ITIEQ C18
by berryChapter 18 â A Spark of Fire
âTeacher Shen.â
Having left the pharmacy, Gao Rong suddenly spoke.
âPerhaps ⊠I have a plan.â
Shen Qinghe gestured for him to continue.
âThough they monopolize the market and have cut off several of the herbs prescribed by the Imperial Physicians, they cannot cut off all medicinal supply. Iâve read through many medical volumes in the Academy, and there are precedents for curing plagues.â Gao Rongâs expression turned solemn at the thought of thousands of lives in the refugee camp. âMight you allow me to give it a try?â
âOf course.â Shen Qinghe exhaled a deep breath. His brows relaxed and he put on a lighter expression. âWhat method have you in mind?â
âIn the Treatise on Cold Damage Disorders (ăć·ćŻè«ă), there is a curious strategy called the âEpidemic Garment Methodâ (ç«èĄŁæł). That is, the clothes worn by a patient are removed and put onto a healthy person. The healthy one first feels mild illness but within days recoversâand thereafter resists reinfection from the same plague. This method needs only mild herbs rather than the harsh prescriptions given by court physicians.â
Shen Qingheâs eyes lit up. Wasnât this essentially vaccination!
A controlled, mild exposure, followed by medicine to ensure survival. Limited by current medical conditions though it may be, it should still reduce mortality greatly.
The only difficulty: convincing the venerable Imperial Physicians of something so unorthodox ⊠but surely not harder than dealing with aristocratic clans!
He swung to the saddle, gave one last look at the gilded plaque of Qixiang Pharmacy, and spurred his steeds through plumes of dust straight back toward the refugee camp.
Leftover herbs could last five to seven days, but new infections grew by a hundred every few days. Now stocks might last only three.
âGao Rong, what heretical book did you read that has you scraping off peopleâs scabs to grind into powder? Can such things really work? If it werenât a volume in our Academy, Iâd call it foreign witchcraft!â
You Luo muttered behind his thick mask as he carefully plucked a flaking scab from a patient.
Gao Rong ignored him, cutting coarse cloth into neat squares. âItâs written in the books. Iâve never tried either.â
Lang Xingyue meanwhile was gathering the scabs into a mortar, grinding them fine into powder and pouring them into a porcelain bottle for Gao Rong.
âYou can guarantee this works?â You Luo jabbed a finger at the mortar.
âI cannot.â Gao Rong replied evenly. âBut we shall know soon enough.â
Then, removing his mask, and before either boy could stop him, he lifted the porcelain bottle and inhaled the powder through a reed tube. He fell into harsh choking coughs.
Shocked, You Luo grabbed for his arm. âWhat are you doing! Do you want to die?â
Breathing hard, Gao Rong steadied himself. âDid not our forebears taste hundreds of herbs in pursuit of cures? I am but one body testing a remedyâwhat is the alarm? If I catch the plague, I will better know how to dose, how much to prescribe.â Tucking the bottle into his sleeve, he saw the tear-brimmed eyes of his classmates but turned his face aside. âIf this succeeds, not only the refugees here, but all under Heaven may benefit. Fear notâI am a physician. I know my limits. This is the desire of my heart.â
Lang lowered his eyes. ââŠGongzi, such righteousness.â
Within half a day, Gao Rongâs cheeks flushed. Ever attentive, You Luo rushed with a bowl of medicine. âQuick, drink!â
By nightfall, he burned with high fever. The two panicked. Though ordered to secrecy, they chose to report to Teacher Shen outside the camp.
Hearing, Shen Qingheâs face hardened, and he rushed in.
Gao Rong lay unconscious, face ruddy with fever, neck streaked in scarlet rash. Everyone gasped.
Shen stormed, âGao Rong! Youâve always been the most reliable, and now in the crucial moment you play silent hero! If this method must be tested, it should be meâ not you! A healer healing himself into collapseâleaving us outsiders fumblingâwhat nonsense is this? And you two, helping cover it upâdo you want a life on your conscience?â
This was a soldierâs gamble, a dice roll with life. And if one of his students died for it, heâd never sleep again.
âClear back! Donât block his breath. Bowen, take my pass-token and fetch the Imperial Physicians from the palace! You Luo, you run fastest: drag any local doctor here!â
They sped off.
Moments later, You Luo dragged in an elderly physician, literally pulling him by the arm. âSave my friend!â he cried, heedless that the man clutched sleeve to mouth, terrified of plague.
Pressured by young eyes, the physician took the pulse, then shook his head.
âWhat!â You Luo yelled.
Covering his face, the man said: âEven if you eat me, it changes nothing. His pulse is chaotic, heat rampant within, chills without. Hopeless. Prepare his last ritesâŠâ
âHow could that beâŠâ
The studentsâ eyes reddened. Gao Rong, half-conscious, forced out pale lips: âItâs ⊠nothingâŠâ before fainting again.
Then at last the Imperial Physician arrived, carrying his chest. Hearing his prized pupil had tested on himself, he was grief-stricken. Entering, seeing despairing faces, his own heart dropped. But upon gauging Gao Rongâs wrist, his brows suddenly twitched.
âGao Rong!â You Luo sobbed aloud. âIf only I had stopped youâif only I grabbed itâYou wouldnât die so young!â
But the Physician waved impatiently. âCease wailing! He needs rest, not your noise scaring him half to death.â
ââŠWhat?â
âThe two heats battle inside him. If he survives tonight, his life is secure. I prescribe Si Ni Tang*âmake him sweat, and heâll recover.â
* (Si Ni Tang ćéæčŻ â âDecoction for Frigid Extremities,â a classical formula to rescue yang and balance internal cold/heat.)
He sighed heavily. âCurious thoughâthe illness resembles plague, yet is far weaker. How?â
The students haltingly explained all.
The physicianâs eyes shone. He pondered longâthen burst into loud laughter. âA brilliant stratagem indeed! Butâone must refine further. Select source carefully, purge venom, distill essence intact. Then safe beyond harm. This timeâhe lived by fortune. Next timeâmay not. Restrain him henceforth!â
âOf course!â they cried, still shaken.
That night, none returned home. They piled thick straw, laid cloth, and kept vigil. You Luo even sang old lullabiesâsongs his mother crooned when he was illâannoying Xu Lesheng in the next camp who cursed heâd sing Gao Rong to death either way.
At dawn, past weary night, Lang Xingyue saw Gao Rongâs lashes tremble. Fever waned at last.
Thus, across a war-scorched land where plague was deemed deathâs mark, there dawned at last a cure-in-the-making. Frail as a candle in the wind, yet given time, a spark to kindle prairie fire. The hope of survival would be tied forever to Gao Rongâs name, carried across the soil of Great Yong.
For centuries, nobles had called peasants as worthless weeds. But weeds need only the smallest drop of Heavenâs rainâand life springs forth again.
The âGarment Methodâ and the âScab Method,â backed by the Imperial Physicianâs own witness, spread quickly. Death still cameâbut compared to once, when ten of ten died, now lives were spared beyond counting.
With mortal needs steadied, refugees finally took breath. They walked, they washed, they lived again. Shen Qinghe then laid plans to push âRelief through Laborâ into full motion.
Refugees are like flowing water: easy to guide at source, impossible to dam downstream. In past famines, Great Yong opened the Ever-Normal Granaries not only to store grain, but, Shen Qinghe now said, to âstore people.â He called it âLabor Ever-Normal Granaryâ (ććććžžćčłć).
Those bankrupt, landless, unregisteredârecruited into storage. When the famine ended, release them back to labor land. Meanwhile, during storage, their labor could âappreciateâ: teach new trades, build skills, raise value. This was true one-move-for-many-gains, treating root and branch.
Work in years of famine cost little. Aristocrats were ever hungry for projectsâpalaces, towers, silk, and wine. Workers hungry for food, masters waste no coin.
Implementation Shen designed: refugees divided by households into dozens of squadsâA, B, C, D, each about two hundred. Each squad picked literate, esteemed locals as leaders and deputies to distribute food, enforce order, and manage laborâpowers and responsibility both.
Over these were overseers, Shenâs own men, who kept records of each cohort.
As for job types: those funded by state are âpublic worksââriverworks, engineering, fortifications. Those funded by nobility âprivate worksââpalaces, textile, brewing. Shen set rough wage standards based on trade, adjustable by report. Key: fairness mattered more than plenty.
What if noble clans obstructed? The Censorate would oversee, and Shen would memorialize all to the throne. Who gave more, who less, would be written black-and-white. And the officials tainted by the last Censorâs disgrace now had motive to relentlessly prove themselves.
Completed, the scheme lay ready. Shen presented it before Emperor Zhaohuan, standing tall in the hall.
His Majesty finished reading, set it down.
âYour method is bold and new, reform amid rot. Great Yong choked long on old bureaucracyâsuch new blood we sorely lack.â
Shenâs heart lifted; approval had come.
âThe matterâs continuationâI entrust to Censor Kong.â
The red imperial seal pressed onto his words.
Shen froze.