WSMTATMC C49
by berryChapter 49
âAt lastâŠughâif this went on Iâd have left my life on the roadâŠugh. This place is so remote, even the barbarians of old would fail to find it. Your father truly found a lonely spot!â
âForgive us, Master. Iâve let you suffer,â said young Chen Qinghuai, face pale as paper, bowing his head with guilt.
This long road had tortured both master and pupil who rarely traveled. Especially poor Liang Boqing, who grew so dizzy in the carriage he nearly vomited out his life along the way.
When at last the entourage halted at the Chen gate, attendants knocked. The porter Linzi peered suspiciously. âWho is it you seek?â
One servant drew out a sealed letter. âI am retainer of Lord Chen Jing. By his orders, I escort his son and Master Liang to the ancestral home.â
At once Linzi hurried inside. Soon Madam Li and Aunt Chen Rong both came forth to greet them.
âQinghuai!â
âFirst Aunt, Third Aunt!â The boy bowed reverently to the two elder women.
âAnd you still remember us! My child, how tall youâve grown. Quickly, come inâyou must be weary from the journey!â
âIt was tolerable,â he muttered.
Madam Li then noticed the slender middle-aged man behind him. âAnd this, surely, is the Master Liang your father spoke of in his letter?â
Liang saluted. âGreetings to the two ladies.â
âMaster, no need for formality. Please, inside.â
Within the hall, Madam Li pressed Qinghuai for news.
âFather and Mother took my younger siblings with them to Shanzhou. Once they are settled, theyâll write back.â
âIâve not seen your mother in over a decade,â sighed Madam Li. âWhen she last came, she was with child and could not travel. Who knows when next we meetâŠâ
Aunt Chen added softly, âIndeed. Since your fatherâs appointment we hardly met. Iâve near forgotten her face.â
The two ladies thus indulged in long sighs and recollections. On the side poor Liang Boqing had no patience for such endless chatterâso, with sudden roll of eyes, he simply collapsed back feigning faint.
âAh?! Master Liangâwhat is it? Quick, fetch the doctor!â
Physician was summoned. After a check, he declared: âMerely exhaustion. Master is frail. He must rest well.â
At once, Madam Li ordered soup boiled and the house hushed.
After all left, Liang cracked open one eye. âGone yet?â
âMasterâyou feigned illness again?â asked Qinghuai helplessly.
âI could bear no more of their prattling! Where is that cousin of yours?â
âElder Cousin is at the estate. He returns tomorrow.â
âWere it not for the curiosity of sizing up that lad praised to Heaven by your father, Iâd never have come this far. Weâll see if he is horse or mule when he stands before me.â
Qinghuai said firmly, âMy cousin is truly outstanding. He passed tongsheng at fourteen. Had he not been framed, he would long since have become licentiate.â
Liang snorted. âTo pass xiucai is nothing. Even juren at second tier, many are useless waste.â
Qinghuai bit back a retortâmindful that his own fatherâs degree was precisely Second Tier 37th place.
Meanwhile at the estate, Qingyan and Wang Ying worked on their new courtyard house. The walls had risen days ago; now they paved the yard.
Because the estate lay near the mountain, for safetyâs sake Wang Ying had the back hill fenced with tall wooden posts, like palisade, to block wild beasts.
Furniture too had been finished. The master chamber held no bed but a flameâbed (kang)âas in later generationsâ peasant homes: a stone platform, hollow channel beneath linking to a stove. Burning firewood within, the bed retained warmth till dawn.
Villagers flocked to see, marveling at such wondersâfor few had beds that could burn warm! Once dried and laid with mats, the platform stayed toasty a whole night. Many old folk resolved to build imitations when they went home.
Qingyanâs beloved sixâsided pavilion too had been raised. Inside, stone table and stools awaited, perfect for reading or sipping tea midst blossoms.
After half a dayâs effort, the courtyard nearly complete, they sat to dine. But at noon Ershun brought word: âYour cousin Qinghuai and his Master have arrived.â
Hurriedly they arranged chambers, airing fresh bedding. Courtesy demanded no lapseâespecially since Uncleâs letter warned that Liang was oddâtempered.
By morning, the couple returned to town.
Yet when they entered, neither youth nor teacher was in sight.
âDidnât they arrive yesterday?â Qingyan wondered.
Madam Li explained: âAt dawn, Master Liang dragged Qinghuai outâto see the town, he said. After a nightâs sleep, he was lively as a dragon. A peculiar man indeed.â
In truth, Liang simply hungered. Yesterday he had faked illness, so supper was light and plain. Now his tongue longed for flavor. In a street shop, tasting wontons, he spat: âGah! Sand in the mince nearly broke my teeth!â
The stallwife only smiled. âForgive me, sir. Next bowl will be clean.â
Couldnât rage at a smiling woman. He shoved the bowl to Qinghuai. âYou finish. Iâll buy a sweet cake.â
Accustomed to such, Qinghuai wolfed the bowl, paid the bill, and trotted after.
By noon, they returned. Liang now strode solemn, chin up, hands clasped behind his back, surveying the Chen courtyard with weighty eyes. Were it not for the sprig of coriander leaf stuck in his beard, he might have seemed daunting.
Qingyan and Wang Ying stepped forward to bow. âYour unworthy nephew Chen Qingyan, with spouse Wang Ying, greets Master Liang.â
Qinghuai hiccoughed, burping from excess food. âCousin, Cousinâinâlaw.â
After courtesy, Liang wasted no time. âDo you still read daily?â
Startled, Qingyan answered, âYes, sir. Never a day without three hoursâ study.â
Liang nodded faintly. And quoting Mencius, murmured: âThe selfâdegraded I cannot converse with; the selfâabandoned I cannot employ.â At least the lad had not abandoned himself after disgrace.
Inside, Liang tested his learningâquotations from Four Books, Five Classics. Most Qingyan parried well, though on deeper points he faltered. After all, deprived of a proper tutor, his progress was remarkable.
At last Qingyan confessed lowly: âMaster, you know of my fate. I can never sit for examination againâŠâ
Liang nodded. âYesâyour uncle already confided. Know, I too share such fate. In you, I see the shadow of myself.â
âYou also, sir?â
âPerhaps you heard my nameâof Yangzhou, once one of the famed âTen Talents of Jiangnanâ: Liang Liufang.â
Qingyanâs eyes widened in disbelief. This was him! He had indeed heard the legend of that brilliant youth, undone by charges of cheating.
Seeing the recognition, Liang sighed heavily. âEnough of old wounds. I hear you live now on the estate? Far from here?â
âYesâŠnot far.â
âI prefer not to lodge within this household of widows and divorceesâit would not be seemly. Better your villa.â
Sensing hesitation, Wang Ying stepped forward, describing: âOur estate lies forty li from here, ringed by mountains and streams. The villagers are our tenants, all kindly. The new villa is spacious, and behind there flows a warm springâwinter baths banish chill.â
Hearing of vegetables green even in frost, Liangâs eyes gleamed. He slapped his thigh. âThere! To the estate we go!â
Ying laughed. âIf Master requires anything, we may purchase before we leave.â
âOnly food enough. I need no more. My headâthere lies all the books of a capital library.â
Thus after meal, all boarded carts for the Chen estate.
On the way, Liang beckoned Qingyan into his carriage.
âBoy, you know they accused me of cheating. Fewer know: later, the court actually granted me chance to sit again.â
Qingyan jerked upright, smacking his head on the beam. âThenâwhy did you not?â
âWhy, indeed. I was young, rash. I once wrote a verse defying emperorsâso when summoned again, I scorned the offer.â
Qingyan: ââŠâ
âLooking backâit was folly. In truth, what is scholarship for? âTrain your skills, and serve the emperorâs house.â So simple. To spread oneâs philosophy, first attain rank. Who listens to a failed licentiate?â
His bluntness shocked but rang true.
âThese years, I roamed. Saw my clumsier classmates become great masters. I regret, oh regretâŠâ
âNow I wish to take pupils. To spread what brilliance I have left. Of many, you have no special geniusâbut your character endures. Iâll take you with Qinghuai. Iâll raise your name againâperhaps even back into the exams.â
So proud he was, that of countless who sought him, he refused all. But friendship with Chen Jing, and a glimpse of this youthâs honesty, swayed him.
On the jolting cart, Qingyan fell to his knees. Three full kowtows struck. âI, Qingyan, am willing to acknowledge you as my Master!â
âUp, up. This counts not. Wait till official ritesâwith meat and wineâand then we shall call it so!â
Qingyan: ââŠâ
notes
: Mengzi, Lilou chapter â phrase used to condemn men who abandon themselves, meaning Liang was testing whether Qingyan possessed resilience.