Chapter 7

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n-From the excerpt of the Swordmeister

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nThere were two gardens inside the Roman mansion.

nOne was a small garden located in the front, facing the capital, made for visitors. The other larger garden faced Con-Tian Mountain and was used as a training ground.

nIt was a large grass-patch that could barely be called a garden. In a corner of this garden, a young man was staring up at the sky on a hammock that hung between two trees. The sun was already going down, but he did not think about going back inside.

nIt had been a few months since he began wasting his time out on the hammock, watching the skies. He was not normally like this. He used to love training and talk about sword mastery with his father and brothers. However, the reason for his sword training wasn’t to be strong.

nThis man had no desire to become strong. He wasn’t interested in defeating foes or enemies with strength. The only reason he trained so hard was this:

nHe loved using his sword. No, he loved seeing the execution of anything he could imagine with his sword.

nHe did not know this when he was young. He trained as told to by his father and learned other essentials from the tutors that his mother brought in from outside.

nHowever, he quickly found out that he had no talent in almost everything. To be more precise, he just couldn’t find anything interesting. He tried all sorts of hobbies such as instruments, but he could not get better and got bored of things quickly.

nMaking friends was also boring. How could one read another’s mind? Why did one have to fit in? His mother or brother seemed like mind-readers to him. His father seemed to agree with him on this, however.

nThe manners the Nobles followed were also boring. He understood the importance, but he could not learn it as easily. His parents insisted that he learn, so his teacher would not return until he wanted to learn.

nHe could not understand why he hated learning so much.

nYet as he grew older, he discovered the reason why. He hated learning anything other than the one specific thing he was good at.

nAnd that was the problem.

nThe three things that he started learning since he was very young was to utilize his body, practice the sword, and controlling Bander. Most people started training at the age of five, but his father made him start earlier.

nThe training was fun and never boring. His father always mentioned that training was hard because the body was not yet ready to follow what the mind told it to do.

nHowever, it was never hard. His father was known for his honesty, but in this instance, it seemed to be false.

nHis mind continuously told him how to move. As he pictured the movement, his body followed. And as he continued, his body became stronger, allowing his mind to come up with new routes. It continued on like this.

nHis body told him where the sword must go.

nHe did not have to think how he should swing, or where he should swing. There was no need. He just needed to swing it toward where he instinctively thought it should go and his father complimented him. He did not know the importance of sword forms, but according to his father and brother, they must be something important, so he learned them. However, he wasn’t sure if it was necessary.

nAs for Bander, it just grew on its own. His father taught him a secret training method to grow Bander inside the body, but it was much slower, so he secretly stopped doing it. He didn’t feel the need to do it since the Bander just grew on its own anyway.

nAccording to his father, he would come across an invisible wall that would stop him from growing further. To be honest, there were slight moments where he felt something like that.

nIt was about five times… but it felt more like paper rather than a wall. It made him struggle for a few days and irritated him, so he trained harder and it went back to normal. That was five years ago.

nHe was so used to training with a sword so easily that he thought it was normal. But it was not. He just couldn’t do anything other than wield a sword.

nAfter he overcame the wall at the age of twelve, he began learning other things.

nIt was more than a wall. Manners, horse-riding, instruments… everything just seemed like climbing up a cliff without any equipment. He knew he had to do, but he couldn’t bring himself to do it. He always went back to what he was good at.

nHis parents seemed to give up. So besides learning manners, he was on his own. After forty-five minutes of etiquette lessons, he was free to do whatever he liked.

nA year later, when he was thirteen, something happened.

nIt was the same feeling he felt five years ago, and he was now seventeen.

nSomething blocked him and he could not get past it. His Bander did not grow any longer and his body stopped growing stronger. At first, he figured a few days of hard training would solve it, but it didn’t. It was the first time he felt something like this.

nThen he realized how low his patience was.

nThe sword training that he loved was now the same as all the lessons he learned before. It was boring.

nWhat was definite was that he needed to find another way to overcome it. However, he was sure that not doing anything would not have any effect on his skills.

nThat was why he had been gazing at the skies for months.

nHe just did not want to do anything. He couldn’t bring himself to continue something that he couldn’t do as he thought. That was why he kept gazing at the sky, ‘thinking’ about what he could do.

nHe couldn’t find a way. His mind stopped telling him what to do.

nHis body and mind used to tell him where to go and what to do.

nBut it wasn’t the same anymore. It was so irritating. He had never felt that way.

nAs he kept thinking about his issue, he ignored the answer he was arriving at.

n‘Ugh…’

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