WSMTATMC C107
by berryChapter 107
After leaving the vegetable shop, the Yang householdâs gentleman went straight home. By chance, guests were visiting that day, and Master Yang kept several to dine.
He instructed the kitchen maids to slice the tomatoes he had bought and sprinkle them with fine white sugar, serving the dish cold.
At table, the plate of crimson tomatoes drew attention at once. Yang Deguang tapped it with his chopsticks. âWhat is this dish? Iâve never seen it.â
The attendant beside him replied, âYoung Master bought it this morningâthey call it xi hong shi.â Note 1
Several guests said, âIt does look unusualâno idea how it tastes.â
âComeâtry it.â
Each took a wedge, cut like a tangerine segment, and paused after the first bite. This tasted nothing like any fruit they knew.
The sugar blunted the tartness; juice burst on the tongueâbright-sour and sweet, genuinely surprising.
Praises tumbled out. âDelicious! Where did you buy it?â
âFrom Wangâs Produce,â the attendant said.
The silver-shop owner, seated nearby, frowned. âA new place? Iâve not heard of it.â
The proprietor of Xianghe Restaurant could not resist adding, âIt opened recentlyâopposite Master Yangâs trading houseâsells fresh vegetables. No one knows where theyâre sourced.â
As a restaurateur, he paid close attention to food. He had sent a boy to poke around right after the opening but learned nothing. If only he could secure such greensâwinter business would soar.
Yang Deguang cleared his throat and said, half-mysterious, âBest not to set sights on Wangâs shop.â
âHow so?â
âOn opening day, I saw the deputy prefectâs carriage arrive to present a âProsperous Businessâ plaque, and the shopâs keeper called the deputy prefect âUncleâ.â
At that, several merchantsâ faces paled. Wang the deputy prefectâWangâs Produceâit must be that the official was the backer.
Folk donât fight officials; merchants even less. They scramble to curry favor, not risk rebuff for a scrap of profit.
By mealâs end, Wang Yingâs identity as the deputy prefectâs ânephewâ was thoroughly cemented. No one dared entertain designs on the shop anymore. The tomatoes, though, thoroughly won hearts. Several merchants went home and told their spouses.
The next morning, seven or eight houseboys came the moment the doors opened, asking by name for tomatoes.
Seeing this, Wang Ying set the price at forty cash apiece, with a maximum of fifty sold per dayâcome late, wait till tomorrow.
The âscarcity tacticâ worked. Tomatoes went viral in the prefectural cityâtasting them became a fashion.
Do not underestimate the ancient taste for novelty; it rivals the modern. People queued to get a bite; âscalpersâ even emerged, buying in line and reselling dearâpocketing dozens of cash per fruit.
Wang Ying had to add a new rule: five tomatoes per person per day, no more.
Some even wrote poems afterward. Most notable was a prefectural-academy student named Song An, whose âRed Persimmonâ went:
âVermilion spheres, round and sleek,
A tart-sweet coolness seeps the teeth.
At first a trace of astringent bite,
With lingering sips turns pure and bright.â
The poem boosted the tomatoâs fame again. Soon even out-of-towners had heard: in Jizhou one could buy a singular fruitâflavor unique, price dear, supply short.
New preparations appeared: thin slices layered with hawthorn; or pounded to a paste for sauceâthe earliest tomato âketchup,â born.
Business stayed hot; Wangâs Produce became a sensation. In half a month they cleared over two hundred strings, to the envy of neighboring shops.
Envy or not, none dared act. The shopâs ties to officialdom were knownâwhoâd pick a fight with the yamenâs friends?
â
That night at home, washed and rested, Wang Ying went early to the experimental field to tend the plots.
The field did have one-click sowing, weeding, and harvestingâbut thinning seedlings still took hands.
After a while, Chen Qingyan arrived.
âPerfect timingâhelp thin these celery rows. Too dense and theyâll go leggy.â
âAye.â He doffed his outer robe, rolled his sleeves, and set to.
Thanks to Wang Ying, the former bookish youthâaverse to labor and ignorant of farmingâhad taken to country work with real skill. He thinned deftly; earlier, before there was one-click harvest, heâd swung a sickle through wheat like a seasoned hand.
After half an hour, three beds of celery were done. Wang Ying fetched two ice pops from the cold zone, and they sat under the peach tree, eating and talking.
âHowâs business these days?â
âOne look, and youâd know,â Wang Ying said. âWe can hardly keep up.â
âGood.â
âVery. The prefectural city is wealthy; spending is high. No matter how I set the prices, someone snatches it up. Those tomatoesâten cash each in town and folk balked; now at forty, and they rush them!â
âThat is a surprise,â Qingyan admitted. âA palm-sized fruit fetching such a price.â
âSomeone even wrote poems!â Wang Ying recited two; Qingyan laughed out loud.
âTake care of yourself,â Qingyan added, looking him over. âYouâve grown thinner.â
The opening weeks had worn Wang Ying out, but with rich returns, his anxiety eased with every copper piled in the cashbox.
At this rate, at least the yearâs rent would no longer be a worry.
With money sufficient, Wang Ying returned the jade pendant to Qingyun. It was a keepsake from her maternal grandfatherâtoo meaningful to pawn without dire need.
âOnce we get through this stretch and the shop runs itself, Iâll let Xiao Ma mind the floor. He reads people wellânothing big will go wrong with him watching.â
âXiao Maâwho?â
âMa Qianziâthe lad who used to buy our popsicles by the batch.â
âHeâs with you in the prefectural city?â
âYesâhim, Tian Daniu, and Chen Fang. Thank heavens for them; without their help, Chen Bo and I couldnât manage a shop this size.â
Qingyan nodded. âWeâll be heading back soon as well. Teacher says we should turn north at monthâs end.â
It was nearly the eleventh month. Snow fell in the north; trees were still green in the south. In recent days, Qingyan had found two fruit trees for the fieldâa loquat and a mandarin.
âAs they say,â he smiled, âsouth of the Huai, itâs an orange; north, a bitter trifoliate.â Note 2 The Huai was the dividing line. For climate alone, oranges north of it turned sour and bitter; south, they were sweet-tart and lovely.
In times past, poor transport meant mandarins rarely reached the north. Raising one in the field meant fresh oranges thereafter.
Wang Ying rested his head on Qingyanâs shoulder. âCome back soon. Even though we see each other here, without you beside me I never feel settled.â
âI feel the same.â Qingyan drew him close and kissed his crown. âI wish I could open my eyes in the morning and see you there.â
Wang Ying lifted his face for a kiss. Warm, soft mouths touched; breath mingled, and they parted at last, flushed and panting.
Qingyanâs voice was husky. âSomeoneâs knockingâIâll go.â
Wang Ying wiped his mouth corner with a thumb. âGo on.â
Qingyan slipped from the field and opened the door. Chen Qinghuai stood there, eyes red and alarmed. âBrother⊠may I sleep with you tonight?â
âCome in. Whatâs happened?â
After a silence, Qinghuai choked out, âJust now⊠I had blown out the lamp and dozed⊠and suddenly a girl barged into my room, took off her clothes, and climbed into bedâsaid⊠she wanted to be my concubineâŠâ
Qingyanâs temper flared. âDid you touch her?â
âNo! I was terrifiedâI ran straight to you.â Seventeen he might be, but at heart he was still guileless; such a thing reduced him to tears.
Qingyan stood at once. âComeâweâre going to Teacher.â
âBrotherâŠâ
âThis touches your honor. We must have it addressed tonight.â
He drew Qinghuai toward Master Liangâs courtyard. The elder had been abed; Liang An received them. âSo lateâwhat brings the young sirs?â
Qingyan told him. Liang An blanched. He hurried in to wake the master.
Moments later, the crash of porcelain sounded within. âYanâer, Huaiâerâget in here!â
They entered. Master Liang was furiousâclutching his chest, coughing hard. Liang An patted his back. âPlease, sirâdonât agitate yourself. The young sirs are unharmed.â
âFetch Third,â Master Liang snapped.
âYes, sir.â Liang An dashed off; Qingyan poured tea and offered it.
After a sip, the elder steadied. âQinghuai, tell me exactly what happenedâagain.â
Qinghuai wiped his eyes and recounted: after supper, as usual, he returned to his room, read a while, grew drowsy, and lay down. Not long after he blew out the lamp, the door creaked. In the dark, he couldnât see who entered. He asked who it was; the person said nothingâonly, in haste, stripped and lunged for the bed.
âI cried, âWho are youâwhat are you doing!ââ
A coy voice answered in the dark. âDo not fear, young masterâI mean no harm. I beg your favorâtake me as your concubine.â
The sound of a woman turned his scalp to ice. In a panic, he shoved her away and fled to Qingyanâs room.
âDid you see her face?â
He shook his head. âToo dark.â
âTo use such a base trick!â
Of the three pupils, Qingyan was married; Qingsong was still a boy; only Qinghuai was of marrying age. If a woman had âfallenâ into his bed and the rice âcooked,â then heâunwed and defiledâwould have his name stained.
The Wu dynasty holds chastity and reputation as bedrock. Even were he later to pass the provincial exam, such scandal would remain a blot. A man of no virtue would never enter the Son of Heavenâs eye. How could Master Liang not burn with anger?
Notes:
- Xi hong shi: The Chinese name for tomato (literally âwestern red persimmonâ), reflecting its later introduction as an exotic fruit-vegetable.
- âSouth of the Huai orange; north, trifoliateâ: A classical adage marking the climatic divide at the Huai Riverâcitrus thrives south but turns bitter north due to temperature and soil.