ITIEQ C32
by berryChapter 32 â Purging the Court
After being scolded so ferociously, Shen Qinghe was no clay figure either. He examined the old man standing before him: a long white beard hanging down to his chest, face blotched with age spots, trembling on his staffâyet his voice thundered without weakness. This was not one of his own local subordinates, but Xu the Elder, a once-renowned censor of the imperial Yushi Tai (Censorate) in the capital, who had since retired to his hometown.
Shen had heard of this manâs âcopper sinews and iron bonesâ reputation. Though appearing frail, his vigor while rebuking someone was formidableâand now Shen experienced it firsthand.
Glancing over the group gathered smugly behind the old man, Shen immediately understood: So, they went and fetched reinforcements.
Respect for the elderly was still one of Shen Qingheâs habits. He leisurely took his seat at the desk and spoke lightly:
âElder Xu, at such an advanced age, you should be enjoying leisure at home. Who urged you here to glare and bluster? Tell me, and I will punish him soundly on your behalf!â
Xu Elder slammed his staff against the groundâbang, bangâand barked:
âWhat shamelessness is this! I may be old, but my eyes are not blind, nor my ears deaf. I see clearly your unruly conduct! Gathering retainers and bonded servants throughout the commanderyâdo you plan to turn grand Qiuquan into your private estate? Do you intend to reduce this court into your one-man hall before you are satisfied?â
His beard trembled with rage, as though he might collapse into faint any moment.
Those behind him wore expressions of righteous indignation, glaring furiously at the young commandery governor lounging with ease.
Shen Qinghe chuckled softly:
âThe truth is, Elder Xu, though you are said to be a paragon of virtue and elder statesman of renown here in Qiuquan, I see it rather differently.â
Xu Elderâs eyes bulged:
âWhat did you just say?â
One of his supporters shouted angrily:
âElder Xu was commanded by the court itself to retire with honor, to return home esteemedâhow dare a junior such as you slander him!â
With the authority of his past career in court remonstrations, Xu Elder declared:
âOthers may not move against you, but I can. Once I return, I will memorialize the throne and have your governorship stripped!â
Soâthe hidden blade reveals itself.
Shen Qinghe spoke unhurriedly:
âIn the Great Yong dynasty, the system of Land Allotment and Retainer Protection was implemented. Officials, depending on their rank, could claim landâFirst Rank claiming fifty qing (large acreage), and each successive rank five qing fewer, until Ninth Rank which claimed ten. Beyond that, they could shelter tenant families as well, the higher the rank the more tenant households allotted.â
Xu Elder frowned:
âNaturally I know this. What of it?â
Shen Qinghe raised his brows slightly:
âIf an official family thus enjoys tax exemption, some might exploit the systemâturning self-tilling farmers into their tenants. Then they need not toil themselves, yet still reap rents in leisure. Elder Xu, how do you see this practice?â
Xu Elderâs expression grew strained:
âIll in parts, perhaps, but still within the boundaries of law.â
A man among the group broke into cold sweat and urged:
âElder Xu, beware! This lad is full of sly rhetoricâdo not let him trick you!â
âAh, what a cruel slander,â Shen Qinghe lifted a register from the desk, reading aloud distinctly:
âLord Tian: received gifted fields of three thousand two hundred mu, with two hundred and eighty households of tenant farmers.â
He flipped to another page, eyes glinting:
âLord Chuâhohâreceived five thousand eight hundred mu, tenant farmers four hundred and sixty households.â
âLord ZhangâŠâ
As names and figures rolled on, sweat poured down their foreheads. When had this youth investigated them so minutelyâtheir very undergarments flung open for all to see!
Xu Elderâs brows knotted as he turned toward them:
âIs this true?â
The group mumbled evasively, until finally one snapped, smashing the pot and letting it shatter:
âAnd youâare you so spotless? In mere days youâve gathered over a hundred people! Even our own tenants forsook their lands and hurried to you, forced to sign servile contracts! Even if you oppose us, how dare you exploit the townsfolk, oppressing the people for your gain?â
Immediately they tried to justify themselves, pressing Xu Elder to return to their line of defense.
But Shen only leaned back in his chair, smiling easily:
âWho told you I forced anyone to sign contracts, making the folk my slaves?â
âIs it not so?â
âThose who labor under me eat steamed buns and porridge every meal, and also receive wages. I dare say this is the best treatment in all Qiuquan. Why canât citizens choose to work for me?â
His smirk turned razor-sharp:
âYou clutch purses tight in stinginess, begrudging my wealth spent freely. You hide your own shameful dealings but bring Elder Xu here to scold me? Such hypocrisyâstrict with others but lax with yourselvesâyou are unworthy to be officials of this commandery!â
With each line he spoke, their faces grew paler.
So this youth truly dipped into his personal coffers, feeding the folk daily with his own coin? No wonder no one imagined itâthat in history, no official ever did such a thing. Profitless, purposelessâwhat would he gain?
In Great Yong society, officials and commoners did not mingle. Scholars and commoners were divided. Such was the entrenched order. Discussing ideals with them was futile.
With laughter faint, Shen dropped the veil:
âBut in one thing you are correct. I have no wish to wrangle longer, and I am tired of your meddling in my court. If Qiuquan Commandery becomes my one-man hallâwhat of it?â
In the capital, oppressed under great clans, there was nothing he could do. But here, in this forsaken backwater, must he still bow his head to these men? Absolutely not.
The local officials recoiled in shock at his audacity.
Shen recited calmly:
âTian Qi. Chu Qingsheng. Liang Sanshang…â
One by one he named those officials who had postured behind Xu Elder earlier.
âSince you refuse to heed me, then resign and go idle.â
Those words dropped like thunder.
Everyone knew: this governor was exiled to Qiuquan only because the capital had abandoned him. True, governors did have authority to dismiss officials. But Qiuquanâs bureaucracy was tight-knit, rarely disrupted. To purge so many elders at onceâhow could he dare?
âImpudent child! How dare you?!â
Even Xu Elder himself grew uneasy. Weighing Shen with new eyes, he admitted the youth was clever-tongued and capable, but far too rash. Even if the others were wrong in part, such hotheaded purges would not bring him far on the bureaucratic road. Stroking his beard, Xu spoke earnestly:
âThese are your colleagues, men once esteemed in their villages. To treat them so harshly dishonors all.â
Shen Qinghe slapped his palm on the desk, smiling razor-thin:
âElder Xu, times have changed. Now under the imperial examination system, not the old recommendation system (cha-ju). Do you intend to remain a relic of past corruption?â
Xuâs face stiffened:
âSoâyou mean to set yourself against all the loyalists of Qiuquan?â
Shen replied coolly:
âNot so. Only against those who violate law. I hear your son-in-law holds office here as well⊠and that he too played a role in illegal land-taking. Are you, then, shielding lawbreakers?â
Xu Elderâs complexion twisted from shade to shade. He fell silent, yet stood firm, unwilling to retreat.
Shen sighed.
âI heard much in the capital of your upright name. Never thought, in retirement, you would invert your principlesâtarnishing your legacy. I could stop you, but why preserve the rotten?â
He stepped toward the desk. Upon it lay a long, cloth-covered shape. With one pull, crimson silk fell away revealing an ornate scabbard of jet-black iron. With steady deliberation, Shen Qinghe drew the blade. A streak of cold lightâat once laid against Xu Elderâs neck.
All gasped. Madness! Had the governor lost his reasonâpressing steel to an elder statesmanâs throat?
But in that instant, they beheld the full bladeâs patterned surface. Engraved with the constellation of the Northern Dipper, misted with silver lightâit could only be the legendary Imperial Sword of the Son of Heaven.
A weapon bestowed solely upon trusted intimates of the Emperor, conferring authority to âexecute first, memorialize later.â They had heard rumors Shen Qinghe was exiled, cast aside. Yet hereâhow could this be?
Faces drained of blood. As if facing the Emperor himself, they knelt.
Shenâs voice froze like steel:
âEven in the old recommendation system, selection was for âfilial and incorruptibleâ men. But these thousands of acres of private landâwhat filialness, what incorruptibility is this? Xu Elder, you take sides, shelter villains, aged yet unworthy, betraying virtue. On behalf of the Emperor, I ought to strike and sever you as disloyal. Do you submit, or not?â
Xu Elder trembled. At last, the straight spine of his life bentâknees dropping, muttering:
âTh-this servant⊠this servantâŠâ
Shen pressed the icy blade nearer. The old man collapsed fully to the floor.
Anger softened at last; Shen had never intended bloody execution. With a flick of wrist, the sword returned.
âFor your faithful service in years past, and old age today, I spare you your life. But all titles, lands, privileges, hereditary rightsâstripped. Never again invoke past glory.â
Half a lifetime of sweat turned to foam. Honor to disgraceâruin in a breath.
Shen twisted the sword, now pointing at the cowering men behind:
âAnd as for you rabbleâyour kin-connections, your lofty backingsânone of that matters here. You spurned resigning? Good. Then I shall revoke and strike your names. Back to farming with you! If you object, fetch reinforcements again. Show me who could overturn my will!â
At the direction of his blade, silence froze them.
That very night, the entire prefecture knew. The new governor, sword of the Emperor in hand, had expelled several senior officials; even Elder Xu himself was disgraced.
They had marched in proudlyâemerged in disgrace like whipped dogs.
When the news reached Xue Bufanâs residence, his wine-cup fell to the floor, liquid spreading into a small pool.
âCan it be mistaken?â
The official with him sighed:
âNo mistake. The rumors were wrong. Who would think one so young so favored by His Majesty? Fortunate for us, we never opposed him. Otherwise, now, we would be first to be purged.â
âBut trulyâthe atmosphere is now rife with alarm. Everyone takes orders from this governor alone. Tell me: should we strike first? Youâve long been away from the capital. Perhaps following him, you truly might returnârather than rot here. These few years already feel like half a lifetime! âŠBrother Xue? Brother Xue?â
Xue Bufan turned, face blank.
âGranted the Son of Heavenâs Sword⊠permitted to act with such libertyâŠ?â
The other consoled vaguely:
âPerhaps he possesses true extraordinary qualities?â
But Xue Bufan only muttered into the shadows:
âDecline, decline⊠why not return?â (quoting an ancient lament)
â
Meanwhile, lithe white pigeons winged south, carrying distant messages into the secluded imperial palace.
Eunuch Jinchang held a bamboo tube, rushing to present it to Emperor Zhaohuan:
âThis must be from the northern commanderâs pigeons.â
The Emperor was quietly reading. At these words he set aside the scroll and opened the tube. From within, a tiny rolled slip of paper, his eyes passing line by lineâhis brows relaxed.
During afternoons, none were permitted to disturb him at readingâsave for reports from his old troops stationed in the wild northwest. At these, he checked instantly. Jinchang was rightâit could only be that.
Yet the Emperor said:
âIt is northern news indeed, but not from the commander.â
The young sovereign carried the paper to his desk, flattening it out.
Curious, Jinchang blinked:
âThen⊠who?â
The Emperor glanced sidewaysâbut with a smiling gaze, without wrath. Jinchang hastily raised a hand to cover his mouth, feigning silence.
The Emperor chuckled:
âThat bratâalways stirring trouble, even in some remote corner. Out there beyond my reachâhe must have suffered some hardships. All the better; it will temper that fiery temper of his.â
Jinchangâs eyes rolled cunningly, then he broke into cheerful praise:
âWho would have thought a lowly criminal servant like me would witness such favor from Your Majestyâindeed, thanks only to Young Lord Shen! Did Your Majesty himself not once remark, âthe bravado of youth is not all flawâ? Young Lord Shen is blessed indeed. No matter where he goes, he will avert disaster and achieve great deeds.â
Indeed, ever since Shen left, the Emperorâs words grew fewer. Without realizing, Jinchang had seen the truthâthat only in Shenâs company did His Majesty reveal warmth. Now, even a mere letter from Shen could bring brightness to that august face. Even the most dedicated servants here could never do the same. Though exiled, Shen was clearly remembered by the throneâtreated more dearly than many ministers of the capital. A return seemed inevitable.
âYour tongue is ever glib,â the Emperor laughed, scolding lightly as he readied brush and ink. âThat place was chosen far from courts, its affairs simple. With Uncle Yao stationed not too far, nothing grave should occur. That is good tooâspares him constant bouts of combative pride here at court.â
Reviewing Shenâs words, the Emperor saw lively spiritânot bleakness. Content, he nodded.
âIf he wishes to mine, let him mine. Should he succeed, it will someday adorn his rĂ©sumĂ© with merit shining.â
Then he instructed:
âThe new year festival soon arrives. After you dispatch this reply, assign a courier to carry a New Yearâs gift. The journey is long and mountainousâyet just in time.â
Jinchang answered at once:
âIndeed, Your Majestyâs care would make Lord Shen beam with delight!â
Footnotes
- Yushi Tai (ćŸĄćČèș) â The Censorate, a powerful imperial watchdog office where officials impeached and scrutinized others.
- Land Allotment and Retainer Protection system (ć ç°èćźąć¶) â Historical land/tenant privilege system where officials held special exemptions of land and dependent households.
- Cha-ju system (ćŻèć¶) â An earlier selection system based on recommendation of the morally upright (filial and incorruptible), replaced by imperial examinations (ç§è).
- âDecline, decline, why not return?â (ćŒćŸźïŒćŒćŸźïŒèĄäžæž) â From the Book of Songs (Shijing), a poem lamenting ruin, often quoted to express despair.