The Bird and the Wyrm Chapter 72

Novel: The Bird and the Wyrm Author: XIR Updated:
Font Size
15px

It was raining the day Yeung Serng Yin got the call from the SSD. She’d had a rocky relationship ever since the departnt was established, but both sides knew that it was more a holdover from the dragon’s terse dealings with the SSD’s predecessor, The rlin Club, so there were no real hard feelings.

But even so, she was not that much of a curmudgeon and had... at least one person in the SSD she called a friend. Her hair was mostly black with only a few, bright strands of white gracing her sole plait. That had to count for sothing, right?

"Wei?" said Yeung Serng Yin, phone receiver pinched with her shoulder against her ear as she wrote a quick note-to-self on a scrap of paper: eggs, yau mak choi, soy milk.

"Yin-Yin! You need to co here!"

Yeung Serng Yin set her pen and paper on the side table and shifted the phone into her hand. "Helen? What’s happened?"

There ca so strange crackles and bangs from the other end of the line before there was a response. "He’s going to die!"

Yeung Serng Yin clicked her teeth and moved around the table toward the door where her shoes were while making sure not to yank too hard on the line. "Helen. Take a breath. Explain."

Helen Chu, part taotie but still a decade younger, did as she was told then spoke again. "I’m at Tong-gor’s shop in the Under City. He’s..." There was another deep breath. "He did a sundering of a human soul. The father... he wanted money, so Tong-gor..."

There was a sharp crackling then the distinct sound of soone else taking the phone and putting it to their ear. "Yin-jie! Listen to , I didn’t know! I really didn’t know! They said he was-"

So more scuffling, then Helen’s voice ca back along the line. "You have to co. You’re the only person I can think of who can save him!"

But she needn’t have said that. As soon as she’d heard the words ’human soul’ and ’sundering’ she’d thrown the phone down and headed out the door.

The typhoon wasn’t forecast to make landfall until the next day yet the city and its residents were already being lashed by the storm. Broken umbrellas lined the side walk by the upturned rubbish bin and the few people that were on the street look practically drowned. A speeding taxi, just a smudge of red in the rain, sloshed past Yeung Serng Yin, spraying up a deluge of half-rain, half-sewage water. The dragon swore and cast a quick spell to get rid of the worst of it.

She no longer lived in the Under City and, while she mostly stood by this decision, it was during tis like this when she wished she hadn’t moved. It had been cramped and expensive in that underground cavern, but it had been lively and work had been easy to co by. Now...

The dragon pushed all this from her mind as she pushed her way through a nondescript tal door in an alley between two nondescript buildings with a closed up newsstand at the end. She still rembered when most entrances to the Under City had been through public telephones but ever since the handover and the infrastructure started to change, adjustnts had had to be made, this sketchy entrance being one of them.

But the rats and humans and human-rats all stood clear of the woman and caused her no trouble as she strode to the lift at the end of the narrow hallway. Likewise, no one got in the lift with her and she had a clear shot all the way down to the underground level.

The lift doors slid open and the sll of burning assaulted her sense. She grit her teeth and walked out.

Partial spirits of the dead andered closer, drawn to the scene like moths to a fla as she cut a line through the gawking onlookers and headed to the pawnshop.

"Shoo," chided Yeung Serng Yin harshly with a swat of her hand.

The shimring bodies stood unsteadily on transparent feet and gaped silent mouths at her. She raised two fingers, channeling a fraction of her qi to the tips, and pointed the makeshift laser gun at them. Sothing about that, be it the power or the body language, triggered a response in the ghosts and they turned slowly and andered away.

They would be back, the dragon thought to herself, they always were.

"Yin-jie!"

Yeung Serng Yin’s eyes darted sideways then latched to the pale face peeking out of the window of the shop opposite. She hurried to the door and pushed her way inside.

"We had to move over here," said a breathless Helen. She would look much the sa a decade later, such was the fate of a part magical being, but it was clear from her mannerisms and stance that she was new to the job and knew it. Yeung Serng Yin put a hand on the woman’s shoulder and looked into her eyes, not threateningly, but with authority.

"Breath," she said.

Helen blinked, bit her lower lip, then did her best to get her breathing under control. "We had to move over here," she continued once she had it all under control and her hands stopped shaking, "because the pawnshop got too crowded. Soone leaked what had happened then-"

Yeung Serng Yin cut her off. "I’ll leave the information leaks to you and yours," she said. "Take to the human."

Helen nodded and gestured. "This way."

They were in a cafe that had had to close up shop quickish when the SSD carried in the boy on the stretcher that now lay in the centre of the room, the tables and chairs having been pushed out to the periters.

Yeung Serng Yin crouched and felt the boy’s pulse.

It was nearly nonexistent.

She let go then placed her index and middle finger against the boy’s forehead.

Cold. As cold as ice.

--

"Ten years is a long ti for a child, but for , that night could have been just yesterday," said Yeung Serng Yin. She cleared her throat almost to drag herself back to the present. "The sundering of a soul is a mostly frowned upon practice," she said, almost like a lecturer in a university. "Only to be used under the most extre of circumstances, and even then, maybe not. But that is for a being of the jianghu. For a human..." The woman sighed. "Apart from our Bran, I’ve never heard of a case where any part of the person survived."

"But... but if it’s so bad, why would Feilou Tong do it?" I asked.

"He said that they told him that Bran was sothing of a changeling, that he was really jianghu and rely trapped in a human form. Stupid bastard. Even if that had been the case, he still shouldn’t have done it, changeling or not, but that would have interfered with his bottom line."

"He was paid to do it?"

"Not exactly. Your see, while the practice may be frowned upon, it does have its purposes, with so not being as altruistic as others." She glanced at with curious eyes. "Can you guess what for?"

"Uh..." I looked away as I quickly tried to think of an answer. "Souls are... worth sothing, maybe?"

"No," was Aunt Yeung’s flat reply. "A whole soul, is worth next to nothing for anyone other than its owner."

"A whole soul? So a partial soul is worth sothing?"

Aunt Yeung grinned with her sharp teeth, teeth that I now knew were draconic like mine. "In simplistic terms, a soul is pure energy, regardless if it is the hun or po portion. It is a... small stove that gives power to the rest of the body. In theory, it would be a perfect source of energy for soone else to use, and when you channel qi, that is what you are doing. However, in channeling, you are rely siphoning off a small fraction of that energy and drawing it out through a defined and protected channel. Do you know what I am getting at?"

For once I felt like I knew the answer. "If the energy of the soul isn’t protected, then it’ll fly off, just like if it’s sundered."

"Yes. Sundering is the act of destroying the protective mbrane around the soul, letting its essence escape."

"So that’s why you said it’s worthless... But then-"

"Can you guess how many uses that mbrane has?"

Sothing clicked in my brain. "They, they sunder souls just to... harvest the mbrane? They kill soone just for that?"

Aunt Yeung sighed then shrugged. "Beings have been known to kill for less."

I looked away. I knew what she said was true, but to be suddenly reminded of it was still upsetting. "...And you said... Bran doesn’t know?"

Aunt Yeung looked at with surprise. "No, he knows. When he woke, this was the first place I took him to, showed him his mother. No, what I ant earlier was... not telling him the reason why I was able to save him despite him being human."

I glanced at the tank and saw a tiny fairy-like creature swim through the water with a pair of scissors towards Lok Saan’s long flowing hair. "His mother," I said. "She did sothing, or you did sothing to her or with her, and that did the trick?"

Aunt Yeung chuckled. "You’re really not that bad," she said. "So right, but not all right. Yes, his mother’s willing sacrifice was required to stabilise his soul, create scaffolding from sothing as close to him as possible, but during a sundering, the soul imdiately shatters and its pieces fly off. Theories have been postulated as to where they go, but no one really knows. Point being, that he shouldn’t have had any soul left to save."

"Then... why?"

The tiny fairy snipped a lock of hair from Bran’s mother, grasped it along with the pair of scissors, then nimbly swam back up to the top of the tank. There, one of the workers, or scientists, helped them out then took the hair from them.

The worker waved to Aunt Yeung and . "We’ll get to work on the Compass Spell," she shouted.

Aunt Yeung nodded. "Thank you."

She turned and headed to one of the consoles by the tank. I followed.

"The seal on Bran’s soul was not placed there by ," said Aunt Yeung as she tapped at the console, "though I was indeed the one who originally weaved it. It was not a single person’s intent that he received it, but, from what I’ve been able to gather, rely the ddling of fate that settled this heavy mantle on that boy’s shoulders from the mont of his conception."

"His conception?"

"Yes," she said then stood back as the console’s screen spat out a deluge of information. I had a look but couldn’t understand anything. "At the mont of the handover, when Pretan territory returned to being Chinese, Bran’s father was making love to his mother and, at that very sa mont, a powerful seal was being cast. Things went... awry with the spell and a portion of it spun off and entered the thing that was most similar to it, the thing that had been brought into being at the sa mont."

You are reading The Bird and the Wyrm Chapter 72 on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Slime True Immortal cover
Similar genre

Slime True Immortal

肚子有点胀 ·Fantasy

Spring—aseasonofrenewalandrebirth.Intheswampforest,magicalbeastswerebeginningtostir.Onthereed-linedriverbanks,beastkinsharpenedsticksandsettraps,ly...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.