ITIEQ C6
by berryChapter 6 â I Have Special PUA Techniques
âBrother Chenââ
A folding fan poked out from behind a bamboo curtain.
âFrom across the hall I could already hear your racket. Let me seeâwhat mischief are you up to again?â
The noise stuttered to a halt for an instant. Chen Xianâs eyes sharpened. âAnd you are?â
The young man in green robes beside him exclaimed in surprise: âBrother Shen? What are you doing here?â He turned to Chen Xian and explained, âThis is the second son of the Vice Minister of Ritesâ household. Brother Chen, you may not know him wellâwe used to play together often.â
Shen Qinghe stepped out from behind the curtain.
Chen Xian narrowed his eyes, scanning him up and down.
The second son of the Vice Minister of Rites? Heâd heard vague mention of such a oneâwell known throughout the capital as a useless fop and easy victim for swindling.
Seeing him directly, his expression relaxed a little, and he cupped his hands with a gesture of courtesy.
But not far away, the one holding the vessel could no longer endure. With a dull crash, the copper pot slipped and hit the ground.
Shen Qinghe feigned shock. âAhâwhatâs this? Some young lady collapsed onto the floor? And no one will even help her up?â
âA lady? Hahahaha! Brother Shen, are you once more moved by pity for fragrant jade and tender blossoms?â The youth in green laughed to tears.
Chen Xian gave a short, cold laugh. âWhat lady? Nothing but some base commoner filth. Some petty household brat, dreaming to cling upwardsâfawning, crawling.â
âHe claimed to have a gravely ill younger brother and begged money everywhere. Upon seeing his neither-male-nor-female looks, Brother Chen ordered him into womenâs robes for our amusement⊠And would you believe it, he even holds the xiucaiâ± degree? Iâd never imagined one could be so devoid of backbone! We, of course, would have naught to do with such despicable creatures.â The green-robed youth snorted, then, as if to drive the humiliation deeper, drew from his sleeve and flung a handful of coins with a clatter across the floor.
âSince your brotherâs a slave in Brother Chenâs household, this young lord will reward you. Tell me, what use is that xiucai degree? Born in dirt, stay in dirtâthat is your fate.â
Lang Xinyue lay sprawled upon the ground, iron coins ringing in scatter about him. Beneath the crimson silk dress, his thin body trembled, the hem fanned out like a blossom wantonly unfurledâyet each petal curled inwards, crushed.
He crouched low, picking up the coins one by one.
Laughter erupted all around.
Up close, indeed his face was hard to classifyâfeatures exquisitely fine, brows soft as willow, lips red as blood, the visage of a hibiscus beauty.
On the sons of noble houses, such beauty bespoke noble bloodline, the continuation of refined heritage. But on Lang Xinyueâinstead it spelled peril, like a flame too near dry kindling, a blade turned against the self.
Scornful gazes showered upon him from all sides like rain.
Lang Xinyue turned his face aside. His dark eyes opened and closed quietly, but inside carried the sting of a beeâs tail.
The crowd tossed him aside from thought, turning instead to chat with Shen Qinghe. One asked: âBrother Shen, whatâs detained your steps all this while? Perhaps entangled in some warm nest of beauty, forgetting even us?â
For Shen Qingheâs purse had always been openâbanquets, wine, all costs falling upon him. A month of his absence meant fewer visits to Zhuangyuan Tavern all around.
âAh, hardly that. I was merely off sitting the exams, and returned as a jinshiÂČ. My father, dear elder that he is, wishes me to bring honor to our clanâso heâs chained me to books and brush. Do you think me suited for such toil?â Shen Qinghe waved his hands as though overwhelmed.
âJinshi?â
âYouâpassed the jinshi?â
âHow could that be possibleâŠ!â
Their shock rose like a wave, just as Shen Qinghe had predicted. He pretended surprise himself. âWhat? But the results hang still upon the imperial board. Did none of you see? Ah, I suppose none of you care to pay attention. No wonderâI thought it odd none came to congratulate me!â
Scanning their familiar, twisted expressions, he nodded inwardly.
Now it was his turn.
âUnless I mistake, your household has had happy news,â Shen Qinghe said slyly. âYour parents bearing a son in old ageâinviting grand celebration, no doubt. I must certainly come and share in the feast. You may forget trifles, but do not forget me.â
The smile upon the green-robed youthâs face froze.
âYou never knewâhaving been an only childâjust what it is to have younger siblings. Look at my family! So lively. And yet, Father shows such favor to my brother, I can scarcely help but grow jealous. Sometimes I fearâdoes he think me useless, so now raises a âsub-accountâÂł instead?â
âN-not at all, Brother Shen, surely you imagine itâŠâ
âAh! So youâre cleverer than I. Youâre rightâit is only my fancy. Still, on the day I brought back my degree, Father near tore the genealogy apart, wanting to re-start the family history from my name alone!â
The smile drained clean away.
Shen Qinghe turned to face Chen Xian.
âBrother Chen, your house is famed for its strict order. Until today, I had never yet glimpsed your dissipated sideâthree lifetimesâ fortune to see it so!â
âWhy, just the other day, I received your younger half-brother. Came to consult my father about imperial exam matters, he did. But I thought thenâhis bearing falls far short of yours, Brother Chen! But come, I wonderâwhy did you not appear yourself? Could it be you already mastered all, and surely will pass at once?â
Instantly Chen Xianâs complexion darkened like a soot-stained pot.
Shen Qinghe beamed at the next.
âAnd your houseânone in this generation of Fifth Rank⎠or above, eh? Brother Zhao, though eldest, seems luckless without ancestral titles. Difficult matters indeed!â
âAnd Brother Mengâonce proud partner in revelry with you, is now toiling at the Secretariat, worn thin as a reed. Compared, Brother Mengâs hardships do him no justiceâfor see how well-nourished and radiant you remain!â
âŠ
After a full circuit of âgreetings,â all wore expressions like wilted cabbage. Shen Qingheâs vigor soared.
âBrother Shen! We are friends of old. What need for such barbed words?â someone shouted at last.
Shen Qinghe sighed deeply. âYou see? With so many flaws, you fly into fury at a few truths. Honestly nowâyour failing or passing bears no relation to me. My stipend is already secure. I only anger because I pity you! Only true brothers would speak so franklyâdonât you see?â
They shifted uneasily. âThe examination system now is unlike in ages pastâthe questions more difficult than everâŠâ
âOh, difficult? Nonsense! Standards remain as always. But His Majesty bears heavy burdensâhow could the court be filled with wine-sacks and rice-bags?â” Think, reflectâyour families already hired tutors, founded academies. So many yearsâdid your marks rise? Exam after exam, did you reflect? Sit long enough and still failâwho can you blame but yourselves?â
âYes, I passedâbut seeing brothers fail, my heart⊠burns with grief!â
Clack, clackâhis fan handle knocking rhythm upon the railing, anger and righteous sorrow interwoven.
From other booths around, scholars listening to the commotion grew moved by his words. The exams had just concluded; many scholars still lingered in the capital. Hearing this son of Shen cry harsh truths yet with warm heart, and seeing his striking poiseâthey cherished him all the more.
âTo gain one confidant such as you is fortune enough! Brother, call me Cui Haowen of Changzhou. Might I befriend you?â
âI am Shang Nan of Anyangâcount me a friend as well!â
âAnd I, Lin Shuangcai of ChaisangâŠâ
âŠ
The plot had careened wholly beyond his intent! Shen Qinghe flapped both hands dismissively.
Enough of this noiseâmy pork knuckles are going cold!
âGentlemen, your praise is undeserved.â With a bow in all directions, then to his old companions, he added: âGood medicine tastes bitter but heals the illness; true words cut the ear yet guide the steps. Treasure yourselves.â He dabbed at phantom tears as though overcome, then turned and departed.
Leaving Chen Xian and his circle dumbfound.
Every eye condemning them, every word of Shen Qinghe had stabbed their lungs. None had spirit for revelry. Calling their servants, they slunk away, minds now burning with desire for study, even considering to dig old volumes from beneath moth-eaten chests.
System, puffing imaginary e-smoke: âWhy provoke him at all?â
At last the storm settled, and tea cooled to drinkable warmth.
In a booth above, Jin Chang, who had listened all along, leaned to the darkly robed figure at his side. âThe second son of the Vice Ministerâs house, Your Majesty has seen him before.â
Xiao Yuanzheng, clad only in plain garb, dark wide sleeves, sat perfectly adorned. All under heaven called the royal house diminished, but faced with Emperor Zhaohuan, not a measure of that majesty was lost.
âI remember him.â The Emperorâs fingers traced the rim of his cup.
âLittle did I think the young master Shen could show such a side,â said Jin Chang.
Through the pearl curtain Xiao Yuanzheng glimpsed, as the gauzy veil swayedâjust barely visible, those lips curved into half-hidden smile.
That same boy who had thrown himself weeping at his palace steps begging vindicationânow below, stood tall, fan in hand, conceding not an inch.
Testing his masterâs mood, Jin Chang saw his eyes soft with approval. He chuckled: âThe rumors indeed prove false. To my eyes, he somewhat recalls Your Majesty in youth.â
The Emperor smiled faintly. âA little too claw-and-tooth.â
âYet for the young, high spirit is no ill thing.â
â
Lang Xinyue exited by the side gate, his hair ornaments shed who-knew-where, twisted bun falling loose, the rouge about his lips smudged. He cared naughtâonly clutched his skirts tightly forward, hoarding the scatter of coins against his chest as he bolted for the city outskirts.
âHeyâstop!â
A shout behind; he turned warily, one hand brushing the knife at his waist, honed daily to razor edge.
âHuffâyou run so fast!â A youth in green brocade scampered up, face flushing red when met with Lang Xinyueâs stare. âThat⊠our young master bade me give this to you.â
From his palm he offered a small embroidered pouch.
Lang Xinyue did not even look, only stepped back, fingers tense upon the warmed knife hilt.
âNo, donât fear! Our young master is no bad man.â The servant waved hands, opening the pouch. Inside glimmered a pile of golden leaves. The glint made Lang Xinyueâs breath seize.
With this money⊠Brother could be saved.
His eyes suddenly welled moist, bright liquid glimmer trembling, burning. He stared fixedly at the youth.
Startled in turn, the boy hastily tied the pouch shut and thrust it into Lang Xinyueâs arms, immediately retreating a step, gaze full of pity.
âOur young master said: Heaven gives each talent its use. Spend gold, gold will come again. Donât repayâhe believes in you.â
Lang Xinyue sagged, drained, shoulders bent. His voice cracked: âYour young master⊠what is his name.â
âOhâthat.â The runner scratched his head, flashing white teeth in a grin.
âYoung master said⊠just call him Lei Fengâ¶.â
Footnotes
- Xiucai (ç§æ): The lowest rank in the imperial examination system, also known as shengyuan, which granted basic privileges but little real power.
- Jinshi (éČ棫): The highest rank in the imperial examination system. Passing makes one eligible for high official posts.
- âOpen a small accountâ (éć°è): A tongue-in-cheek modern slang borrowed here. Originally âsmurfingâ in games or creating alternate accounts; Shen uses it as a metaphor for his father raising a âsecondary sonâ to replace him.
- Fifth Rank (äșć): Refers to ranks in the official nine-grade system. Above fifth rank are senior officials; below are lesser functionaries.
- âWine-sacks and rice-bagsâ (é ć飯èą): Classical idiom for useless men, existing only to eat and drink.
- Lei Feng (é·é): A modern PRC cultural icon, a soldier famed for selflessness and helping others. Shen cheekily uses âcall me Lei Fengâ as alias while secretly gifting gold.