ITIEQ C55
by berryChapter 55 â Storm on the Horizon
The air was dry; dark clouds pressed low over the city. In the Zhuo River, little fish leapt up, landing briefly on lotus leaves the size of basins, before splashing back into the water.
All things waited for the sudden storm.
Shen Qinghe walked alone beneath an oilâpaper umbrella, moving against the flow of vendors and townsfolk fleeing the coming rain. Down off the levee he went, until he reached the teahouse by the street. On its second floor, a window stood halfâopen. A tall figure wearing a scholarâs gauze cap looked down on him.
Among scholars of Qing Studies*Âč, status, appearance, and bearing were held in the highest regard. And of all, none were stricter than the Yue family, who claimed custodianship of Qing Studiesâ interpretation. Their standards of dress were near draconian, unyielding guardians of orthodoxy.
Thus, the Yue clan men were easy to spot: severe in dress, rigid in posture, never casual. At a glance, Shen Qinghe knew it was none other than Yue Jie.
The heavens cracked. Slanted rain blew down, dampening Shen Qingheâs robe. He cast the briefest glance at the figure in the window, then folded his umbrella, stepping out of the dripping corridor roof and into the teahouse.
In times past, great houses flaunted wealth in open extravagance. But after generations of consolidation, silver stacked like mountains, their tastes cultivated finer aimsâ
The subtle aroma of tea, which one might sip long without intoxication, suited literati best. And so these elegant teahouses had spread, sanctuaries of scholars for hosting guests and conversing over fine leaves.
Flutes and zithers played faintly, soothing to both mind and spiritâyet Shen Qinghe had no heart for music.
He did not know what means Lord Gongyang had to arrange this meeting, but likely he was unaware that Yue Jie had loathed him for years⊠Even though, at their last encounter, Yue Jieâs barbed words had done him no particular harm, recalling them now gave Shen little optimism.
The Five Great Surnames were not a single lineage, but linked branches, joined in monopolizing the uppermost resources of their age. If push came to shove, would Yue Jie aid him?
He had taken leave under the cover of attending the Xiu XiĂ© festival*ÂČ, but could not tarry here long. The target now revealed itself. If he could not cut clean through, the chance would slip. Closeâso close!
In his heart, he did not think it possible.
But impossible things were exactly what Shen Qinghe preferred to try.
With all these thoughts crowding him, he still wore an easy smile when he finally faced Yue Jie. After all these years apart, Yue Jie was no longer who he had once beenâand negotiating would demand his every bit of vigilance.
âI had not thoughtâit would be you,â Yue Jie declared, chin slightly lifted, pride intact, the aura of his prime days briefly visible. What he really thought was: How dare Shen Qinghe come.
After the Hunt at Mount Lu, Shen Qinghe was ruined, the Yue family the first hands upon the knife. An accidental meeting before, fine; but for him now to seek this outâsuch nerve!
âOf course it would be me,â Shen Qinghe laughed, sliding into the seat opposite unflinching.
âIf I call my cousin now, you will not leave here alive.â Yue Jieâs tone was airy, casual.
âBut you havenât, have you?â Shen Qingheâs eyes crinkled. âAnd even if you did⊠I trust in your character, Yueâxiong. At least for this moment.â He swept his gaze subtly over the room, chuckling. âAnd it seems I wagered true.â
Silver tongue. Servile.
Indeed, he was still a man of sesameâseed standing. Yue Jie had seen countless such small men, too many: some undone by overâhardness, others sinking in dissipation.
And thus Shen Qingheâs difference stood out all the more.
That very differenceâwas what Yue Jie himself still failed to understand.
In times past, he would not have cared to notice a commonerâs uniqueness. His cousin had drilled it always: Yue heirs must bear their mission, inherit, expand, bring glory to their line. He had held himself to it and justly felt pride. And yet sometimes, at pause, he felt not fulfilment but a strange hollownessâas though in mist across the way a glimmer shone. One he could see but not approach.
Looking closerâit was only Shen Qingheâs smiling face pointed at his own.
Yue Jie startled.
Fine Gu Zhu tea leaves spilled across his finger.
ââŠSay it then. What have you come for.â
Just days ago he would have deemed wrangling with a petty commandant beneath him. But now, his mind shifted.
In public life, he had gained a name. Not a kindly oneâpeople labeled him cold, heartless. He had grown deaf to such. But if Shen Qinghe sought his help, no way would he make it easy.
Shen Qinghe sat straighter. He would take the circuitous way.
âI have something for you to see.â
From his sleeve he drew a slip of yellowed paper and laid it on the table.
Yue Jie glancedâit seemed to be a prescription. To what purpose?
Reading his doubt, Shen Qinghe pressed one finger to hold it, tapping lightly.
âThis is part of the formula for Springwater Brew (æ„æ°Žç ).â
Yue Jieâs brows pulled. His gaze followed Shen Qingheâs fingertip upward, searching his eyes.
âYueâxiong may not know pharmacology. Allow me. Most herbs here are for cooling fevers and cleansing poisons. But when mixed with Datura bloom, mesmerist fungus, and crowâbitter grass, the effect changes. A harvest of alkaloids arises. And so healing decoction becomes weaponâpoison that bleeds not, yet kills.â
These jars they had found cellared in a tavern. Examined by scent and hue, no wineâbut potent Springwater Brew, in enhanced concentration. Crossâtested by soldiers and Shenâs own cheat system, its profile overlapped with the incense powders from the White Lotus Temple.
Thus it aligned: White Lotusâ beguiling incense and the noblemenâs fashionable Springwater Brew shared a single hand. And that hand could not be the legendary benevolent Daoist who âgifted his concoction to the world.â
If not the Wei clan themselves, then intimately linked.
Yue Jie scoffed. âYou say poison? I have seen many take Springwater Brewâdo they not still live well enough?â
âLivingâand living wellâare not the same.â Shen Qingheâs eyes sharpened. âThe brew you know is diluted a hundredâfold. Taken once, a man feels light, refreshed, like an immortalâso thinks it wholesome. But the alkaloids act upon the neural system, distorting synaptic transmission. One draught at this concentrationâjust once!âand the soul is enslaved for life. Addicted past reason, reduced to a beast obeying craving alone.â
âEven the diluted doseâyou think its outcome not the same? Only slower.â His gaze darkened, words a storm. âThis is Wei craft. Since they can dilute, they surely know the danger. Of the Five Clansâhow many fops already use it?â
âYueâxiong, the Zhuangyuan scholar who topped the imperial examsâsurely you can see their intent.â
Yue Jieâs face grew grim at last. If Shen Qinghe was right, the implications were catastrophic. He snatched the slip, growling: âI must test its truth.â
âBy all means.â Shen Qinghe let it go. âBut as proof of trust, I gift this to you. In return, I ask one favor.â
He saw how his baiting words struck deep, and knew the blow had landed. So he spoke his true purpose.
âFor such monstrous deeds, the world longs to see them ended. Yet my power is thin. With your strength beside me, we could bring down this king of poisons. Would that not be joy shared?â
Yue Jie pocketed the slip. Schemes ran in him, but even still Shen Qingheâs audacity took him aback.
Cold laugh. âTruly unchangedâyou still overestimate yourself.â
Shen only patted his shoulderâdodged, it landed lightlyâbut smiled still. âWhat can I say? Life is hard. Someone foolish must shoulder the hopeless tasks. With you by meâwould that not be bullying the weak with the strong?â
Highest virtue is like water. So preached by Qing Studies, chiseling men smooth to slot into their destined grooves. Only Shen Qinghe refused. He would batter until sheath took his swordâs shape.
Such a wild, reckless life.
Yue Jie judged.
And yet, uneaseânot hatred, but some strange stirringâmoved in him too.
Shen Qinghe gone, tea cooled.
Yue Jie sat alone long. Then flipped the porcelain cup down on its dish, and left.
Back at his temporary mansion, he hurriedâto copy Nine Arguments of Qing Studies and calm his mind.
But at his desk sat already Yue Zhi, his elder cousin.
Yue Jie halted at the threshold, corrected his posture, bowed solemnly. âCousin.â
Yue Zhi lifted his lids faintly. âWhy stay outside. Enter.â
Yue Jie stepped in, closing the door soft behind.
âI had word, thought Cousin would not reach Huizhou for some days yet.â
Yue Zhiâs fingers brushed over the scrolls. He idly lifted one, Commentary on Rivers and Mountains, scanning its densely noted margins.
âA small change of plans. I came earlier.â
Change of plans?
Yue Jie thought instantly of the Springwater slip. From his sleeve he drew it forth, laying it before, explaining its nature, naming the Wei family. Of Shen Qinghe he said littleâknowing how his cousinâs distaste ran deep.
Yue Zhiâs eyes cooled, flicked between slip and his little cousin.
âCousin?â Yue Jie faltered at that gaze. âIs something amiss?â
Slap.
A clean crack.
Yue Zhi rose unhurriedly. Yue Jieâs head whipped aside under the blow.
Never had he imagined his upright cousin would strike him. Wideâeyed, he looked up. Yue Zhiâs expressionâcold, alien.
Tall, chin raised, his pale thin lips, straight nose, penetrating eyesâall sharpened now with cutting aura, indifferent disdain.
From youth he had been lauded prodigy. If the clan weakened, he was their savior; if strong, their spearhead. Every word of his carried weight, every peer half his student. Even so, he had rarely shown such edge.
Yue Jie, for once, was struck dumb.
âTell me,â Yue Zhi murmured. âWhat was wrong.â
He sat back down as if nothing had been.
Yue Jie bent low, shame heavy. Brain whirling, he could only think of one charge. âI⊠I should not have met with Shen Qinghe. I should not have promised him anything.â
Yue Zhiâs glance upon him was like disappointed steel.
âI thought you more clever.â
The words landed heavier than knives in flesh.
âYou bear the Yue name. Mistakes I permit. Stupidity I do not forgive.â
Yue Jie nearly buckled under the weight. âBut CousinâI did it for you! If we take down the Wei of Yunzhong, whether in seizing their secrets or cutting off an arm, surely it brings your cause closer?â
âYou speak truth. Yet false.â Yue Zhiâs gaze cut him. âWith or without him, Weiâs fall is sure. The falsehoodâyou let that man exist at all. See? Even you, solemn Yue Jie, already waver because of him.â
A dull thunder rolled outside. The drizzling rain broke, cascading into a torrent.
Yue Zhiâs gaze alone pressed Yue Jie back, stomach knotted.
âYou know your path. Know your task.â
Ice rimmed his stare. Whether at Yue Jieâor someone elseâit was hard to tell.
âYou are the one I have chosen. Do not, at the end, prove my sight wasted on a dog.â