LBLCPCB C18
by berryChapter 18
The rain showed no end. Even the air turned thick and sticky, sapping strength and will. Zhu Song spent three days shut at home, sleeping through all he had missed. Two more days idle, going stirâcrazy, when an urgent summons yanked him back into the palace.
A catastrophic flood had struck Jizhou. The great river levee, newly built only five years prior, collapsed. Losses dire, devastation across the land.
Emperor Liangâs face was like iron. He spoke little, yet the pressure in Qinzhen Hall weighed suffocatingly.
Zhu Song swept his eyes down the memorial in swift gulps, then feigned calm with a bland line, gauging the Emperorâs temper: âNatural disasters are unpredictable. Your Majesty, be not angered.â
BANG! The Emperor slammed the desk, rage flaring anew. âIf it were truly Heavenâs will, Iâd accept it gladly! Do you know how much I spentâfive million taels of silverâand the damn levee collapsed at the first rushing tide? A wall of tofu would last longer!â
Zhuâs own surprise showed sharp. âA dam, fresh builtâfalling so swiftly? Impossible.â
The Emperor ground his jaw. âTake my imperial sword, Zhu Song. Dig out the vermin responsible. Not a single one may be spared.â
Bowing low, Zhu answered, âI will not fail Your Majestyâs trust.â
Soon calmer, the Emperor waved. âFor now, tempers among the people run hot. You will go publicly as Imperial Envoy of disaster relief. Quietly, afterward, dig the truth.â
Zhu inclined his head. âFirst feed the starving, then hold the guilty to account.â
âGood,â Emperor Liang agreed. âTake your kinsmen Lingye and Lingwang. Waste no time.â
Thus decreed, Zhu departed, rushed home, gathered his cousins, packed, and within hours the three were en route.
Two relentless days of hard riding brought them into Jizhouâs blighted borders. There Zhu understood the Emperorâs fury. Entire fields drowned. Wailing stretched across the land, waters to a horseâs knees and still rising.
At the provincial yamen, the local governor Yi Kangning, the regional inspector Duan Zhenghong, and the imperial agents already on sceneâVice Minister of Works Song Shunran and Assistant Chief Astronomer Zhang Wanpingâwaited to greet them. They made polite bows, but the moment words were exchanged, the excuses began.
âThe Prefecture opened its granaries at once, sent officers to rescue the trapped,â Yi chattered nervously, âbut the waters were too fierce. We could not cope, so we pled to court. Thus His Majesty sent funds with these honored officialsâtwo hundred thousand taels for relief. But the disaster grows, our refugee camps have been swept away, numbers rising daily. Of the silver, little now remains.â
Zhu Songâs brows lifted. Already whining for pity the moment I step in?
He cut in coldly: âHow much remains?â
Yi darted glances. Song Shunran sipped tea leisurely, not deigning to answer. Duan Zhenghongâs brows twitched with wordless disdain. Flustered, Yi stammered: âAbout⊠fifty thousand taels.â
âFifty thousand is hardly âalmost none,â is it?â Zhuâs tone bit.
Yi faltered, then grasped at Zhangâs prediction: âBut Sir Zhang predicts the flood will yet worsen. Even if victims stabilize, fifty thousand cannot last.â
Zhu made no reply, only pressed: âWhere are the refugees?â
Yi admitted: âCamps destroyedâbeing rebuilt. Meanwhile, food is distributed thrice daily at the city gates.â
âWhere do they sleep at night?â
Yi stammered: âTheyâremain outside the walls. Too many to admit without risk of chaos. When new camps rise, it will be solved.â
Zhu swallowed his anger and barked: âTake me there.â
Yi blanched, attempted weak protest about the rain and a welcome feast already prepared. Zhuâs glare silenced him.
At midday, they reached the gate as porridge was given out: huge cauldrons, heat and rice fragrance steaming in the drizzle.
Yi boasted loudly, âFor their health, we feed rice daily. Todayâpotato rice stew.â
Zhu descended to inspect. Indeed, white grain filled the pots. But disaster victims stretched as far as the eye could see. âFive cauldrons for so manyâhow long?â
Yi promised quick distribution, under an hour. He then announced to the crowd:
âEat, children of the realm! All must share, and soon your new shelters will be ready! Above stands His Majestyâs envoy, Lord Zhu Song, who will aid all your needs!â
âThank you, Lord Envoy!â rose the chorus. The governor smiled in smug pride. He leaned smug at Zhu: âDone. Letâs return.â
Zhuâs mouth curved faintly cold. âYi, if you are so busy, feel free return. I shall walk.â
Paling, Yi had no choice but follow.
As they progressed up the line, Zhuâs anger grew. Near the front, faces were plump, clothing poor but clean, spirits alert. But further on, the crowd changedâgaunt, soaked, skin pale from waterârot, hopeless eyes. And none but strong young men queued.
Beyond the line, refugees squatted in forests, children huddled in hollowed trees, women and old lying listlessly beneath crude thatches that dripped under storm.
âWhy donât you eat?â Zhu asked softly.
Listless women barely lifted eyes. No answer.
Yi muttered: âThey are likely illâthe doctors insufficient.â
Zhu knelt by children in a log hollow. âWhy donât you queue for food?â
A wideâeyed fourâyearâold blinked rain from lashes. âAre you new here?â
âYes,â Zhu nodded gently.
âThen you can eat. Youâre a grownâup.â
âAnd you?â
âWe have no strength. Eating wonât help us work. So we donât.â
âWhy?â
âBecause if we eat, Uncles wonât. Without strength, they canât build shelters. Then weâll all be rained to death.â
Rage burned Zhu Songâs chest. Yi began to sputter excuses: âChildrenâs wild tales. We have enough food! If they refuse, what can we do, deliver it by hand?ââ
But the crowd erupted. âLies!â âNever enough!â âWe queue by turns, always short!â âWe beg onlyâlet us into the city walls to escape the flood!â
âPlease, Lord Envoy! Have mercy!â
The storm of voices, the governor shouting denials, chaos near riotâwhen a new voice shattered through:
âI can prove it.â
Heads swiveled.
Through the rain walked a man in azure long robes, another holding his umbrella. As the canopy lifted, all sawâhalf a face pale as snow, beauty near divine.
Half a faceâand for Zhu Song, enough.
Wasnât he supposed to be in Suzhou ârestingâ? How is he here!
Yet his own face betrayed nothing, only cool words: âWhat proof?â
The manâs gaze was steady. âI am the proof.â
Yi Kangning almost interjectedâbut froze at Zhuâs stare fixed wholly upon this new figure. He followed the look, and in that torn halfâmask of beauty suddenly understood. No wonder Zhuâs eyes would not move away.