WSMTATMC C38
by berryChapter 38
Wang Ying stretched out upon the bed with a sigh of comfort. âThese past days of riding have left my back aching and my waist sore. Truly, there is no place like home. What are you standing there for, dazed? Hurry and get into bed.â
âOh⊠yâyes.â Chen Qingyan removed his shoes and lay stiffly upon the bed like a block of wood, unmoving.
Sensing something amiss, Wang Ying reached out and touched him. âWhy are you so cold? Did that bath just now chill you?â
ââŠNo.â
Propping himself on an elbow, Wang Ying studied his pallor. âAre you unwell? Shall I call for the doctor to take a look?â
âNo, it may be I am merely tired.â
âThen rest quickly. I will check the experimental field to see how the vegetables fare. Only a few days remain till New Yearâif we cannot supply vegetables, we shall lose profit this year.â
âIâll help you.â
âYou rest. I can manage this alone.â
He entered the âtest fieldâ. To his surprise, its experience bar had advanced another large segment. Just days ago it had not budged. Could it be that merely by returning home, experience increased automatically?
The yearâs end pressed closeâhe had no time for puzzling. He seized his sickle and set about cutting chives.
The night before, at the inn, they had already harvested much of the produce that stored wellâcucumbers, tomatoes, beans. This day he harvested only the perishable greens, like chives and celery.
For an hour he labored, cutting dozens of jin of each. At the last instant before the fieldâs timer expired, he pulled all of it into reality.
In a blink, their chamber was filled to bursting, more than ten baskets of vegetables, scarcely room to step. Too weary to tidy, Wang Ying collapsed into sleepâunaware that at his side, Chen Qingyan still lay wideâeyed.
For Qingyan had no rest. One matter tossed endlessly in his mind.
He had told himself he no longer cared. Yet when his younger brother mentioned that man, fury rose like thunder.
He remembered the day of the county exam: when the examiner discovered copied notes hidden in a sleeve. In an instant, his limbs had drained of strength, mind gone blank, heart seeming to stop within his chest.
No matter how he begged and kowtowed, the officials were unmoved. With a cold brushstroke they crossed his name from the registry, declaring icily: âCheating in the examâqualifications canceled!â
Why? Why was it that one who lied glibly, without virtue or loyalty, who stabbed a friend in the backâwas the same one who passed as xiucai (licentiate), while he, honest and genuine, suffered ruin?
He recalled the first days of their acquaintance. Then, Zhang Shiqiu had not even a decent brushâhis only pen worn bald, bristles fallen to stubs.
Qingyan had said nothing, but chose two fine goatâhair brushes from his own satchel and gifted them.
Shiqiu had clutched them with tears, declaring: âFor such a gift of writing, I can never repay. Allow me to compose a poemâto memorialize our friendship, may it last for all time.â
How hateful! He had by flowery words deceived him, wrapped in false friendshipâwhich Qingyan, blind fool, had taken for brotherhood.
Thus he tossed all night sleepless, not wishing to wake his spouse. At last he slipped softly up, drew on his robe, and descended.
With dawn, Wang Ying awoke early, only to find Qingyan seated already at the desk, poring over a book.
âHow did you rise so soon?â
âCouldnât sleep. Iâve already tied up your vegetablesâtake them straight to the shop.â
Wang Ying slipped into his clothes, leaned close, and kissed his cheek. âHow good, my husband is so capable.â
Qingyanâs lips curved faintly. âIn the side room, congee is kept warm. Eat before you go.â
âGood. Iâll move the vegetables out first.â
Dunzi was waiting outside. Together they loaded the muleâcart with the heaps of produce, using the same ruse as beforeâpretending the vegetables came in from the countryside.
Once breakfast eaten, Wang Ying and Ershun headed out to open the shop. Qingyan returned to his study.
With yearâs end close, most pupils of the private academy were home for the season. Only Qingyanâs younger brother Qingsong remained, already up and reading earnestly.
âBrother, youâre here!â
âMm. Continue reading.â
Qingsong recited aloud: âFrom sincerity arises clarityâthis is nature. From clarity arises sincerityâthis is teaching. Sincerity brings clarity; clarity brings sincerity.â
Hearing it, Qingyanâs mind leapt to Zhang Shiqiu again. âYesterday you said you befriended a licentiate. Was his surname Zhang?â
âYes, Brotherâyou know him?â
ââŠI do not. What poems did you compose at this gathering?â
âMe? I canât write verse! I only went for company. But that Zhang licentiateâs poem was excellent. He wrote Watching the Snow. I even memorized it.â
Clearing his throat, Qingsong recited:
âSeated, I watch snow pile strong, a full foot deep.
At dusk, the light grows keen and cold,
In midair flakes weary, drifting listless,
Yet a lone gust still whirls them frantic.â
Qingyan at once recited the continuation:
âTill all blossoms of white have fallen, Heaven spends without regret,
Sealing plum buds in jade, withholding scent.
Ah, who will grind fine to make dumpling soup,
And warm the weary guts of mortal smoke and fire?â
âYou know this poem!â Qingsong asked, amazed.
Of course he knew it. More than thatâhe himself had once written it alongside Zhang! And that man, shameless as city walls were thick, had now declaimed it anew, palming credit, before his own kin.
âBrother, should I invite him next time, for you to meet?â
âGood.â For Qingyan, it was indeed what he wishedâto ask plainly, why had he betrayed him?
Qingsong beamed. âExcellent! That will be grand!â
Meanwhile, Lin Qiu and Lin Sui had accompanied Wang Ying to the shop.
The vegetable shop was already filling. Wang Ying, busy weighing goods, reached into the cashbox, drew a string of copper, and pressed it into cousin Qingyunâs hand. âTake your cousins about the town. Show them the sights.â
But Lin Qiu said, âTake Sui with you. Iâll stay to help Cousin-in-law.â
âIf Brother stays, then I too stay,â Sui shook his head.
On the journey their mother had lectured them repeatedly: here, they must be sensible, quick to work, never cause trouble or shadows of dislike to fall on them.
Thus they kept careful always, anxious lest their kin grow weary of them.
Qingyun pouted. âIf none of you go then I wonât either.â
Wang Ying observed all and understood well. He recalled his own childhood days when he too had lodged with relatives, forever watching othersâ expressions, terrified of doing aught to displease. He would not allow these cousins to suffer alike.
Thus he beckoned them: âThen come hereâall of you, help me pick the vegetables.â
In the baskets lay not a few wilted or spoiled ones, not sorted the evening before. Let the three young cousins pick through.
âAlright!â they chorused, and set to work.
This day was Qingshui Townâs great market. With New Year near, the streets were thronged even before dawn: vendors shouting like in a quarrel, customers rubbing shoulders in endless crowds, so that there was scarcely room to walk.
Business boomed. So many customers poured in that within an hour, a few hands had even tried to snatch vegetables without paying. That morning alone they caught four such thieves.
Luckily, with the cousinsâ help, the stall did not collapse in chaos. Wang and Ershun alone could never have managed.
At first, Wang Ying had feared too much was picked, that it would not all sell. But within half a day, nearly every bundle was gone.
Fully half the stock was bought up by two local taverns.
During Wangâs absence, those taverns had returned to serving only the old dried fare. Spoiled tongues could not abide it; customers stopped coming. Business plummeted. Thus, upon news of Wangâs return, both innkeepers set men to wait at his stall, buying vegetables at once when the door opened.
The remainder was snapped up, though priced far above common produce. Still, for the festival, every family bought a little to savorâhalf a jin, a pound, however much they could afford.
Four hundred jin of vegetablesâall cleared before noon. Those who came later went away disappointed.
Counting coins, Wangâs wrists ached with weight. A string of cash weighed near eight catties, and he had piled up several. His arms went numb from threading them.
Across the street, the sesameâoil sellerâs wife, envious, remarked with forced cheer: âYour business is good indeed. But why were your doors shut so long? I thought youâd closed for good.â
âHardly! We went to the county, carrying New Year presents to relatives, and were delayed.â
âNo wonder. These days many have asked when your shop would reopen. Your vegetables are the only fresh ones in all the town. Youâll be rich!â
Wang Ying heard the sour note. âAh sister, you see only the bright side. Fresh vegetables can be sold only half the year. When spring opens, everyoneâs fields yield greens. Who will buy mine then?â
The woman nodded. Indeed, once fields burst into produce, who would spend coin?
âThen what will you do in summer?â
âIâll sell fruits and such. The shop cannot sit empty.â Inwardly though, Wang Ying had other plans: once heat came, he would sell iced treats, for his experimental field was a natural icehouse. Let rainwater freeze in traysâan entirely novel trade.
After a few more words, she left him to his customers. The last basket was sold cheap, and Wang Ying took up his ledger.
That dayâs gain came to seven strings and four hundred seventy cashâa fortune, near half a monthâs usual earnings.
And the New Yearâs market yet remained ahead.
He thought then: best to hire an errand boy.
âTomorrowâwill you three help again? For the holiday, Iâll even give you wages.â
But Qiu shook his head. âNo need for money. Sui and I are glad to help.â
âAnd I shall not take money either!â Qingyun chimed.
Wang Ying tapped her forehead. âWages or not, you must help. Otherwise, Iâll be overwhelmed.â
âHehe.â
Just then, Madam Li and Chen Rong arrived with a food box. Finding the stall bare, they were astonished.
âAll sold?â
âYes, with the crowds today they went quickly. Whereâs Qingyan?â
âWe went for a walk, so I brought food on the way. He stayed.â
Lunch ate, afternoon business quieted. Madam Li took Qiu and Sui to a cloth shop, buying them fabric for new clothes. Smiling, Wang Ying drew a string of cash. âTake it. Pick fine cloth for the cousins, and for the younger two as well.â
But Madam Li refused. âKeep your money. I brought silver.â
âHave it anywayâand what remains, bring back.â His heart was generous. With family, he was expansive. To Qingyun and Qingsong especially, he gave sincerely as to born siblings.
Unable to dissuade him, she let her maid pack the silver. Off they went merrily to the market.
Wang Ying wound up the stall, barred the doors, and turned homeward. Yet his thoughts were uneasy. Since the night before, Qingyan had been peculiar. At dawn, his eyes were ringed, as if sleepless. Earlier Wang had been too hurried to askâbut now he must. What shadow bound his heart?
notes
: Jin (æ€) â traditional weight unit; about 500 grams (~1.1 pounds). Thus 400 jin â 200 kilograms (~440 lbs).
: The recitation is from the Doctrine of the Mean (äžćșž): âSelfâsincerity becomes illumination, which is our nature. Selfâillumination becomes sincerity, which is teaching. Sincerity brings clarity, clarity in turn brings sincerity.â
: The poem Watching the Snow (è§éȘ) â an original stylized poem, here claimed by Zhang but in fact earlier composed by both Qingyan and him during their friendship.