ITIEQ C70
by berryChapter 70 â You Are Not Worthy
Overnight, the maple blossoms outside the window blurred into a deeper hue, like tufts of red cloud rising with the swell of autumn.
The dossiers on Shen Qingheâs desk no longer piled to small mountains. The Engineering Division had recently developed a new paper resistant to mold and insect damage: the cost acceptable, far cheaper than the pricey stationery sold outside, with hopes to launch within the year; academy students would be the first to enjoy it, with sales through the major education markets.
As for external sales, he had already leased a storefront on the most prosperous avenue in Danyang Prefecture; with minor renovation, it would become the first offline âQingbei Manufactureâ shop.
Shen Qinghe flicked his brush and fixed the opening date on the planning sheet. He still had to drag the Pingyun Princess out of her sootâsmudged research topic, tidy her up for the ribbonâcutting, and drill the remarks so she could show her face properly.
He leaned back against the chair and balled several discarded proposals, pitching them into a porcelain jar not far away.
Qingbei Academy already had its first graduating classes: some returned home to build, some prepared for the examinations, some were rehired back to campusâthere were all sorts. Shen Qinghe never forced any particular path; at graduation he simply led the chant, âA year a Qingbei student, a lifetime a Qingbei person.â Regardless of birth, regardless of where life led, the mark of Qingbei Academy would be forever imprinted, alma mater the eternal harbor.
At once, many graduates were in tears, sobbing without quite knowing whyâ
When they rose to prominence in future, donations to the alma mater would surely be plentiful.
With Xiao Yuxiâs staunch support, businessâschool parentsâ generous purses, and âQingbei Manufactureâsâ brisk cash flow, he should, by rights, have amassed a healthy fund. Yet to keep Danyangâs local literacy push abreast, money flowed out as quickly as it came in, like water.
Plopâanother paper ball dropped into the porcelain jar.
Slow, slowâstill slow.
He sighed and shifted to a new lounging angle.
Three feet of ice do not form in one day; in the end, patience would be required.
Still, at both Qiuquan and Danyang campuses he had already raised several PIs capable of independently running projects: the first five who had followed himâDan Bowen and companyâthe forever labâbound Xiao Yuxi, several elite picks among the students tapped for independent tracks; coupled with the Systemâs vast builtâin resources, the research fields remained a wide blue ocean. Every month brought good news. Not to boast, but his teams and their tech transfer stood at the pinnacle of Great Yongâindeed, of the whole world.
Such sterling academic repute had begun to draw talent nationwide as a matter of course. Tan Ping, Chao Chuke and the like needed no comment; the unexpected one was the venerable Master Baoshanâ
Shen had expected it would take effort to âwear downâ such an old guard; yet Xiao Yuxi merely smiled and produced a pair of reading glasses, inviting him to truly see and truly try. However stiff Master Baoshanâs mouth, how could he say ânoâ to a world, clear and beautiful, unseen for nearly ten years?
So the staffâbearing Master Baoshan, under the pretext of âinspecting his discipleâs future teaching environment,â forcibly remained at Qingbei an entire month. He and Xiao Yuxi were âold acquaintances,â and with a small, tailâflicking pride she showcased a handful of the academyâs completed microâpatents, igniting the scholarly passion that had been banked in the old man for half a lifetime. Only when Baizhang Academy realized the party had been gone a very long while did they send an urgent summons to call him back.
Upon departure, the man past sixty found his back no longer sore, his legs no longer aching; he could, leaning on a cane, mount a carriage alone. Before he left, he grasped Tan Pingâs handâno lingering sadness, only declaring, âI will definitely return,â which left Shen Qinghe, who was doing his best as host, half laughing and half exasperated.
But Master Baoshanâs final words were for Shen himself. Though nominally this campus was ârun by that slip of a girl from Pingyun,â he knew very well who the backbone was. The little old manâs eyes, beneath the lenses, threw back a shine.
The people heâd admired across his life were few, and every one a sainted sage or giant of the age. But this youngsterâŠ
The tower bells pealed again; uncountable students appeared, gathering in the central square: men and women, old and young, every walk and station⊠Master Baoshan had witnessed this scene many times in a month. The clever crafts alone were not what moved him; yet each time he saw this, his feelings surged anew.
Education for all, the world held in common; knowledge is not hardâonly practice is hard.
He had long thought the younger generation mixed and middling, unfit for great useâthat all still rested on their old bones.
One must yield to age, after all.
Folding his hands together, Master Baoshan suddenly bowed toward the blackâhaired youth.
âEhâehâŠ?!â
âTeacher! YouâŠâ
Students stood stunned.
Shen Qinghe was struck dumb, then hurried forward to support him.
âYouâll shorten my years!â
With a long sigh, Master Baoshanâold now, knowing he might never again come to Qingbeiâpried open the mouth that Princess Pingyun had once called ironâtoothed:
âYoung talent keen as a bladeâand yet in fear of those to come. On the four characters âpeach and plum throughout the world,â I am not your equal.â
Shen Qingheâs sleeve was caught, his wrist held; Master Baoshanâs words rang like metal, the old bearing of a man who had once strode the court faintly visible.
âBut having lived half a lifetime more, this old man still must sayâthis road is not easy. Though it is not easy, I still hope you⊠hope youâŠ!â
It was already a pouring out of heart and lung. Shen Qinghe understood the unspoken weight behind it, and clasped those furrowâridged hands in return.
âRest easy, sir. I know.â
Returning from the drift of thought, the mapleâtinged clouds moved outside the window; a curtain of clear autumn. Shen Qinghe gave a soft laugh to himself. He was only just past twentyâcould he truly already âfill the world with peach and plumâ?
The System poked its head out. âHost, when rewards are handed out, remember mine.â
Shen Qinghe smirked. âRightânearly forgot you. WhatââReincarnate Founder of the Eight Great Cuisinesâ isnât good enough?â
The System was the best tool on earth: never tired, never sleepy, capable of running eighteen directives at once, never needing a wage. Now that the academyâs processes were clear and polished, Shen no longer needed to micromanage. With its massive database, and as the living encyclopedia of the age, whenever Xiao Yuxiâs projects hit a bottleneck she ran straight to itâshe had even eagerly built the System its own âlaboratoryââ
A private kitchen with full topâend cookware and ventilation.
The System felt the title barely suitable. âHost, no discriminationâpeople live by food. My topics are important too.â
âYes. When will you write a study on adapting the Eight Great Cuisines to Yong? If we can produce a series of exact recipes, perhaps we could open a chain of restaurants. The aristocrats seem to love novelty; I think theyâd pay dearly to taste preâprepped dishes.â Shen liked it; he jotted a note, swished it in the air, and told the System: âThen this new topic is yours.â
System: ââŠâ
Knock, knock, knock.
The door sounded. Shen answered âcome in.â Xue Bufan stood at the threshold, brows faintly knit, expression complicated.
What catastrophe now, for our Director Xue to wear that look?
Shen shed his lazy air, lowered his propped legs slowly, and asked soberly, ââŠWhat is it?â
âGongyang Ci is here.â
Shen blinked. Then his lips parted into a smile of unclear meaning.
âHa.â
âŠ
Xiao Yuxi had changed into plain dress. The long hair that usually fell to the floor when seated had become a nuisanceâshe had lopped half off and bound the rest high, clean and neat, her brows sharpâlike a lady general.
Gongyang Ci sat properly opposite, a dark headpiece on his crown, shaped like an inverted cup; layered long robes, every pendant in placeâformal to the utmost.
Xiao Yuxi: âWhat do you want with me?â
No one visits the ancestral hall without cause. She wore no pleasant face for Wei clan folk across the river.
Catching the thorn in her tone, Gongyang Ci neither angered nor flustered.
Xiao Rou and Xiao Yuxiâs late husband had been paternal cousins; by seniority, he should have called her âauntâinâlaw.â But the lady of this house would likely detest the term. He turned the thought over and addressed her with respect: âYour Highness, Princess.â
It was laughable. Of the seven prestigious houses, two had come under the charge of outsiders. In the old days, even as a joke, others would have found it absurd.
Gongyangâs lips curved faintly.
âMm.â
Xiao Yuxi snorted through her nose. She disliked the Yunzhong Wei and would not speak peaceably with anyone from there. But with Shen Qingheâs methods, her flotillas were transformedâspeed more than doubled; every saved hour rang like coin. And with the branch campus bearing her name, merchants along both banks, who had once wavered, now either had sons studying at the academy or were breaking heads for slots next termâstanding firmly at her skirts.
She had not anticipated this layer of benefit.
Xiao Yuxi could scarcely hold herself back; she burned to see the Wei faces soured and stinking. With her side strong, what face had Wei Hongbo to call himself head of the house?
Alas, it wasnât the sour old manâonly a pale scholar.
Boring.
âWho are you? Why not Wei Hongbo?â She leaned back against the couch, playing idly with her fingers. Her vermilion lips arched, wicked. âDonât tell me I angered him to death?â
Shen Qinghe had enmity with Yunzhong folk. They were in the same boat; she was still waiting to make the front page. At such a juncture, even if the Heavenly King came, she would not yield.
She had already let her mind wander.
Hm⊠they said a portrait could be carved for the front pageâwhat pose would she strike?
Gongyang answered with precisely measured courtesy. Yet whatever he said, Princess Pingyun remained cool, plainly impatientâone more empty phrase and she would likely flip the tableâquite within her character.
He lowered his eyes; when he lifted them again, they still held a warm smile. âIn former days, my lady often spoke of Your Highnessâs bearing. Today I see it trulyâstunning, as the tales said.â
âMy lady?â Xiao Yuxi slanted a glance. âAnd who is that?â
Gongyang dipped his head, light shining under thin lids. âMy wife, Wei Qiongâstyle name Rouze.â
âXiao Rou?â Xiao Yuxi straightened.
Gongyang feigned surprise. âYour Highness knows her?â
Wei Qiong was beautiful and kind, though frail; few in Wei were any goodâshe was one. Pity that, after the split, they had not met again. Xiao Yuxi shed her slouch, looking him up and down. âSo youâre the retainer who ran off with her?â
Gongyang smiled downwards, voice gentle. âThe climb was hard; now, at last, the clouds part and sun breaks through.â
Xiao Yuxi had heard rumors and found herself mildly curious. âYouâre half a Wei head now, arenât you?â
âYoung Master Wei Sheng is gravely ill⊠I am favored by the old house head.â
Xiao Yuxi trusted no manâs deep love; yet this deathâtoâlife attachmentâshe clicked her tongue.
He had some ability, at least. Since the eyesore would not be at the helm, for her poor, helpless little sisterâinâlawâs sake, she might as well hear him out.
Gongyang raised his gaze and broadly outlined his purpose. It was as she had suspected: matters tied to the DanâYun River, with generous terms. If truly joining jade with pearl, she might reap quite a harvest.
Seeing her tempted, he smiled, all aristocratic grace. âIf you refuse, itâs no matter. I know the Wei once showed you disrespect. I only wish from now that we put aside the sword. Xiao Rou thinks of you often; when her health improves, I will escort her across the river to call upon you.â
A fine speech. Xiao Yuxi felt soothed.
Building Qingbei had drained her coffers; to stumble upon free money and not take it would be foolish.
She swung her arm, ready to agreeâwhen the painted screen behind her knocked. Turning, she saw Shen Qinghe step out smiling.
âHaving a nice chat.â
Both looked over. The youth stood tall and jadeâslender, hands folded in sleeves, arm bracedâcareless grace. Gongyangâs pupils tightened and then eased. The blackâhaired youth, exactly as remembered, was already walking over.
His pupils shrank, lips pulling into a slow smile, voice dipping low. âI knew Lord Shen was no ordinary man.â
Shen Qinghe lowered his eyes, looking at him as one might look at a hollow clay idol.
âIt has been many daysâLord Shen, you are well? You are still a prefectural governorâbest return to your post soon, lest tongues wag.â
âThanks to Lord Gongyangâs blessings, I have never been better. You, on the other hand, resigned office and chose to remain in Yunzhongâquite the nerve.â
Gongyangâs eyes slitted. With such a man, if you became enemies and failed to kill in one stroke, all calculations were lesser schemes.
Barbs traded, Xiao Yuxi sensed things between them were ill. She tapped the chair with manicured nails. âSince Lord Shen is displeased, I canât help you.â
Shen Qingheâfounder of âPure Yong,â favorite at the Emperorâs sideâshe went to him for project approvals. Xiao Yuxi knew large kings from small.
She rubbed her nose. Much as she wanted gossip, this excitement was truly most inauspicious.
Grievances and debts were best settled by the parties themselves.
âYou two talk. You two talk.â
Skirts lifted, she ran off at speed.
Under a gaze that could be called dissecting, Gongyang felt a twinge of discomfort.
His mind spun through a hundred turns. Wei Sheng on the brink; Wei Hongbo gravely ill. Though he had borrowed Yue Zhiâs nomination to serve temporarily as clan head, he could not shake old prejudices. Affairs piled high drained him; collateral lines and elder clansmen eyed him like tigers, eager to drag him down. To secure the seat, he needed one stunning achievement to shut their mouths. He knew it might be hard in Danyangâhe still had to come.
The anticipated major obstacleâXiao Yuxiâhad softened. He had not expectedâhad not expectedâShen Qinghe!
He had not fled in defeat; he had stayed within armâs reach in Danyangâand even become an honored guest of the Princessâs house. Gongyang drew a deep breath, pushing down the dark in his gaze, forcing his tone level.
He could no longer tell what twisted growth rose in his heartâresentment, or jealous hate.
âLord Shen trulyâno matter the straitsâwins noble aid and stirs fair winds. I am envious. Have you ever had your fate read? It must be perfect fortune.â
Fortunate? First time heâd heard that.
But Shen would not bandy gods and ghosts with him. He took the seat Xiao Yuxi had vacated, elbow on raised knee, chin lifted. âWhat fateâborn to toil, perhaps?â He sneered. âYour âladyâ on your lips day after dayâhow deeply you love.â
Gongyangâs face did not shift; he held his tongue.
Soâknowing he was unmasked, he would not even bother to pretend.
Shen stared at him, seeming nearly to watch, with his own eyes, how a talented man of low birth, in a warped era, was devoured bit by bit by power into a demon of congealed desire.
Everything to be used. Everything a chip on the board.
Within his sleeve, Gongyangâs fist loosened, then clenched. His peripheral glance slid to the doors and windows. His attendants were withdrawn without; though he had brought many, this was Danyang now. If Shen meant to make things hardâor take his lifeâthere would be no escape.
âHmph.â Shen watched him for a long momentâthen let out a light, mocking laugh, airy as cloud. âYou come to talk businessâand bring neither plan nor decision brief?â
Gongyang froze.
Reclining, Shen wore a look Gongyang could not parseâonly find offensive.
âYou want to talk business with me?â
âIf you offer concessionsâwhy wouldnât I nod?â
Money that entered the Danyang Wei would be money flowing indirectly to his hands. If someone wished to hand him coin, why refuse? Should he swear the chastities of nine and three, see an enemy and go redâeyed, never rest till revenge?
As for him?
Not worth it.
So far from expectation, Gongyang did not dare believe it at first. He suspected deeper plots: that Shen meant to pay back old betrayal with some elaborate schemeâperhaps to fell him in an instant as at Xiechun Tower, with godsâandâghosts devices.
His mind roiled, eyes flickering. Still, he laid out the preâplanned profit splits. Shen listened intently, flagged a few points for revision. Gongyang, in unease, agreed without much thought. Shen was surprised at his readiness.
âThen settled. Iâll have a contract draftedâno, signature and seal.â Was the man addled? Fineâsaved him the tongueâwork.
Gongyang sat stiff, incredulous, fine webs of blood rising in his eyes.
Just like that? He knew very well what that private dungeon was. Did Shen truly not want revenge?
As if reading him, Shen rolled the words on his tongue, light as drifting cloud: âWhatâs strange? Youâre not worth it. To like, or to hateâyouâre not worth either.â
Haânot worthy? Iâm not worthy?
âThe entire Wei bends to my commandâand you say Iâm not worthy?!â
The mask tore. He no longer feared whether Shen would act. Perhaps he was madâperhaps had long been so.
The blackâhaired youth watched his frenzy; all rancor had fallen awayânot forgiveness, but a clear, placid understanding.
Across the table, the true opponent had never been one particular man.
âGive my regards to your lady.â
Bloodârimmed eyes watched him glide away, back straight as pine and bamboo. Old wounds and hardships seemed not to have left a speck upon him.
He left.
He did nothing.
Gongyang collapsed against the couch; sweat soaked hair beneath the cap.
Blankâfaced, he thought of the âgradingâ the scholars lovedâthe old âfixedârankâ appraisals. However he had striven, at best he had earned a âsixth rank, lower.â As for the very top gradesâbeyond family backgroundâone required that âclarity is not muddied by clarity, disturbance not turbid by disturbanceâbroad and brimming as tenâthousandâacre waters.â
He had never believed such men could exist. Take Yue Zhi, chief of the scholarsâ hall: for all the brilliance of his public name, his inner methods were nested and nested, toying with hearts.
Disgusting.
Shen Qinghe.
Why?
Why could he so easily possess everything?
If sunk in a mire, how was one to gladly choose to sink?
His eyelids dipped. On the tableâone teapot, one porcelain cup.
Not even a cup of teaâs respect.
Gongyang could not hold himself; he swept the scattered objects to the floor.
He laughed in a daze, as if draining a jar of yearsâold liquorâpart relief after disaster, part the heavy ache of a hangoverâfinally all congealing into a chestâheaving, gutâturning poison.
Impossible to swallow; impossible to spit.
Footnotes:
- âEducation without class distinctionsâ (æææ ç±») and âthe world held in commonâ (怩äžäžșć Ź): Classical Confucian ideals that the academy actively embodies in its admissions and mission.
- âPeach and plum throughout the worldâ (æĄæć€©äž): An idiom praising a teacher whose students (peach and plum) are spread everywhere, i.e., widespread, successful disciples.
- âFixedârank appraisalsâ (ćźćæł): A traditional scholarly habit of grading men by talent and moral quality; the âsixth rank, lowerâ (ć ćäžæ) indicates middling ability in old literati parlance.
- âTenâthousandâacre watersâ metaphor (æŸäčäžæž ïŒæ°äčäžæ”ïŒæ±Șæ±ȘćŠäžéĄ·äčé): Evokes a mind so broad and stable that clarity does not overâclarify and disturbance does not muddyâan ideal of cultivated equanimity.
- âXiechun Towerâ (æșæ„æ„Œ): The pleasure house where a previous confrontation left Wei Sheng gravely injured; referenced here to underscore Gongyangâs fear of Shenâs âgodsâandâghostsâ methods.