WSMTATMC C97
by berryChapter 97
Laizhou Prefecture Academy.
Today was the monthly rest day. At dawn, Liang An was already waiting with a carriage outside the academy gates for the three students.
Spotting them with book cases on their backs, he waved. âThis way, young masters!â
Chen Qinghuai and Chen Qingsong ran over cheerfully; only Chen Qingyan came slowly, face taut, step by step.
Ever since he learned of the flood at home, worry had lodged in his chest; not wanting to burden his younger brothers, he had told them nothing.
Once in the carriage, the two younger ones chattered about what theyâd eat upon returning.
âFinally we can stop eating fish. Iâve had so much lately I could vomit.â
Qinghuai nodded vigorously. âTonight letâs have roast chicken. I know a place whose Beggarâs Chicken is especially good!â
Liang An said, âYoung Master Huai means Aunt Fourthâs Beggarâs Chicken, yes?â
âThatâs right! Uncle An, will you take me there?â
âNo need to goâIâve already bought it. Eat at home.â
Qinghuai and Qingsong clapped in delightâwishing they could fly home to taste it at once.
Only Qingyan remained grim, gazing out the window, lost in thought.
Qingsong sidled over and whispered, âElder Brother, is something wrong?â
âHuh? No, nothing. What did you say?â
âMaster bought us Beggarâs Chicken.â
âOh.â Qingyan forced a smile. âThen we must savor it well.â
After half an hour the carriage reached Liangâs residence. A second carriage stood at the gateâguests, perhaps.
Inside, Master Liang Boqing was seeing someone out; their talk was ending. The man bowed and took his leave.
Liang beckoned the three in. âBack already?â
âGreetings, Master.â
âGo bathe and change. Later, Iâll test what youâve learned these days at the academy.â
âYes.â They saluted properly and withdrew.
At the door, Liang suddenly called, âQingyan, stay a moment. I have something to tell you.â
Turning back, Qingyan saw solemnity cloud his masterâs face. âSit. Donât be alarmedâI must tell you something.â
Qingyan had guessed already. Drawing a breath, he said, âPlease speak, Master.â
âAn urgent letter came from Jizhou. Days of heavy rain breached the Yellow River dikes; three counties in Jizhou suffered severelyâamong them, Longquan County…â
Though he had known already, hearing it from his master struck him like a blow. His eyes flushed red.
The Yellow River breached⊠would there be anything left of home?
âDonât panic. Iâve written to a friend in Jizhou. Assistant Prefect Wang has men under himâwe hope they can go look. If all are safe, theyâll bring them to Jizhou to settle. If⊠ifâŠâ
Liang could not go on. He turned away, pressing his sleeve to his eyes.
How could this be fate?
Heaven had no eyes!
Wang Ying was such a good child, and little Yuanbao, that impish darlingâhe had not doted on them nearly enoughâŠ
Over long months living together, Liang had already taken them into his heart as family. The old man could not help but break into sobs.
Qingyan hurried to comfort him. âMaster, please donât grieve. They will be safe.â
âHow can they be? With water like thatâthe Jizhou prefect was demoted, and I heard the Water Bureau officials drowned outright; else theyâd have faced extinction of their households!â
âThis flood is heavenâs wrath and manâs fault. The Yellow River embankments went four years without reinforcement. Court silver was allocated, but layer by layer those corrupt officials stripped it bareânone used to shore up the dikes!
âThe innocent people sufferânearby counties are near emptiedâŠâ
Qingyan swallowed. âI understand. If thereâs nothing else, this student will withdraw.â
âYou wonât return to see them?â
He shook his head. âNo. Returning now wonât change outcomes. All I can do is set my mind on study. When I pass as provincial graduate and enter office, only then can I wield power to change such things.â
Liang hadnât expected such words. After a long pause, he sighed. âWhen Heaven places a burden on a man, it first wears his will and labors his sinews. Good childâgo.â
â
Back to the household.
After Wang Ying routed the door-crashers, no one relaxed. Steward Chen and Dunzi hurried to reinforce the gate, lest the thugs return.
None but a few children dared shut their eyes that night.
At the Ox hour before dawn, Dunzi drove the cart back to the estate.
His errand was not only to summon the folk for seed grain, but also to bring back a few men to guard the house, in case of trouble.
Once he left, Steward Chen barred the gate tight and kept a constant watch through a side window, sweating each time a passerby crossed the lane.
Perhaps yesterdayâs show of force had sobered themâno one came all morning.
Near noon, just as the porridge finished cooking, pounding rattled the gate again.
âHereâthis is the house! I smell millet porridge!â
âDamn itâbreak the door! They must be hoarding grain. Smash the gate and take it!â
Steward Chen jolted, snatching up a cudgel. âCur bastards! This is the house of Chen Jing, Prefect of Shanzhou. Rob here, and youâll die for nothing!â
A momentâs hushâthen laughter. âWhat prefect? When men canât live, who cares whose house it is? Break it!â
Learning from yesterday, they didnât shoulder the gate, but hefted a thick log, several together, and rammed.
Dong! Dong! Dong! Each blow thudded into the gut.
Wang Ying pulled Madam Li and Chen Rong close. âMother, Auntâtake the younger ones and Yuanbao to the back wood shed. If the front breaks, crawl out the drainage tunnel!â
âNo, how can I leave you aloneâAh YingâŠâ
He whispered in her ear. She paled, nodded, hugged Yuanbao, and fled with the others.
Up front, Steward Chen still braced the gate. Wang Ying came, palms slick on the cleaverâs handle. âIf they break throughârun. Donât think of anything else.â
âYoung master, youââ
âDonât worry for me. I have a place to hide.â
Steward Chen stamped his foot. âAye!â
The wood splintered and crackedâbang!âa gaping hole burst in the gate.
A man peered in and locked eyes with Wang Ying.
âWell nowâsuch a pretty gÄâer! When weâre in, that oneâs mine. The rest of you take the goods!â
Vile words dripped from their mouths. Wang Yingâs face only hardenedâdrag it out a little longerâlet Dunzi return in time.
Just as the gate was about to give way, the clatter of a mule cart came. Dunzi cracked his whip and shouted, âWho dares make trouble at the Masterâs gate!â
Before the cart halted, seven or eight men sprang from it, brandishing cudgels and shovels, charging the thugs.
Seeing equal numbers, the intruders stood their ground, flexing for a fight.
But they had misjudged farmhandsâ strengthâand after flood had destroyed fields and houses, menâs chests smoldered with rage. Given a target, how could they relent?
In less than fifteen minutes, the lot were thrashed and scattered, fleeing in all directions.
Wang Ying called off the pursuit. âEnoughâback!â
Chen Dashun spat and rubbed his neckâonly now feeling where a stick had caught him. âMasterâare you all right?â
âIâm fine. Why so few of you?â
âMore are behind. Dunzi said there was trouble hereâwe few rode ahead. The rest are on footâwonât arrive till afternoon.â
After a sleepless night and strain beyond measure, Wang Yingâs face was wan. With danger past, he hurried to call his elders back from the rear.
The others were no betterâespecially Madam Li. The once-elegant matron now wore gray, hair bound in a rough cloth, all polish gone.
Seeing the estate men arrive, all finally relaxed.
âAunt Chenâcook porridge.â
âAye.â
Half an hour later, another group arrived, trotting to the gate.
Finding others patching the doors, they joined, and soon both leaves were refitted, sturdier than before.
âDashunâcome.â
âHere!â
Wang Ying led him to the back wood shed. Inside were eight neatly stacked sacks of millet.
Dashun gaped. âThis⊠this isââ
âGrain we stored at home. By luck it wasnât washed away. Take it back and distribute to the estate folkâget it in the ground at once.â
This flood was not pure curse; the silt it left was richâenough to bless fields with three years of harvest.
Dashun was struck speechless, then fell to his knees, knocking three times to the floor. âThis saving grace cannot be repaid. Iâll serve as ox or horse for a lifetime!â
âUp. When the porridge is ready, take the grain back. Leave seven or eight to help tidy the house.â
âAye!â He ran to gather men to load.
Tears rimmed eyes as they hefted the life-saving millet. With this, they could endure monthsâand by autumn, no one need starve.
They loaded the cart; seven estate men remainedâthose with brothers at home stayed, the rest drove back, promising to return the cart at dawn.
Among the seven were familiar facesâone was Tian Daniu, the young man who had volunteered to scout during the mountain refuge.
He was tall and guileless, smile all teeth and no eyes. With brothers at home and both parents alive, he came willingly.
âDaniu, take men to clear the side rooms. Find places to sleep. Youâre on watch tonight.â
âYes!â
Daniuâs crew set to workâshoveling out the courtyard silt until stone pavers emerged again.
Where roofs had fallen, nothing could be doneâthe beams had been elm over a foot thick. None could be bought now. They would wait for better wood someday.
They made the side rooms habitable, patched the roofs, and moved in.
Because of the separation of men and women, Steward Chen had a door added between front and back courts. The men were forbidden to enter the rear yard.
Rural men were simple and obedientâtold to keep out, they did. Seven split into two teams: by day, repairing; by night, standing watch against intruders.
Thus it continued until the morning of the fifth dayâwhen a knock sounded again at the front gate.
Footnotes
.
- Beggarâs Chicken (ć«è±éžĄ): A whole chicken marinated, wrapped (traditionally in lotus leaves and clay), and baked, yielding tender, fragrant meat.
- âHeaven places a great burdenâŠâ: From Mencius; often quoted to console and exhort perseverance under hardship.