minds, but she knew the arrow had burned to ash before even touching her. And she knew that was Ryeohwanâs doing.
But⊠is that how curses usually work?
Maybe I should look it up in some old books.
Of course, anything about curses would be classified as forbidden texts, so even finding such a book would be a challenge. But it seemed worth trying. Still, there was an even better method. Seohwa deliberately cleared her throat so someone would hear.
âI wish someone would tell me how to break a curse.â
Casting a sidelong glance at Yongyong as she made her loaded remark, she saw him quickly turn his head away.
[Even after seeing what that man did earlier, you can still say that? Thereâs nothing to wait for â we should leave immediately.]
âAre you serious?â
[I ran for ten years. What reason is there I canât run again? Didnât you hear what he said? That once the curse is lifted, heâll have no need for the Last Princess of a ruined kingdom â and heâll come running to kill you.]
At Yongyongâs blunt words, Seohwa gave an awkward laugh. The small dragonâs scales bristled, radiating hostility toward Ryeohwan, as if blaming him for everything that had happened.
Seohwa, however, took a more objective view.
âEven if we managed to run away, the same thing would just happen again. I canât live as a fugitive forever.â
[Butâ]
âAnd you too, Yongyong. If you lose any more divine power here, youâll vanish entirely. Are you okay with that?â
Strictly speaking, he would return to being part of nature, but still⊠Her question made Yongyongâs eyes narrow.
[Thatâs why I told you to build a shrine deep in the mountains and gather people to make offerings!]
â…And shout at the top of our lungs for them to come and get me? Besides, that way, divine power would scatter faster than it gathers. Stop being so stubborn. Thereâs only one way for you to ascend â you know it, donât you?â
For nearly ten years, Seohwa had been on the run from Ryeoâs pursuit, always knowing that a day like today would come. It was simple: she was sensitive to divine energy. More than that â she carried the blood of the imperial family said to have made a contract with the Azure Dragon a thousand years ago.
Because of that, when a curse befell the royal family of Ryeo, she didnât need anyone to tell her â she sensed it immediately.
At first, Seohwa had intended to lift the curse right away. She had even thought she might be able to bargain her life for it, if she was lucky. But she was a complete novice in the matter of curses â the training allowed to her in the shrine had been very limited.
[I still donât want to.]
And so the only one she could ask for help was the Azure Dragon himself. Despite his appearance and behavior being more like a pesky younger brother than a god, he was still a dragon.
Yet whenever Seohwa brought up the subject of curses, he would shudder and fall silent.
It was said that an imugi needed a thousand years of cultivation before it could become a true dragon. And in the very year he had finally ascended to that status, a rebellion broke out. Given that history, it was hardly surprising that Yongyong hated humans, and loathed royalty most of all. Understanding his resentment, Seohwa had stopped pressing him on the subject â until now.
âEven if Iâll be in danger if we donât break the curse?â
Instead, she had spent ten full years with him, carrying the unascended dragon on her shoulder and making sure he didnât fade away. At first, it was just out of a minimal sense of responsibility â but that wasnât the only reason.
She reached toward her shoulder. Yongyong sighed in disapproval but climbed up her arm nonetheless. In the early days, he had bristled at her as much as anyone else, but over the years, that had faded. To Yongyong, Seohwa was a friend, a comrade, and sometimes the only support he had left in this world.
Drawing her arm in so she could look him in the eyes, Seohwaâs gaze turned pale blue, as it did whenever she used divine power.
âFor my sake⊠tell me.â
Her expression was deadly serious. Yongyong realized there was no way to avoid this conversation.
âYongyong.â
[I donât know what youâre talking about. Iâm tired. Letâs talk about this later â I need to rest.]
Normally, Seohwa would have backed down at this point. When it came to the curse, she had always respected his opinion. But this time, the matter couldnât be delayed any longer.
âNo. You know exactly what Iâm asking.â
It was like looking behind herself and seeing nothing but a sheer cliff â nowhere left to retreat.
Eyes dark and deep as a stormy sea, Yongyong spoke firmly.
The capital, surrounded by the imperial city at the heart of Ryeo.
Choi Myeonghak, the capitalâs Chief of Police, was famous for being devoted to his wife. He had a loving spouse, a respected position, and the kingâs trust â a life many would call a success. The only thing lacking was a child.
So when news spread that Choi Myeonghak had adopted a distant relative as his foster daughter, gossip flew across the capital. Some speculated he was planning to bring in a son-in-law to continue the family line; others whispered that being the kingâs right-hand man wasnât enough for him and he had his eye on the position of queen consort.
Those with experience in politics were convinced it was the latter.
That was why his name came up among the high-ranking officials gathered for the morning audience. Yi Pan, an elder statesman with hair gone completely white, spoke without preamble.
âSo, sheâs a distant relation?â
The man walking beside him replied promptly.
âYes. A plague struck and killed her whole family â she was the only one who survived.â
This summer, several towns had been ravaged by disease, and even the court hadnât been able to keep track of every tiny, isolated village affected. Yi Pan clicked his tongue as he recalled Choi Myeonghakâs family tree. She wasnât even an adopted son, but an adopted daughter â so what was the point of measuring how close they were?
He had only a young daughter himself, so he couldnât send a marriage proposal, and he had no personal friendship with Choi besides. Still, who would have guessed that big, bearish Choi would start playing fox?
Clicking his tongue again, Yi Pan thought of his daughter, still five years from adulthood.
âTsk. Every year itâs something â plague, flood, wildfire⊠hmph.â
âWell, still better than in the days of the Sera kingdom. Back then, disasters werenât enough â they taxed us at seventy percent on top of it.â
âThey can lower taxes all they want, it wonât solve the root problem. So, a girl, you say? The timingâs perfect.â
Sensing the meaning in Yi Panâs words, the other official looked uncomfortable. He was a civil official, but in his youth he had trained for strength in the Choi household.
âI doubt Lord Choi brought her in for that reason. If sheâs all alone, perhaps he just felt sorry for herââ
âThatâs possible. He does take in the children of provincial officials and ruined noble families as students.â
âThatâs true.â
âBut one way or another, there needs to be a queen chosen. Sheâs the right age, just past twenty. And being a foster daughter, yet still of his kin â that wouldnât be a problem, would it?â
At his question, the official nodded. In both their minds, the talk of Choiâs foster daughter faded into the background â only the queen selection remained.
âDo you think it will happen this year?â
âIt must.â
âTrue⊠Itâs already overdue. How many years has it been now without a mistress of the Inner Palace?â
Traditionally, royal marriages happened young. But Ryeohwan had passed twenty without showing any interest in marrying, so naturally people were talking.
âWhether itâs late or early isnât the point right now. And you â take my advice â donât ever bring up the queen selection in front of Dongjin.â
âNo matter what, surely His Majesty wouldnât think of putting a young prince on the throne when heâs still so healthy?â
âHey!â
Yi Panâs sharp rebuke made the younger man frown deeply. The young official, son of a powerful family, had passed the civil service exam early and risen quickly to a senior post. He was upright, too â rare in a court where most were sly as snakes.
Yi Pan liked such men â those who didnât calculate only their own profit, whose eyes werenât clouded by greed. But he also knew they were fragile things, easily broken. This one had strong backing, but with the king having no heir, who could match Dongjin, who held the young prince in his grasp?
Well⊠thereâs also Baekun of the Nam family.
Thinking of Nam Dowon, Yi Pan nodded. The young official, perhaps misunderstanding, changed expression to reply â but then froze in place, staring ahead.
When Yi Pan turned to see what had stopped him, he, too, fell silent a beat later. The difference was that while the younger manâs face went pale, Yi Panâs went white enough to turn bluish.
âY-your Majesty!â
It was the king himself, returning from leaping over the Choi householdâs wall at dawn straight to the palace.