LBLCPCB C19
by berryChapter 19
Zhu Song no longer wished to hear Yi Kangningâs evasions. He cut him short:
âTell your kitchens to prepare more rice at once. If I hear even one voice say they went unfed, Yiâdaren, you may prepare a new color for your officialâs hat.âš
Yi Kangning bowed hastily. âYes, immediately, I shall see it done.â
Zhu turned away. Yi shot his servants a furtive glance, then hurried after him.
âWhere are the new refugee shelters to be built?â Zhu asked.
âOver there,â Yi answered.
âTake me.â
Crossing swiftly, they saw a broad ground where hundreds labored. But looking close, Zhu saw only a dozen government yamen officersâall the rest were refugees.
Yi supplied an excuse at once: âOur manpower stretched thin, in urgency the refugees volunteered themselves.â
Zhuâs eyes tightened on the site. Not even the framework stood yet. As he went forward, suddenlyâa support beam cracked.
A laborer fell from three meters, smashed his head upon stone. Motionless. Rain pooled with blood, red streams washing everywhere.
Zhuâs brow furrowed as he strode quickly to the body. Around, the others only looked toward Yiâs face, as if gauging his reactionâno real horror upon theirs.
Zhu crouched and pressed fingers to the nose. Already no breath.
He rose, gaze lifting to the snapped beam. Rain revealed its core hollowed by rot, moths fluttering into the air. His expression deepened into storm.
Yi floundered: âSuch weather, accidents cannot be avoidedââ
Zhu clenched his fist and ignored him. Instead he told the workers: âStop work, all of you.â
The yamen obeyed without comment. But the refugees wailed at once:
âWe cannot stop, lord! Drenched like this, we will all die!â
âBetter let us labor, we do not fear death!â
Then, countless dropped to their knees, rain and tears and blood flowing alike into the churned yellow mud.
Zhuâs chest grew heavy. After a pause he said steadily:
âTonight I will open the city gates. Refugees may enter. But on one conditionâyou obey orders.â
At once cheers surged. âWe obey! Lord, you are parents reborn to us!â
âReborn father of ours!â
âReborn father!â
Yi panicked. âLord! Too many, if they flood inâwhere will they lodge?â
Zhu ignored him, addressing the kneeling: âGo. Tell all your fellows. Prepare to enter the city for shelter.â
Overjoyed, they banged heads to mud in thanks and dashed to spread the word.
Zhu returned to the Provincial Office. There he set Yi Kangning to tally up every shop or hall in the city large enough to shelter people. He then ordered Duan Zhenghong to negotiate with their owners to house refugees.
Duan balked. âTheyâthey will never agree.â
âIf they agree, Iâll send men. Why need you to speak?â Zhu flicked him a glare.
Flustered, he hedged: âI may try, but cannot promise success.â
Zhuâs tone thundered. âNothing you can do, everything impossible? Duanâdaren, what use are you as Inspector?â
Duan snapped, sleeve whipping: âThough you are capital envoy, you rank but fourth. I outrank you.â
Zhuâs gaze cut like steel. âYou outrank meâbut do you outrank the Emperor?â
Duanâs face iced. âHow dare Zhuâdaren style himself as His Majesty?â
Zhu raised his hand in salute, voice cold. âYou mistake me. Before leaving the capital, His Majesty granted me the Imperial Sword of Authority², to act as needed. With it, if need be, I could strip you of rank, or even take your head. And none would say no.â
The color drained from Duanâs face. He bowed quickly. âSince the sword exists, I heed Envoyâs command.â
Zhuâs lips curved faint. âGood. I trouble you.â
âSoâI obey.â Duan left to do it.
Yi Kangning remained trembling. âThen⌠what shall I do, lord?â
Zhu smiled thinly. âMuch! Yiâdarenâcount shops, estimate capacity by floor space. By tonight I want numbers.â
The words stuck in Yiâs throat. Argument swamâbut just then he recalled how Duan had been crushed. Yi wilted and bowed. âYes.â
Arrangements made, Zhu turned to his cousins.
âLingyeâinvestigate how the old refugee shelters washed out. Lingwangâcheck the accounting.â
Lingye glanced. âIf you know they stink of corruption, why order them tasks? Hoping they âearn merit to atoneâ?â
Zhu only said: âEverything has its use. Now go.â
Later, Zhu sought out Astronomer Zhang Wanping. Disasters always brought Astronomersâto divine forecasts.
âZhangâdaren,â Zhu greeted.
Zhang held an umbrella, eyes cast to heaven, lashes wet with downpour. His face was somber. After a long silence, he spoke: âRain without thunder, heavens masked without light. This is an omen of ceaseless deluge. I see no end yet.â His eyes returned to Zhu, heavy with concern: âPrepare for long siege.â
Zhu nodded grim. Then discussed, half idly: âRefugees rot in rain. Already sickness spreads. Only the envoyâs presence brings me calm.â
Zhang sighed. âSince you came, I too may rest at ease.â
Zhu let the irony cut deep. So Song Shunran collapses sick only when posted here? Aloud he smiled: âMask of waterâsickness. Odd how fine he was in the capital.â
âPerhaps unaccustomed airs,â Zhang said lightly, unwilling to tread.
Zhuâs sardonic grin held. âOf courseânot sleepless concern for common folk.â
They parted. Zhu knew the truthâSong Shunran, kin to Prince Su, held his own factions. Untouchable, evidence or not.
That evening, tasks bore fruit. Yi reported: âThere are 268 shops, capacity 7,062 people.â
âHow many victims in all?â Zhu asked sharply.
Yi stammered. âSevenâeight thousand? Daily increases. One cannot be exact.â
Zhuâs smile thinned. âForget it.â His eyes shifted to Duan. âAnd you?â
âI convened the merchants. One hundred twentyâsix agreeâto house refugeesâbut demand payment. Ninetyâsix refuse flat. Fortyâsix absent.â
âWhere are these men now?â
âIn the yamen hall.â
âBring them,â Zhu commanded.
Soon, all 268 proprietors stood mustered. Zhu ordered crisply: âThose willingâstep left.â The majority shifted.
âThose refusingâstep right.â Another group moved.
The rest lingered.
âThose are the âabsent mastersâ?â
âYesâtheir deputies,â Duan confirmed.
âThen use their premises by conscription.â
The deputies erupted at onceââNo! Our masters have fastidious pride!â âOur goods are priceless!â
Zhu cut their noise with a hand. âChoose then: join refusals, or join the paid demands.â
The shuffle went quickly. In the end, one man still stood at center.
Zhu eyed him. âYou consent to conscription?â
âI do.â
Zhu patted his shoulder. Only Duanâs eyes glittered with distaste.
âYour name?â Zhu asked.
âYour humble, Zhou Yannian, of the Tianyue Inn.âÂł
âSit,â Zhu said.
âGrateful, lord.â
Then Zhuâs eyes swept the hall. âSoâall agreed? No changes?â
âNo changes!â the crowd chorused.
Footnote
- âChange color of hatâ â Idiom: the black hat (çç´ĺ¸˝) symbolized office rank. âChange colorâ = being demoted or dismissed.
- Imperial Sword (ĺ°ćšĺŻśĺ) â A mythical imperial token that granted emissaries power to execute corrupt officials in the field without prior approval.