LBLCPCB C13
by berryChapter 13
Zhu Song interrogated the kitchen staff, but nothing was gained. As he had explicitly arranged, Lin Fengâs meals had always been under strict supervisionâeven delivery done by two men together. There should have been no mistake.
By evening, the coroner came with his report.
Lin Feng had been poisonedâcraneâred venomš mixed in his water. His body bore many scars, but none fatal. The only lethal wound was to his chestâso deep the heart itself had been pierced. And yet, someone with extraordinary medical mastery had stitched his heart together, prolonging life.
âExquisite! Unparalleled!â the coroner exclaimed. His face radiated awe. âNever in all my years have I seen such superlative skill. A living immortal physician! Marvelous!â
Zhu Song, grim at such gushing, cut him short. âAnd?â
Startled, the coronerâs enthusiasm dimmed. âShould my lord someday befriend such a divine physicianâplease, introduce me.â
Zhu raised a brow. âI meant the case.â
Chastened, the coroner explained: âLi Mingsi indeed died smashing his head on the pillar. But upon autopsy, his heart disease was advanced. Even without this, he had only a few years left to live.â
Zhu nodded curtly, dismissing him.
After dinner, Gu Huaiyu came with a portrait in hand. âFinished.â
Zhu examined it. The painted figure wore a golden mask; only noble bearing and general outline could be seen. Nothing of Li Mingsi, who had none of such polish.
âYou think?â Gu asked.
Zhu inhaled deep. âA scapegoat.â
They shared the same thought. Yet time pressedâthe Emperorâs deadline loomed. Guâs true worry was whether Zhu would continue, or stop here.
But Zhuâs jaw set. âCheck Li Mingsi.â
Though Gu had expected this, he still advised: âSomeone does not wish us to pursue this. If we continue openly, we face blocks at every step. Why not close the case to placate the throneâthen investigate in secret?â
âSecret would face no obstacles?â Zhu retorted.
Gu knew resistance was useless. âFine. Then Iâll find Old Qu.â
âMm.â
When Gu left, Zhu studied the portrait again. Purpleârobed man, golden mask, eyes gentle, aquiline nose, lips thin, a beauty mole at his mouth, and on his pale hand a darkâjade ring. Lin Fengâs description, his first impression of that man.
Zhu sighed heavily. Too few fragments; the chain would not form. Only one certainty: some high lord was behind it all. But could such a grand figure covet a mere coral?
Illogical.
Beauty? Xu Wanyin, even as famed as she was, had chosen and wed Lin Sicheng ten years before the massacre. That too seemed farâfetched.
Without evidence, imagination meant nothing. Zhu pondered all night until dawn, when Gu returned.
âI found it. The man is not Li Mingsi. His true name was Zhou Mu, a cloth merchant from Ganzhou. Two months ago he entered the capitalâto treat his sonâs illness. They stayed at the Tianyue Inn.â
At last, a lead. Zhu surged upright. âIâll go!â
But at Tianyue Inn, nothing. The family had abruptly checked out two days prior. The innkeeper recalled them only as anxious seekers of medicine. Nothing more.
With Dali Siâs network, searching even in a city was not hard. Zhu issued public wanted posters. Yet two days passedâno trace.
The Emperorâs deadline pressed. Despairing, Zhu sat when, without warning, a dagger darted through his window and struck the pillar. Affixed was a note.
He ran to the doors: âAnyone see something?â
The guards blinked. âAssassins?â
âNo. Investigate quietly.â
âYes, lord.â
He tore the note open. The man you seek is in Xiliu Village.
Even if suspicious, better to act.
Zhu swiftly led men to Xiliu Village. At the far huts, he found Zhou Muâs wife and son huddled, shaking with fear. Seeing the insignia of Dali Si, they prostrated.
âMy lord, save us!â
Brought back, she confessed before questioned:
âTwo days ago, a man in hood came to Zhou Mu. They spokeâI do not know what. Then Zhou said our childâs sickness could be cured.
He returned with a thousandâyear lingzhi mushroom², ground it and fed our son. The boyâs illness truly eased. I rejoiced. Then Zhou told meâI was to take the boy, leave the city in secret. He had a deal to fulfill, and might not return.
Were it only me, Iâd have refused. But for the boy, I agreed. That night we crept out. Before three liÂł, assassins struck us. I begged, but they showed no mercy. When I thought we must die, another group of masked men appearedârescued us and brought us here.
Since then, they kept us silent. Not until today did you come.â
Two rival bandsâintrigue deepened.
âWhat marks had the attackers?â Zhu asked.
âOnly black clothes and masks. I was too scared.â
âAnd the rescuers?â
âAlso blackâclothed, masked. Said not a wordâonly gestured with swords.â
âAnd the trader? Apart from the lingzhi?â
âNothing. Only the mushroom.â
âDid Zhou give him anything?â
âNo. Only said I must flee.â
Zhu frowned. But she added timidly: âThe first day he came, a gust blew back his hood⌠and I glimpsed his face.â
Zhuâs spirit leapt. âSummon the painter!â
By night, Zhang the portraitist arrived with Gu.
Gu met the womanâs eyes. âWe must paint tonight. Can you do it?â
Flustered, she bowed. âIt is my duty.â
The painter arranged his tools.
The woman recalled carefully: âHe wore perfumed purple silk robes. A plain dark cloak. Roughly this lordâs heightââpointing at Guââbut heavier, fifty years perhaps. Yet skin white and smooth, wellâkept. Face rounder, jowls a little slack. Regular brows, long phoenix eyes, a stern gaze. Strong nose, thin lipsâŚâ
Under moon and candle, stroke by stroke, a vivid face emerged. By sunrise, it was complete.
They all gathered roundâand at once their brows drew tight.
They knew this man.
Zhu seized the portrait, storm already brewing.
âI go at once.â
âIâll join,â Gu said.
âNo need. With proof so clear, would they dare refuse surrender?â
Gu subsided.
The woman asked tentatively: âMy lordâdo you truly know him?â
Gu did not answer directly. âIf we bring him, can you identify?â
âOf course,â she swore.
Zhu marched with yamen to the gates of the Imperial Uncle Chenâs mansion.
The guards flinched at their array. Zhu announced: âAssistant Minister Zhu Song, Judicial Court. Request entry.â
A servant ran to report.
Soon, the Imperial Uncle himself appeared. âLord Zhu, what is this?â
Zhu held forth the portrait. âYour steward, Chen Yurong, stands accused of the slaughter of the Lin familyâthirtyâtwo livesâand of commissioning scapegoats. Surrender him.â
The nobleâs eyes widened. âPreposterous! How could suchâ! Men! Bring Chen Yurong out!â
Servants rushed.
âStay and take tea meanwhile,â the noble offered graciously.
Zhuâs gaze flicked to a scar on the elderâs mouth. âYouâve a wound, Uncle?â
âHa, my wifeâs new cat struck me.â
âNew cat? I never heard madam fancied cats.â
âHer sister kept one. She fancied it. But it clawed me, so I said return it. She begged keep it.â
Idle words filled the wait until servants returned, panting.
âMaster⌠the steward⌠dead!â
âWhat?â
âIn his chamberâalready lifeless.â
Zhuâs brows slashed down. âAgain? So decisiveâŚâ
âShow me.â