WSMTATMC C92
by berryChapter 92
At this, both women could only sigh. If the manorâs fields failed, tenants could be excused the rent; but for common folk without grain, life would become truly hard.
Chen Rong said, âThis rain reminds me of a flood more than thirty years agoâsame month, seven days and seven nights without letup. The water rose higher than the table tops.â
âI remember my parents laid planks across the rafters, and we children huddled up there to escape the water. As a child, I didnât understand much and even found it novel; thinking back now, so many died in that flood. Many families in town were wiped out entirely.â
Qingyun grew anxious. âWhat should we do now?â
Wang Ying thought a moment. âFor now, we watch and wait. Our side sits higher; the water wonât reach us immediately. If it keeps up like this, weâll have to move up the mountain.â
Fortunately, the nearby hills were thickly forested, unlikely to shear off into mudslides or rockfalls during heavy rain.
That meal tasted flat to everyone except Yuanbao. Afterward, Wang Ying returned to the bedroom to keep writing.
The first volumeâSeedsâhad five pages already; when complete, it would cover the seed forms and identifying features of over sixty plants.
The second would be Breeding, with a third, fourth, and fifth to follow. Altogether, around five hundred pagesâa major undertaking. Wang Ying wasnât in a hurry to finish in one go; writing and revising in turn, he hoped to complete it within a year or two.
Heâd thought his learning had mostly faded, but as soon as he took up the brush and reviewed systematically, it returned almost entireâthe advantage of a young memory.
Outside, the rain still stitched the airâan irksome sound without end.
The sky was so dim he could barely see without a lamp, so he barred the door and went into the experimental field to write.
In there, the weather was faultlessâwarm breeze and bright sun. The rose bushes that Qingyan had brought in recently were blooming.
There were roses back home as well, but only deep pink and pale pink. Not like the Laizhou academyâs diverse varieties: in the grove behind the academy, a broad sweep of rosesâorange, yellow, white, and double-petaled hues.
The species propagated easily, it was saidâpinch a tender tip and stick it in the earth, and it would root. Qingyan had found time to snip several fine shoots and slipped them into the field.
Wang Ying planted them by the peach trees where theyâd take little space.
A new note lay in the field. He picked it upâit must have been left last night. Seeing that the three had entered Laizhou Prefectural Academy put him at ease.
He left a note of his own: the old home had endured days of endless rain, fraying tempers; the downpour was so heavy he feared for the crops. All was well otherwise, and Yuanbao had been obedientâno mischief; not to worry.
Then he settled into writing. Perhaps he had finally grown into his wits; concepts once opaque fell into order under systematic review, and he understood them clearly.
The delight spurred his enthusiasm.
After two hours, he stood to stretch. The fieldâs remaining allotment of time for the day could not be used; they had agreed to leave at least half an hour for one another in case of need.
Back in the bedroom, he rubbed his eyesâunaccustomed to the gloomâand drew in a breath full of damp. He put on an outer robe and stood in the covered walkway for a while.
Still no sign of a pauseâthe clouds rolled like poured ink; now and then a muffled thunderstroke resounded, a dragonâs roar. Who knew how many days this rain would drag on.
He crossed the corridor to the rear courtyard. Yuanbao had just woken from his nap, and the nurse was feeding him water.
âAh FuâŠâ The little one shot across the floor.
Wang Ying scooped him up and smoothed the messy topknot. âWhatâs wrong?â
âThe young master must have had a nightmare,â the woman said. âHeâd been crying. I just woke him.â
Wang Ying chuckledâso small, and already dreaming. âWhat did you dream?â
Yuanbaoâs mouth puckered and tears clung to his lashes; he burrowed into Wang Yingâs neck and sobbed.
âDonât cryâAh Fu wonât ask.â
âI dreamed⊠dreamed of water⊠so much water⊠Yuanbao couldnât⊠find Ah FuâŠâ Halting through hiccups, the childâs words gave Wang Ying a start. He guessed it was the endless rain working on the boyâs sleep.
âDonât be afraid. Dreams are false. Ah Fu will protect youânothing will happen.â
âWaa⊠Yuanbao is afraid of waterâŠâ
He patted the boyâs back and soothed him. In time, the tears passed. Children forget quickly; when Mutou and Chunsheng came, he was soon leaping about again.
Wang Ying did not forget. A vague worry gnawed at him: if the rain kept on, if the river upstream burst its banks, the whole of Qingshui Town would suffer.
The Yellow River might be called the Mother River, but it was a mother with a violent temper, schooling her children on both banks with the stickâfloods beyond counting, from ancient times to now.
Qingshui lay about a hundred and seventy li from the river. The county gazetteer recorded that thirty-two years ago the Yellow River had overrun and drowned the whole townâhouses collapsed, crops failedâstarved corpses lay everywhere.
He summoned Chen Bo and Dunzi. âGather all the rain gear in the house. Prepare more planks and rope. If the rain hasnât stopped by tomorrow, we head for the hills.â
Chen Bo hesitated. âLangjun, the water isnât deep yetâdo we go up now?â
âBetter to be ready. Also, go tell Chen Xiâs household. If anyone in the village wants to come, weâll go together.â
Chen Bo bit back objections. It felt excessiveârains like this came most years, and when they stopped, the water level dropped fast.
But he was a servant; he dared not argue. With orders given, he would carry them out. âIâll go.â
He pulled on his rain cloak and went out. After a few steps, he froze. The flood barrier theyâd stacked that morning had been breached; the water had poured straight into the fields, swamping the milletâ
He ran without delay.
Chen Xi lived at the east end of the village where the ground lay low; water was already in the houses. Adults and children sat on bed boards, fretting, unsure when the rain would end.
When Chen Bo arrived, Chen Xi hurried out. âBrother Chen, what brings you?â
âThe rain is too heavy,â Chen Bo said, wiping his face. âThe master intends to lead his family to the hills. He asks whether the villagers will comeâif we go in a band, we can look out for one another.â
Chen Xi hesitated, then nodded. âWeâll go! I know a rock cave on the mountainâwe can shelter from wind and rain there.â
Most people knew of the caveâfrom days of herding cattle and seeking shade in summer heat.
That surprised Chen Bo. âIâll tell the master. Let the villagers know: if the rain hasnât stopped in the morning, bring clothing and dry rations. Those who can travel should all goâwhen the rain ends, weâll return.â
âAyeâIâll go now!â
He and his eldest son went door to door. Hearing the message was from the master, many began packing at once.
Others balkedâsaid the master was making a fuss. The water was only up to the ankles; running for the hills was cowardice.
Back at the annex, Madam Li ordered the servants to pack clothing and grain. Flour was awkward to carry; Aunt Chen filled cloth sacks with rice and beans.
Wang Ying said, âDonât take too much foodâenough for a week for the family.â If the rain didnât stop after a week, he would find a way to bring grain from the field.
Qingyun and Lin Sui packed clothesâthree sets each for adults and children, both thin and thick. Who knew how the weather would turn? A sudden chill without warm layers would be trouble.
Madam Li and Chen Rong packed valuablesâbanknotes wrapped in oiled paper and strapped close against the skin; if soaked, theyâd be useless. Gold and silver ornaments went into a wooden box. As for bolts of cloth, too heavy to carry, they wedged them into the rafters of the storeroom, safe from the water.
By then it was already late. After dinner, Wang Ying slipped to the storeroom and put whatever could be carried into the experimental field. He locked up and would replace it upon return.
That night, he slept with Yuanbao and entered the field around the You hour. His earlier note still lay thereâQingyan hadnât come. He let the boy play there for a while.
After a quarter hour, Qingyan arrived.
Yuanbao launched himself forward. âDaddy!â
âAye!â Qingyan caught him up and hoisted him onto his shoulders.
âI thought you wouldnât have time today,â Wang Ying said.
âQingsong and Qinghuai are asleep. I slipped in.â
âSo early?â
âThereâs curfew at the academyâno lamps permitted. Everyone turns in early.â
âAre you adjusting to Laizhou Academy?â
âThe classmates are amiable, and Qinghuaiâs friend is there. Weâre nearly settled.â
âGood.â
Perched on his fatherâs shoulders, Yuanbao listened with a grin and didnât interrupt.
Qingyan set him down and squeezed his chubby hand. âHas Yuanbao been good these days?â
âGood!â he piped.
Wang Ying laughed. âHeâs behavedâmostly because the rain keeps him indoors.â
âIs it raining hard?â
âManageable,â Wang Ying said lightly. âIt just wonât stopâirritating.â
âWe had rain all the way to Laizhou,â Qingyan said. âNever a dry day. Teacher caught a chill and a feverâwe had to rest several days in a nearby county.â
He did not mention the near-crushing in the shrine. Both spoke only of the good, not of the badâeach loath to worry the other.
âNo wonder you arrived late.â
âBe careful thereâdrink ginger broth against the cold.â
âDonât worry about home,â said Wang Ying. âI may not have time to enter the field for a few days. If anything comes up, leave a note.â
âAlright. Iâll write when I can.â He dared not linger. He kissed Wang Yingâs brow. âIâll go.â
âYuanbao wants a kiss too,â the child said, tilting up his face.
Qingyan laughed and smothered him in a prickly-bearded kiss, making the boy squeal.
After they left, Wang Ying carried Yuanbao back to bed. The rain did not slacken all night.
Before dawn, the annex lamps were already lit. Things that feared damp were placed in wooden chests and sealed.
Chen Bo returned with news that there was a natural rock cave halfway up the mountainâjust the place to wait out the rainâso the days on the mountain wouldnât be too hard.
Around the Yin hour, a knocking sounded at the gate. Chen Xi arrived with the villageâs elders and youngsters, ready to climb together.
Footnotes:
- Yellow River floods: Historically frequent and devastating; local gazetteers (county records) often documented notable flood years and their impact.