WSMTATMC C101
by berryChapter 101
Entering the gate were two inverted rooms facing the streetâspaces usually for the gatekeepers to live in, or occasionally used as simple reception rooms for entertaining ordinary visitors.
Passing through the hanging-flower gate into the main courtyard, eight large lotus tanks were arrayed neatly in a line; they must have once held lotuses, but for lack of upkeep the leaves had turned yellow and withered.
Once the lease was signed and the place tidied, those eight tanks must not be moved. The merchant whoâd moved to the capital had clearly had feng shui arranged; with luck, the layout augured good fortune for future business.
Feng shui is not mere superstition. In a previous life, Wang Ying had read into this fieldâconcepts of magnetic fields and the like. Some things seem arcane, but ancestral rules have their reasons.
On either side of the courtyard stood three side roomsâtraditionally set aside for younger generations, with men to the left and women to the right.
Further in were three spacious main rooms. In the central hall still stood a wooden table-and-chairs set, mantled in a thick layer of dust.
Chen Bo swiped a fingertip over itârosewood. This set alone would fetch several hundred taels.
The flanking chambers were bedroomsâempty withinâwith a pair of ear-chambers beside them for maids and older attendants.
Beyond the covered corridor lay the rear kitchen range for cooking, a shed for livestock, and two storerooms for sundries.
The only oddity was the lack of a toilet. How was one meant to relieve oneself in such a house? After wavering a moment, Wang Ying asked outright.
The broker stifled a laugh. âGreat households use chamber pots. There are collectors outside who take them away; such filth naturally has its channels.â
Wang Yingâs mouth twitchedâkeeping chamber pots at the ready, storing urine and feces until collected, made his skin crawl. Once they moved in, he would add a proper latrine in the rear courtyard.
Overall, the house was decent and respectableâsmaller than their place in Qingshui County, yes, but in a prefectural city, land was dear. Renting a compound comparable to home would cost a thousand taels or more.
He bargained with the broker for a long while and didnât shave off a single copper.
The broker, hearing their out-of-town accents, assumed a faint superiority. âOfficial exchanges arenât like private ones; the prefectural city isnât the countryside. Prices are set above; what we say doesnât change them. If you want to rent, come to the office to sign. If not, please be on your way.â
Wang Ying did want to rentâhe didnât want the child and elders to suffer.
But they had only just reached Jizhou and had a little over six hundred taels on hand. If rent took more than half, starting a shop afterward would be tight.
âCould you point us to something cheaper?â
The broker grew impatient. âIf you canât afford it, say so earlierâwasting our time.â
Wang Ying quickly apologized. âMy faultâI didnât think things through when viewing. Youâve been out in this heat for nothing. Please accept this for tea; forgive the imposition.â
Taking the tip, the broker relented and pointed ahead. âThereâs a two-courtyard place down this lane. Rent is one hundred eighty taels a year. If it suits, take it; if not, forget it.â
âWeâll have a lookâthank you.â
With keys in hand, the broker led the three down the lane to a weathered gate and opened it.
This compound was much smallerâand much more dilapidated.
Vacant for years, weeds stood waist-high in the yard, and the main-room window frames had warped; everything would need repair before move-in.
The layout was similar to the first house, but the courtyard was half the size and the rear kitchen range was gone.
The price, though, was much kinderâenough savings to purchase necessities and cover a yearâs outlay.
Wang Ying asked the two at his side for their thoughts. Chen Bo said, âAway from home, itâs best to be frugal. If trouble comes, weâve nowhere to borrow.â
Ma Qianzi dared not be forward. âThis house is fine. Clean it up and itâll do.â
They settled on renting this one: 180 taels yearly, with a 50-tael deposit.
Back at the office, Wang Ying handed over the silver he had exchanged in advance. After the cashier weighed it, they drew up the lease; rent and deposit totaled 230 taels, nonrefundable upon signing and sealing.
The broker handed over the key. âRenew a month before expiry, or rent will be deducted from the depositâand when thatâs gone, officers will come to evict you.â
Wang Ying accepted the key with a polite nod, then went back to call on Tian Daniu and the others to help clean the compound.
There was nothing in the rooms, so basic household goods had to be bought. While shopping, Wang Ying also circled the prefectural city, grasping its layout and prices.
Jizhou had three main thoroughfares: Zhengyang, Zhengtong, and Zhenghe.
Zhengyang Street was in front of themâthe commercial spine. Shops crowded it from end to end; the outer sections sold general goods, and toward the center were eateries, cloth merchants, silver shops, and other finer trades.
Behind Zhengyang lay a residential beltâclans with established roots and scholarly families.
Zhengtong Street was to the northâthe administrative quarter. The relay station lay there; the prefectural yamen, the six bureaus, and the military offices were nearby.
This area also had residencesâbut only the high-born could afford them. Ordinary folk wouldnât see the inside of such lanes.
Zhenghe Street lay to the far southâwhere porters and peddlers thronged, and the lower trades congregated.
Playhouses, brothels, and gambling dens lined the way; respectable folk rarely set foot there.
Prices were exactly as rumor had it.
The same feather duster that sold for five cash in town sold for fifteen hereâhaggling halved only five cash off, a full three times the price.
Cloth wasnât cheap either: a bolt of fine cotton at one string and three hundred cash, compared to over seven hundred in their town.
Foodstuffs cost moreâlikely due to flood impacts. A dou of millet at a hundred fifty cash, and gray flour at two hundredâthough still cheaper than the county seat, where millet had risen to three hundred.
Even if he sold all the wheat in the field, it would fetch just over a hundred fifty taels. He would need to do business to make real money.
In three days, they had the rental house serviceably clean. Furniture was the economical kindâsilver was tight; upgrades could wait.
For the two main bedrooms, they bought elm canopy bedsâover two taels each. In the countryside, such a bed from a carpenter would be no more than three strings.
The servantsâ beds were simpleâplanks nailed together, sturdy and useful. Seven or eight cost barely two strings together.
Then repairs: two carpenters refitted doors and windowsâthree strings the job.
Odds and endsâpots, bowls, and the likeâran over another string. At last, the house was in order.
They chose a day of fair wind and warm sun and moved out of the relay station.
As soon as he entered, little Yuanbao darted off in delight. At the station, Ah Fu had kept him close; now there was room to run.
âSlow downâdonât fall.â Li Shi and Qingyun followed, laughing.
âSister-in-law chose well.â
âYesâneat and tidy, plenty of rooms. When Qingyan returns, thereâs space enough for them too.â
Wang Ying said, âWe looked first at a three-courtyard placeâbigger than thisâbut I couldnât justify the rent.â
Li Shi patted his hand. âThis is already very good. On the road, donât be picky. If money falls short, tell meâI have silver.â
Qingyun started to speak, then thought better of it, and went in with her mother.
The east room was for Li Shi and Qingyun, with a single canopy bed. They had considered putting Qingyun in a west wing, but wings were cold in winter; better the main room, sitting north facing south, to catch the sun.
Li Shi decided they would share.
The central hall had a table and several chairs; they would take meals there.
The west room was for Wang Ying and Yuanbaoâanother canopy bed and several chests piled beside, carried from Qingshui, filled with clothes.
Among the men, Chen Fang and Tian Daniu shared one room; Chen Bo and Ma Qianzi, another; the four children shared a third.
Cook Aunt Chen and nurse Qin each took an ear-chamber.
At last, they could truly restâand no more sneaking into the field.
After dinner, Wang Ying took his son into the experimental field.
These days had been consumed by cleaning; they hadnât entered for three or four days. Several notes lay on the table.
Wang Ying picked them up and read them one by one to his son.
âAh Ying, are you settled in the prefectural city? You said you were at the station we used beforeâIâm relieved. By the way, thereâs a runner with a black mole on his cheekâheâs capable. Ask him if you need anything.â
Wang Ying recalled the runner who had shown them to the exchangeâhe did have a mole. Likely the same one Qingyan meant.
âMonthly exam todayâvery nervous. I donât know if Iâll pass. Master says if the three of us make Class A, heâll take us to visit Mister Caoâthe one who wrote âRecord of the Wei Rocks Tourâ! Must strive!â There was even a tiny fist sketch at the end; Wang Ying couldnât help laughingâperhaps the earliest emoticon in this world.
The third note was a bit scrawled. âMuch to do todayâwonât belabor it. The notes I left two days ago are still where I put themâI think you havenât come. Iâm worried. Ah Ying, if anything happens, do not hide itâŠâ
The last note, from yesterday: âThe small exam results are out. Qingsong and Qinghuai both made Class Aâas Iâd hoped. Iâm truly happy for them!â
Why only mention the two of themâno word of himself? Had he fallen short?
Just as Wang Ying wondered, Chen Qingyan entered, and husband and son ran to greet him. He lifted the boy and kissed his little cheeks.
âYou finally came. With no word for days, I worried.â
âWe were packed tight at the stationâhard to slip into the field. We rented a courtyard and spent the last few days fixing it up.â
âIs the house in order?â
âMm. We moved today. Not as grand as our place in town, but at least weâre not all piling into one room.â
âGood.â
Wang Ying hesitated, then asked, âIn your note you said Qingsong and Qinghuai made Class Aâwhat about you?â
ââŠI didnât perform well due to an incident. But I did make Class B.â
Wang Ying frowned slightly. âWhat happened?â
Knowing he couldnât hide it, Qingyan told him.
âOn the exam day, my stomach suddenly went bad. I held on to finish the paper and ran for the latrine. Because I wrote in such a rush, the calligraphy was sloppy. The tutor thought I scorned the exam and put my paper in the B tierâŠâ
âHow did your stomach suddenly go bad?â
âIâm not sureâperhaps I ate something off.â
He didnât dare tell the truthâthat someone had slipped a purgative into his water.
The culprit was Peng Huan of Class C, who, envious of Qingyanâs tutelage and spurned in attempts to ingratiate himself, resorted to a base trick. Boasting too freely afterward, he was overheard; the dean deemed the effect egregious and expelled him.
Later, the dean offered Qingyan a retest to move him into Class A, but he refused.
Not passing was not passingâeven if there were causes, he had been careless. It was a lesson: he must be cautious with food and drink; donât give malice a crack to slip through.
They talked for a long while; Yuanbao had fallen asleep with his head on Daddyâs leg.
A sudden knocking sounded from outside. âSomeoneâs at the door,â Wang Ying said. âLetâs go for nowâweâll talk again.â He scooped up Yuanbao and hurried out of the field.
At the door, Qingyun knocked again. âSister-in-lawâare you asleep?â
Footnotes:
- Inverted rooms: Street-facing rooms used for gatekeepers or receiving casual callers, common in courtyard houses.
- Chamber pot ânight soilâ system: Urban sanitation often relied on collecting and selling human waste as fertilizer; household latrines were less common in dense cities.
- Class A/B system: Monthly ranked streaming with movement up or down based on exam results; Class A was elite, B next tier.