ITIEQ C92
by berryChapter 92 â âAll Lives Equalâ
In the depths of Great Yongâs winter, the most prosperous places to the north no longer saw flocks of birds flying southward; what lingered was only an endless, cutting wind.
Yet there were warm chambers for the richâlayered curtains, a springlike warmth.
âYou came to tell me just this?â
Yue Zhiâs voice was flat. Through the paleâgreen gauze he regarded the figure outside, hands clasped and head bowed, giving away no trace of joy or anger.
âI have met the students of Qingbei Academy, seen their writings, and what they do,â Yue Jie said, hands faintly trembling. âThough they stand opposed to our cousin, yet⊠they could be turned to our use. Why force them to the brink, and kill them off?â
Yue Zhi was surprised. From childhood to now, this cousin had never defied himâyet for the sake of an irrelevant man, he had stood against him once, and now twice.
âI thought last time had taught you.â
âThe Nine Discourses say: the pure and profound are the great sect among the myriad,â Yue Jie persisted. âWhat they do is not truly evilâand is to our advantageâŠâ
âHave you studied yourself stupid?â Yue Yin was displeased, arms folded at Yue Zhiâs side, gaze stabbing from top to bottom. âWho would have thought the Yue clan would produce a traitor.â
âWhat soulâbewitching draught did that Shen pour down your throat? So long as he lives in this world, heââ
âHe may.â Yue Zhiâs mild voice cut them both short, startling them. âThe pure learning of our time is a sea that admits all rivers. I have never said otherwise.â
Yue Jieâs head snapped up. âBrotherâŠ?â
âAcademies and students are pillars of Great Yong. Why should we exterminate them?â
âFrom first to last,â Yue Zhi smiled, âthe only thing I require is Shen Qingheâs life.â
âŠ
Outside the capital lay the eastern auxiliary capital, Dongjing. Xiao Tianxin had been taken there, and only then did the forced dayâandânight march cease.
When he realized they did not mean to bring him to the main capital, he exhaled a long breath.
Soâhis crime was not one to doom nine clans. Perhaps his nephew would spare an uncleâs life.
He waited two days in terror. On the third, LongâRampart banners entered Dongjing; only then did he feel the blade long poised at his neck show its edge. Seated in Xiangtai Hall of the auxiliary capital, he looked toward the Zhaohuan Emperor, unseen for yearsâstill unsure if that blade would fall, or stay.
âYour⊠Your MajestyâŠâ His lips shook. Among all the Xiao emperors, the Zhaohuan Emperor had never sacrificed a cityâs people, and merited the word âlenientââbut he was no easy sovereign.
Days of war had grafted fresh shadows onto old. Xiao Tianxinâs head swam when he looked up; had not the men behind prodded him forward, he would never have chosen to face this.
âPrince of Lu.â
The Emperor spoke his title. The youth kneeling at his side turned to look as well, brows arched.
âThere had been no seat placed there. Now there was a small desk. But Xiao Tianxin had no spare wits for these details.
With a solid thud, he fell to his knees upon the blue bricks.
âThâthis subject⊠deserves deathâŠâ He could hardly speak, eyes raised in tears, the very image of pitiable grievanceâshort of writing âI was forced!â upon his face.
Three days ago, the Prince of Lu memorialized for an audience; all would meet in Dongjing.
On this day, before the banquet even began, one of the protagonists had already collapsed in shambles.
The elders of the clans wore sour faces. A mouse of a princeâillâstarred!
âŠBut it mattered little. The Prince of Lu was merely a chip to draw the Emperor from the capital. Since the Emperor had already taken his seat in Dongjing, the aim was met.
Wei Hongli broke the farce first. âYour Majesty marched upon Yunzhong, and our Wei familyâs blood flowed. What is the meaning of this!â
âHmph.â By the throne, someone snorted first: a handsome youth propped his chin with one handâno need for others to frame him; he already looked the very picture of a sly favorite.
âYou should have stayed at home. Coming to Dongjingâare you so untouchable?â
Wei Hongli, affronted by a âboy,â flared into rage. âYou are Shen Qinghe?â
âWhat of it?â
âThis is the auxiliary capitalâwhat place is it for a mere Secretary of the Chancellery to speak!â Face twisted with fury, he found no answers. He had long understood those beside him were wolves, but there was no retreat.
âYour Majestyâs awe is vast. Such petty flatterers must not linger by your side. This old man knows loyal words jar the ear, but for Yongâs altars and mountains, he must be seized and cast into the dungeon to await judgment!â
As his shout fell, all eyes turned upon the throneâawaiting reaction.
Xiangtai Hall was narrower than Chang Hall; the slightest expression on the throne was plain. The Emperor leaned back; the hand upon the dragonâcarved, pearlâbiting armrest slowly slid to cover the other hand at his side.
Wei Hongli, who stared intently, jolted in disbelief. So did the elders. Even Shen Qinghe started in private surprise.
Was thisâan official proclamation?
âYou! You two!â Wei Hongliâs eyes bulged red.
Shen Qinghe took in the full ugliness and said, âWhen we met before, none of you afforded Shen a glance. I suppose after today, you all will rememberânever to forget.â Returning to the point, his ire was real. He had no love for false courtesiesâand now, with the Emperor at his back, he would stand for his students.
The Zhaohuan Emperor cut him off and told Wei Hongli, âSomeone will go to prison today.â His jaw tipped lightly; the look was one Shen had never seen before. âBut not him.â
They sat nearest. Shenâs gaze slipped from the Emperorâs hands to his profile. Away from the capitalâs court, a shell of imperial reserve seemed to have cracked; beneath it, an eye bright with interest emerged.
Struck as if by thunder, Wei Hongli stood stunned. He had never imagined such a relationship. Yesâhow else but a favored bedfellow, wellâplaced upon a pillow, to turn a sovereignâs head, so far as to war with all the noble clans?
âChoose beauty over empire? Heh heh hehâthen do not blame this old man!â Reason gone, he tore a short dagger from his sleeve; it rangâa flash of cold.
A dozen imperial guards at the Emperorâs side drew as one.
âYou still sit? LongâRampart is camped without the cityâour men fill the auxiliary capitalâs guard. Miss this, and there will be no second chance!â
He had gone mad. Only then did the âeldersâ beside him slowly rise.
Blades poised; breath held.
Shen frowned. He had known they would not come to lower heads for peace.
Just as well.
They themselves were not here to talk peace.
Wei Hongliâs lip curled. The AuxâGuard Commander had followed the Emperor from the Northwestâan old hand whom he had painstakingly turnedânow to rise. Surely, the Emperor would never imagine an old comrade could one day turn against him?
ââŠOld comrades?â Shen frowned.
âMm.â Xiao Yuanzheng paused. âChoosing new mastersâchanging bannersâit happens often. Life in Dongjing was too easy.â Most of his true confidants from the Northwest had not been brought out. Those with wrong mindsâfor Dongjing was a fine place to leave them under oneâs eyelids, awaiting a day to settle accounts.
âSome will regret not resting easy.â He had gone to wormsâno eye for backing; âold comradeâ? Perhaps only luck and place. Shenâs lips tilted, sly; he leaned closer. âYour Majesty seems used to it. Are you afraidâsomeday, I too willâŠâ
His hand was seized; Xiaoâs gaze fell with a smile unlike his usually imperial air.
ââŠI was joking.â
âMm.â He took it as such, and leaned back more comfortably upon the armrestâtheir closeness now unmistakable. A shallow ripple of gooseflesh rose upon Shenâs arm. He coughed and edged away.
Wei Hongli was near overturning the heavens, and those two flirted. Choking on fury, he turned to shout. It was not the guard but Yue Yin who strode in, longblade at his hip; Yue Zhi, in moonâwhite robes and narrow sash, followed half a step behind.
âWhy so noisy?â
Laziness shadowed Yue Yinâs brows. He gave a perfunctory bow.
âMr. YinâŠâ
âWhat?â Yue Yinâs glance slid over the thin dagger; his lip quirked. âWei Hongliâdo you intend to usurp the throne?â
The dagger hand trembled. Wei Hongli stared, aghast. The men who had sworn to stand shoulder to shoulder did nothing. Each had a backer. Ripping all pretense was the worst choice.
With a casual flick, the dagger clattered to the floor. Yue Yin dragged him aside. âIdiot.â How had he lived this long?
Where Yue Yin was perfunctory, Yue Zhi bowed slightly to the Son of Heavenâa flawless courtesy none could fault.
The guard filed in from the great doors.
Dynasties rise and fall; imperial power stands. Never had the clansâ sway swelled soânearly to the level of âfate,â pretending to steer the very bearer of heavenâs mandate.
Yue Zhi parted his lips. What he possessed allowed him to stand equal before the highest personage in the realm. âYour Majesty, the Yueâs respect for you has never waned.â
âButââ His gaze flicked to the youth at the Emperorâs side. Shen Qinghe did not flinch. Blade flashed from blade where their looks met. Yue Zhi could not avoid this: Qingbeiâs students had come into peril, and the Yue could not claim clean hands.
âSo long as Lord Shen lives, our hearts will not be at peace.â He smiled. âWe beg Your Majesty to grant his death. In return, I promise the Yue will follow you henceforthâguarding Great Yong in a hundred yearsâ peace.â
Yue Yin turned in astonishment.
The old men traded looks. To say so before allâthis was fealty in all but name. A nod from Yue Zhi, and the Yue stood behind the Emperor. All thisâfor a fifthârank clerk? So the Emperor favored himâstill, such a cheap life, why not take it later? Why trade such a heavy pledge now?
Still young.
The process was surprising; the outcomeâthe same. With the spokesman leading, why gainsay?
Voices rose as one: âWe beg Your Majesty to grant Lord Shenâs death.â
Yue Zhi remained composed, clouds light, wind mild. He had no need to elaborate Shenâs threat. Decision made, no regret, no care for othersâ minds. It was no hard choice: any not mired in delusion knew which way to choose. As the world had fearedâuntil today, he would not have been so absolute. Shen Qinghe had exceeded himâfar beyond.
Cut open the clansâ bones to make way for a favorite? Hmph.
He had thrown absolute weight upon his side of the scaleâto buy the outcome he desired.
Yue Zhiâs persuasion at the fore; guard pressing behind.
Such a death threatâwhat power I have to draw it. The Emperor moved; Shenâs gaze followed.
All craned for the decreeâto slip away clean.
He seldom wore the plainest garb, and yet today he did. The clinking pendants had been removed; only a single long tasselâbright redâhung down to his shoe, swaying.
Xiao Yuanzheng looked downânothing more to say. Yue Zhiâs offer, and this âtradeââhe took it as a slight to Shenâand a slight to himself. The clans loved âface.â Within reason, he would give itâ
âThe blood of the clansâthis I will see flowed safelyâinto the histories.â
âHa.â
Yue Zhi watched them and closed his eyes.
âSuch mettleâsuch mettle.â
He stepped back and opened them. His voice drifted, light and clear:
âThose nested withinâenjoy greater power, and fewer fettersâand also more. Step beyondâand you may have nothing.â
âIf soâfirst the minister at your side must be cleared. Laterâwe will persuade you well.â
At this point, he would have Shenâs life.
Pikes leveled. The Emperorâs close guard were drawn from the Golden Armorâeach a match for two or threeâyet if ten, twenty cameâ
Wei Hongli laughed like a madman.
Seize the sovereignâno better moment! The Weiâs fate within his nod.
âKill! Kill himââ
Boomâ
A deafening crack tore open a hall of chaos and madcap cruelty.
Xiao Yuanzhengâs hand was steady. Hands that drew the strongest bows absorbed the flintlockâs kick.
NearestâYue Yin, who flinched at the danger, straightened. The body beside him, fixed in place, tipped backward. He saw clearly the blood hole in Wei Hongliâs back. It happened in a lightning flashâno time for a spray of blood; only when the body struck the floor did it pool.
The reek of it still turned the stomach. Shen forced it down and caught Yue Zhiâs shock. He looked at him and spoke, biting off the words: âLast time I did not properly introduce it. I gave it a nameâguess?â
ââAll Lives Equal.â Whether prince or peddlerâif one stands before it, one pullâand off to the underworld to meet the judge. Equal enough, is it not?â
He had said something terrifying. After a heartbeat of stillness, screams broke.
Prince Lu was close. He cared nothing for faceâlife above allâducking under the table in a heartbeat.
Only now did the clan scions, proud of their âextraordinaryâ selves, seem to realize: stripped of halos, they were as fragile as the lowest bondservant. Faced with this ghostly art, they cast off their dignityâclutching their heads, scrambling for cover behind pillars and tables.
Yue Yinâs pupils shook. He saw the Emperorâs oddâshaped weaponâthe thing that sent Wei Hongli to Heaven in an instant.
He whirled to seize his elder brotherâs hand. Yue Zhi stood unmoving.
Following his eyes upward, he saw the Emperorâs guardsâeach holding the same weapon.
âGongyang Ci⊠dared deceive meâŠâ
In the next breath, his arm was yanked. Jaw clenched, Yue Yin chose to flee the riot of Xiangtai Hall with his brother at once.
Shen frowned, reaching for the iron barrel still warm in Xiaoâs hand. âWhoever movesâthis is your end!â
The AuxâGuard commander had gone pale. The spreading stench of powder screamed danger. High upon the dais, the Emperorâs eyes froze himâknees buckling. The old duke of the Northwest still lingered in him; his hands shook too hard to grip a bladeâhe fell, kneeling.
Yue Yinâs brows drew wickedly taut. He stared into the black maw of the unknown; a vein jumped hard at his templeâand he sprang toward the dais!
âZiyuan!!â Yue Zhi came back from shock and anger, reachingâgrasping air. âDo not go!!â
The close guard reacted fast, but whether from scruple or orders, they did not fire. Cold steel reached to stop him.
Face set, Yue Yinâs hands clawed like iron toward Shenâ
âDonâtââ
Bang!
Eyes shut, Shen pulled the sear. The recoiled, improved flintlock kicked; he staggered back two steps before steadying. A rush of numb pain climbed his tigerâs mouth and forearm, leaving them senseless.
Yue Zhiâs pupils shook; his mind whitened for a momentâa blankness he had never known, like water rising over bone. The clever machine of his heart stoppedâonly the roar remained.
Pain arrived before the sound. Yue Yin sank to one knee, forcing his head to turnâvision failing to focus.
ââŠGo⊠nowâŠâ
Yue Zhi looked back. Behind himâthe wideâopen doors.
At seven, he had been chosen as the Yue heir; more than twenty years since. From the first day, he knew: the Yueâs glory and the heirâs life outweighed all; all else could be cut away for a time.
Shen had wounded Yue Yin. Here was the Yueâs chance to strike. Should Yue Yin die, not even the Emperor could protect Shen.
He took two steps toward the light. Yue Yinâs head hung; a smile pulled up his mouth.
The flintlockâs weight was taken from Shenâs hands by another. His palms still burned; he stood numbed. He had fired beforeâthis time he had less shock seeing bloodâyet his face was grim. He had not expected an outright rushânor intended to take a life.
Coming to Dongjing, he had wanted only to seize allâsecure bargaining chipsâto keep all students safe. Even on wires, his mind whirled quick.
For students, for the greater arcâthe Yue must not die in Dongjingânot under his and the sovereignâs gaze.
âYour Majestyâwaitââ He turned and saw Xiao lifting the barrel toward the man on the ground. His voice caught.
Xiao Yuanzhengâs eyes were steadyâdecision made at once. Seeing the youth stunned, he explained, âHe may live; he may die. But he cannot remain here halfâdead. Do not fear.â From the start, he had not planned to spare any participantâs fate. And this oneâwas a great threat.
âNo, noâhe mustnât die, heâŠâ
Today, for all the turning of fortuneâs wheelâhe still could not move itâand he burned.
Yue Yin could bear painâbut it did not mean he felt none. Small breaths hissed through his teeth; a dull fire gnawed three inches below his chest, as if a redâhot rod had been thrust under his ribs and twisted. He knewâpain, not mortalâhe would live awhile yet.
Sounds faded. He wanted to see if his brother had goneâand lifted his face to the black mouth of the thing that had nearly killed him.
At such distance, aimed at the skullâdeath without doubt.
Yue Yin narrowed his eyes and, still defiant, spat filth.
âMy failure to restrainâlet Your Majesty spare him!â Yue Zhiâs voice cut, freezing all taunts upon Yue Yinâs face. He watched his aloof elder kneel forward, fullâlongâdoing the great obeisance of minister before sovereign.
Blood loss took him; his eyes rolled, and he fell insensate.
The Yueâso exalted a house, exempted from kneeling. Who had seen Yue Zhi thus? Who had thought it possible? The hall fell still; the same stark fear crept over every face. If even the Yue bowedâthen theyâ
The thought that noble clans could tower above all began to totter in every heart. Reality, raw and bloody, lay before their eyes. Scattered across thirteen provinces, never had they felt it more clearly.
The Emperor looked down without âyesâ or âno.â
Two men of equal years had sat across the board even before the opening moveâshoulder to shoulder, court against court. Now, it seemed a result had come.
âAll of it.â
Yue Zhi closed his eyes.
âThis subject will bear the blame in his stead.â
Footnotes:
- âNine Discoursesâ (äč蟩): An allusion to classical texts praising refined learning and moral cultivation; Yue Jie quotes it to argue Qingbeiâs scholarship is a rightful, beneficial tradition.
- âAll Lives Equalâ (äŒçćčłç): A starkly ironic name Shen gives the flintlockâclaiming that in front of the weapon, rank and status are null; one shot sends anyone to judgment, âequalizingâ lives.
- âChoosing new mastersâ (æ©äž»èäș): A literati phrase for changing allegiance to a new patron; here, betraying former comrades for clan alignment.