ITIEQ C99
by berryChapter 99 (Extra) â IF Route
At the Side of the Son of Heaven
On a blackâlacquered rosewood carriage, a hand lifted the curtain with a folding fan, revealing a powdered, pale face.
âHow many years since Iâve returned to the capitalâitâs utterly changed.â
âHmph. Sealed away in the countryside all this time, of course your eyes find novelty everywhere,â sneered the one reclining beside him in his oxâdrawn cart with parasol above. âNever thought our chance to set foot again on home soil would come not at the time of enthronement, when we were forgotten entirely, but nowâsuddenly recalled in the name of fraternal duty.â
The powdered youth cast him a sidelong glance. âWhat, you dissatisfied?â
âWouldnât dare. But being herded back into the capital, chambers arranged, quarters restrictedâbest not repeat the fate of Prince Ying, eh? Heh, Yuanxi, perhaps your futureâŠâ His voice trailed, bitterly amused.
The three speaking were all imperial clansmen summoned together for the Lantern Festival banquet, journeying side by side.
Xiao Yuanxi, who had been silent, only smiled faintly. âWe are already within the capital walls. Brothers, mind your tongues. If you are dissatisfied, why not let me carry your complaints directly before His Majesty?â
At the weight of his tone the others dared not prattle more. Lady Xiao Yuji, who accompanied the carriage, found her âbrothersâ tiresomeâbullies only in their own hall. She swung her sleeves and leapt down. âIâll walk.â
The powdered youth meanwhile leaned halfway out, fanning himself, scanning the street. Bustling crowds, voices and hawkers filled the airâlike a marketplace, vulgar in his eyes.
âWe are at least princes of commanderies,â he complained. âNo retinues, no guard, and housed in this noisy place?â
âGreetings, sirs?â A roundâfaced youth stepped up, smile shy, dimples deep at his lips. The powdered noble nearly let his fan fall in shockâwas this an emissary from the Emperor himself? Someone recognizing their august status?
But the youth only pointed politely to a board hung over the street: a painted wagon, cart, and oxâcarriage, splashed through with a giant red cross. The youth explained with cheerful bow: âNo parking at this gate, Iâm afraid. Would gracious masters please move your carriage?â
Prince Xiao Yuanxiu nearly fainted with rage. In broad daylightâthis was a slap to the face!
âSo you mean to take possession of the street? What arrogance!â He started to step down, but thought better of it, sat back and hissed, âWeâll see who dares bar our way. Call your master here at once!â
The brothersâ faces soured. To slight one was to slight all.
âThis street is not ours,â the boy replied simply, âand usually one may stop. But today is an exceptionâthere is an exhibition of Master HuâHuangâs paintings. The whole street must be cleared.â
âMaster HuâHuang?â Xiao Yuanji asked at once. âThe famed elder?â
The round youth bobbed his head. âThe very one.â
All were startled. HuâHuang Elder was a reclusive grandmaster of landscape painting, revered by scholars across the realm. For years he had vanished; many presumed him deceased. That he should appear now, in the capital!
The quarrel seemed trivial by contrast. Yuanji, known for love of paintings, hid his irritation, eyes alight.
But the guide shook his head. âThis is an exhibition only. Visits by appointment. Andâby the looks of you gentlemenâlikely without a booking?â
âAppointment?â the princes scoffedâthey had never heard of such.
âThis boy taunts us,â sneered Yuanxiu. âHere in the capital, yet he dares. Weâll lodge a case with the Court of Imperial Clans!â
The boy only gave them a strange lookâand darted off.
Yuanxiu smirked. âSee? He knows fear.â
But Yuanji frowned. âStrange. HuâHuang Elder never sought fame or profit. Why suddenly host a grand exhibition?â
Yuanxiu waved it aside. âPeople change.â
Xiao Yuanxi said nothing. He looked up insteadâat the high tower looming ahead, its tiers of sharp eaves climbing skyward. He caught sight of the characters across its plaqueâYouth Palace (ć°ćčŽćź«). Something about that calligraphy pricked his memory.
âŠSurely not?
Inside, the tower hollowed up to the heavens, galleries circling every level. Elder HuâHuang remained unseen; the roundâfaced youth did the guiding.
Yuanji soon forgot his pique, enthralled by paintings. Yuanxiu only sulkedâart meant nothing to him, these daubs no different than blank paper.
At last Yuanji tugged the guideâs sleeve. âThereâs a work here I love. Iâll pay a thousand gold if youâll sell it, or at least tell your master.â
The boy recoiled as from filth, letting the golden leaf fall with clink that drew gazes. âSir! Do you insult me?â
Insult? Yuanjiâs face darkened. Never had his courtesy been repaid so. His patience, already fraying, snapped.
âAll these paintings, we buy. If you refuse, weâll smash this place todayâ!â
âWho is making such noise?â
A voice, lazy, playful, drifted from above. A figure leaned on a thirdâfloor balustrade.
Everyone looked up. Yuanxi blinked.
It was Shen Qinghe. Taller now, grown well on the capitalâs rich air; even with wine glow on his cheek, he smiled with rebel grace, careless and fearless.
The crowd below whispered his name. Murmurs grew into a buzz. Clearly not an ordinary youth.
Fearing a crush, Shen tilted his chin upward, motioning the princes to come upstairs.
They entered a hall of spare eleganceâone table, a few stools, a vase of tall green willow. Severely simple, quietly refined.
Yuanji measured him coolly. âYou are master of this tower?â
âBoth yes and no,â Shen drawled. One leg perched upon the chair, one hand swinging a slim porcelain flask. âThe Youth Palace is state property. Iâm one steward only.â He tipped the bottle to his lips, sweet scent of wine rising.
He explained: âTimes canât be filled only by swords and rice. Children must be caught young, minds cultivated. Thus, todayâs exhibitionâElder HuâHuangâs works. Open to the public, free of chargeâso long as each visitor brings a child under fifteen. Hence a âpublic education hall.ââ
The princes barely followed this new jargonâappointment, public hallâŠ
âName your price for the paintings,â Yuanji snapped regardless.
âPaintings wonât be sold. But you, honored guests, I can host.â Shen lazily pushed forward cups of tea. His eyes swept them with amusement. âAfter all, hosting youâalso a courtesy on behalf of His Majesty.â
ââŠOn behalf of His Majesty?â the brothers stiffened.
Shen smirked. âDonât pretend. Prince of Guantaoâyou act like you donât know me?â
Yuanxi stared, then gave a bitter laugh. âSo you do remember.â
Shen only shrugged, halfâjoking. âIf not for your rejection then, how could I have todayâs fortune? In a way, I should thank you.â
They traded lines. The others, baffled, finally caught up. âWhatâwait, you two know each other?â
âYes,â Yuanxi admitted with mixed feeling.
âAllow me to introduce: gentlemen, this is the newlyâenfeoffed Marquis, concurrently Director of Learning. The very youth raised to high station at His Majestyâs side.â
The two other princes gawped as Shen waved cheekily, âGood day, cousins.â
Recognition dawned. A new marquisâthe very same whose merit in the White Lotus war had earned the Emperorâs golden words, name exempt from protocol, open palace, own residence. His rise a blaze brighter than theirs.
Yuanxiu was quick to change face. Pasting on a springâbreeze smile, he poured himself tea. âNo need to make things awkward, cousin.â
The earlier quarrel smoothed over; after some time, they made excuses to depart. Shen only waved them out.
But Yuanxi lingered a step. He glanced back. The youth was slouched in his chair again, flask drained, popping candied fruit into his mouth with airy indifference.
Shen caught him staring, grinned. âAdvice?â
Yuanxi shook his head with a rueful smile. âTomorrowâIâll report in person before His Majesty.â
Shen only shrugged, not taking the cryptic remark to heart. His mind was already elsewhere: the exhibition had gone splendidly. Even the great clans showed their faces. His reputation spread; from now on, all things would be easier.
He licked a last sweet, patted his sleeves, stood.
âTime to enter the Palace!â
Footnotes
- Prince of Guantao (éŠé¶æźżäž) â Xiao Yuanxi, one of the imperial clan, once crossed paths with Shen in earlier lowlier days.
- Youth Palace (ć°ćčŽćź«) â modernâstyle âyouth public education and culture center,â here imagined retrofitted into an imperial fiction context; explanation of free exhibitions with âchild under 15â requirement parodies modern museum rules.
- HuâHuang Elder (ææèäșș) â legendary reclusive painter, fictional but standing for the kind of revered cultural sage literati prized.