Chapter 3: Laying the foundation

Seoa hurried down the mountain and headed straight to her lodging.

The sun had already vanished, painting the sky red.

It signaled the day had fully ended.

Normally, Seo’s daily tasks would’ve been done before the sky gave such a sign.

Today, though, felt like an unusually long day.

If it were the usual her, she’d have complained about not lingering in bed longer, but today was an exception.

Her conversation with Noya had granted her an unexpected opportunity.

A trade far more valuable than the comfort of a bed.

‘I wish night would come soon.’

Only when everyone slept could she study the martial arts manual without prying eyes.

Today, the wait for night felt especially long.

When Seo reached the lodging, the moon was already visible in the distance.

And Soso, springing up from her bed, rushed toward her.

“Hey! Why are you so late? I was worried…”

“What, you were waiting for me?”

“Of course! When your only friend suddenly disappears, all sorts of thoughts creep in. Oh, what if you got kidnapped? Should I tell the head servant? But the sun hasn’t fully set yet… maybe I should wait a bit? I couldn’t rest easy.”

Soso, clearly worried, rambled on.

Her comment about having no friends stung a bit, making Seo consider retorting.

She hesitated briefly but decided to stay quiet, thinking Soso might have a point.

It wasn’t like she admitted Soso was right because she hadn’t made friends since joining the cult.

Noya could, in a way, be considered her friend…

And also…

…

It wasn’t her fault that the kids’ mental age was too low to connect with, right?

It was just how things were.

Soso had been the one to approach her first, like the village kids.

Whether Soso knew her thoughts or not, she continued with a determined look.

“So, where do you go every day after work without saying a word?”

“Uh… well…”

“Wait! Don’t dodge the question this time. I need an answer.”

Seo pursed her lips.

Her meetings with Noya weren’t exactly a secret…

But it wasn’t something that needed to be widely known, either.

To be precise, flaunting her connection with a true disciple could make her servant life easier, but it wouldn’t benefit her relationship with Noya.

He was a secretive man, reluctant to even share his name…

He surely wouldn’t enjoy attention from many eyes.

That’s likely why he went to that secluded back hill.

As Seo searched for a vague excuse, a voice interrupted.

“Hey!”

A sharp, venomous voice came from behind.

Seo turned toward it.

A slightly… no, very plump servant was approaching.

It was one of the figures from her earlier story with Noya.

The annoying peer who loved scolding her in front of seniors.

Seo spoke.

“Danryang? What’s up?”

“You’re going to Kyomakwan tomorrow, right?”

“That’s right.”

Soso, frustrated at not getting the answer she wanted, glared at Danryang.

Danryang, unfazed, didn’t budge.

“What’s with you? Oh, right, you’re going to Kyomakwan too? Come with us.”

Soso, not wanting to deal with the ill-tempered Danryang, crossed her arms and nodded curtly.

Danryang opened and closed his mouth, as if about to say something to Soso.

“Hmph. Never mind. Listen up. The head servant said we start at Jinshi (around 8 a.m.) tomorrow, not Myoshi (around 6 a.m.).”

“What? Jinshi all of a sudden? You sure?”

Seo questioned, caught off guard by the schedule change.

The distance to Kyomakwan didn’t allow for such leisure.

At least not to stick to the planned schedule.

Danryang, hearing this, huffed and suddenly got angry.

“Are you saying I’m lying?”

“That’s not what I meant…”

“Then are you saying the head servant is lying?!”

As Danryang raised his voice, his thick flesh jiggled visibly.

Seo suppressed the urge to smack him for overreacting and cornering her.

When she stayed silent, Danryang, feeling doubted, continued more heatedly.

“I’ll tell everyone you didn’t trust the head servant. I’ll tell them!”

Arguing with this irritating lump of flesh would gain her nothing.

Danryang was skilled at currying favor with seniors and the head servant, painting them as fools.

They’d explained themselves multiple times to counter his sly wordplay.

But she and Soso were outsiders, bought into the cult from beyond.

Danryang, though a low-ranking warrior, was a born disciple with a true disciple father.

As the saying goes, loyalty bends inward—despite his father’s status, the scales tipped toward Danryang, who fawned over them.

So Seo, to calm the fuming Danryang, said things she didn’t mean.

“Ahem. Danryang, don’t get so worked up. I was just… jealous that the head servant told you first. Wow… I’m envious. It means you have their trust, right? That’s our Danryang.”

Danryang, mollified by her words, nodded with a strange expression.

“Y-Yeah… That’s right. I’ve got the head servant’s trust. Don’t question me from now on, got it?”

“Yeah, got it, got it.”

“Good. Tomorrow, Jinshi.”

With that, Danryang stepped out to handle some business.

Left alone with Soso, she asked again.

“So… where do you go after work?”

It took some effort to shake Soso off.

In the dead of night, when all were asleep, Seo confirmed everyone was out cold and slipped from the dark room.

Under the starlight, she pulled out the book she’d carefully tucked away.

The martial arts manual from Noya.

The cover bore only the word “Foundation.”

From the meaning of “foundation,” it was clear what this book was for.

Or rather, since Noya mentioned the Three Talents Heart Method as an example, it was obviously an introductory martial arts manual.

Using the starlight as her candle, Seo opened the book and began reading.

‘Martial arts…’

Her heart pounded wildly.

In any era, the wall of status always existed.

Even in the modern world, it was just fainter, less rigid, but everyone would agree the wall was there.

In this era she lived in, that wall was thicker.

And far crueler to those like her at the bottom.

Reading this book, memories from about eight years after her reincarnation flashed through her mind.

A black-path warrior had come to the village, demanding money.

The sight of him ransacking every shop was…

How to describe it? To her, still used to the modern world, it was a massive shock.

The image of necks flying through the air for resisting still haunted her.

‘This world is different from the one I knew.’

That was when she first realized her place.

Unlike the modern world, the lives of those like her, the lowest class, were treated like straw in this world.

She felt, unlike the modern world, she couldn’t be content with her current lot.

Having died once, Seo understood the value of life early on.

How could she be sure she wouldn’t meet such a fate?

She had to rise.

At least enough to protect herself.

She had to seize opportunities.

If a lifeline was thrown to her, she needed the strength to grab it.

After that incident, she lingered around the school, secretly learning to read.

Though she couldn’t afford proper education…

‘I gained the strength to seize a lifeline.’

If she hadn’t learned to read back then, this chance to learn martial arts would’ve slipped through her fingers.

Seo swallowed a sigh of relief.

If she became Noya’s disciple and mastered martial arts to become a first-rate… no, even a second-rate warrior, her life would surely change.

She could leap over the thick wall of status, gain true disciple status, and maybe one day wear the head servant’s robes, which seemed impossibly lofty.

‘No, don’t get your hopes up.’

Seo calmed her racing heart.

Let’s be honest. She had no talent.

No false hopes.

If she had talent, she’d already be at Kyomakwan with those kids.

So… don’t expect too much.

Forget becoming Noya’s disciple.

Forget breaking through this thick status wall quickly.

For now, just…

If she could even crack this thick wall, even slightly, that was enough.

A sliver of hope would suffice.

Seo sat cross-legged in the grass.

‘Breathe in… breathe out… breathe in…’

She began regulating her breathing.

She tried hard to sense the presence of qi while inhaling.

The foundation of martial arts: the heart method.

The foundation of breathing techniques. To seize this opportunity.

Seo closed her eyes and sat still for hours, unmoving.

As the book instructed.

She simply breathed in and out.

Feeling nothing, she crushed the doubts rising in her mind.

Time passed.

The red sun began rising slowly beyond the horizon.

The darkness lifted, heralding a new beginning on the earth.

Seo squinted at the faint but bright halo of light.

Though she hadn’t slept a wink, her expression held more relief and a smile than fatigue.

“Phew…”

She could sleep for an hour or two, right?

Seo headed back to the lodging.

“Seniors, Seo and Soso are here!”

With a hollow expression, Seo turned toward the voice.

Through drooping eyelids, she saw Danryang, slightly… no, very plump, looking at her triumphantly.

‘Already Jinshi?’

It felt like she’d barely lain down for an hour.

“These two were slacking off here!”

What?

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