WSMTATMC C114
by berryChapter 114
The two stayed chatting at the Wang residence until midday. Assistant Prefect Wang insisted on keeping them for a meal; Master Liang could not refuse and stayed with Chen Qingyan.
Just then Wangâs several sons arrived, so they all ate together.
The eldest was twenty-four this year and, being only a licentiate, had been placed in an idle post at the prefectural yamen.
The second, in his twenties, was dull-witted (cognitively impaired). He worked as a petty clerk in the prison. From a single sentence it was clear he was not like ordinary men. During the meal he even started describing methods of interrogation used in the jailâhis vivid scene-setting was enough to ruin anyoneâs appetite. Wang Yi slammed his chopsticks down in anger.
âIf you wonât eat, then get out!â
He even wanted to shout back at his father, but the eldest son tugged him away by the arm; the third and fourth were so frightened they barely breathed and followed out together.
This sort of scene occurred almost every time the family dined together. If not for the New Year, Wang Yi usually would not let them come home at all, to avoid embarrassment.
âForgive me for the spectacle, Boqingâthis son of mine canât get his head straightâŚâ
Master Liang was stunned. He remembered these children from years ago as merely dimânot like this.
Only then did he fully understand why his old friend, at such an age, still strained to climb upward. If he stopped striving and one day were gone, this family might fall apart.
âAlasâthese years have been hard on you.â
Because of the incident, the meal ended joyless. Seeing them out, Assistant Prefect Wang made a date to drink properly next time.
On the carriage ride back, Chen Qingyan furrowed his brow, uncharacteristically silent.
âWhatâs on your mind?â
âHow to begin Yuanbaoâs first lessons.â
Master Liang blinked, then burst out laughing. âHeâs only two. What lessons? He canât even hold a brush.â
âIâve only this one son. I want to plan well for him nowâso he wonât stray later.â
âDonât fret. The childâs nature is clear early on. Yuanbao is bright and well-behaved; he wonât burden you and Wang Ying.â
âBorrowing your auspicious wordsâmay it be so.â
One doesnât know a parentâs heart until raising a child. Since Yuanbao was born, he understood at last how parental love plans far into the future.
The very next day was New Yearâs Eve. All New Yearâs goods were purchased, the shop closed for the holiday, and the family gathered at home to enjoy reunion.
â
Early in the morning, snowflakes drifted downâadding a touch of festivity to the New Year.
Yuanbao was dressed early in new clothesâa red cross-collared jacket under a bright yellow sleeveless vest embroidered with auspicious clouds and ruyi motifs.
The outfit was all silkâsoft and fine to the touchâwith a thick layer of new cotton inside: light and warm to wear.
The jacketâs flowers had been embroidered by Fang Ling. Madam Li was clumsy with redwork; simple garments were fine, but delicate embroidery she could not manage.
In past years, Chen Rong had done it when present; this year Third Aunt was away, but Fourth Aunt had comeâand as Fang Lingâs needlework was superb, she volunteered to embroider Yuanbaoâs outfit.
Once dressed, Mutou and Chunsheng took him out to play.
âKeep an eye on himâdonât let him soak his clothes.â
âYesâno worries.â
The servants, too, received new jackets. The fabric was plain homespun, but the cotton inside was truly thick.
The Chen family was benevolent. Since the Old Masterâs time, they had never treated servants harshly. Now that life was slowly improving, Wang Ying would not grind people down; thick cotton coats, pants, and winter shoes were prepared for everyone well in advance.
Wang Ying went in to change into his own new clothesâbought off the rack at a ready-made shop and only altered at the sleeves, fitting perfectly.
Prefectural-city outfitters differed from those in town: more styles and complete setsâalmost anything one could imagine could be found.
He wore a stone-blue, diagonal-breasted, waist-fitted robeâthe most fashionable gÄâer style nowâhair bound with a silver coronet, making him look especially upright and refined.
From behind, Chen Qingyan hugged him and kissed his cheek through the bronze mirror. âAh Ying is truly handsome.â
âSilver-tongued.â
âItâs the truth.â
Wang Ying turned, cupped Chenâs chin with both hands, and appraised him. âI think youâre the one getting more handsome. I fear when you pass as a provincial graduate, someone will seize you right off the examination list as a son-in-law.â
Chen chuckled. âHow could that be?â
âIn the operas, isnât it always like this? A poor scholar passes the provincial exam, a rich family fancies him and snatches him as a son-in-law; borrowing the father-in-lawâs power and wealth, he ascends in one leap, and the coarse wife at home is secretly killed to prevent future trouble.â
âWhere did you hear such plays?â
âNever mind where. Just sayâcould it happen?â
Chen drew Wang Ying to sit, face turning serious. âIâve heard of such things, but in our Wu Dynasty itâs difficult. Leaving aside other factors: unless one ranks in the first class among the provincial graduates, a second-class juren at best enters the Hanlin Academy as a seventh-rank compiler; advancement would take a very long time. Worse, a single misstepâoffenseâand you may be demoted, dismissed, even your home confiscated or your head displayed.â
Wang Ying took a deep breathâbefore the exams had even begun, he was already worrying over shadows.
âMoreover, who among the eminent would marry a daughter to such a man now? Unless thereâs special alliance, no one would set sights on a poor scholar. Merchant families mightâbut abandoning a coarse-wife for a merchant bride brings no benefit to oneâs career and leaves a stain. Best not.â
âListen to youâtruly taking it seriously.â
âOf course I am, Ah Ying. Iâm serious about you.â
Wang Ying found it cloying, yet warm in his heart. âUnderstood. I wonât tease you with that again.â
They headed together to the east room. Madam Li and Qingyun were stringing copper coins. This year hadnât been easyâsince everyone had followed them so far, they planned to give the servants larger New Yearâs rewards.
Back home, they had given half a string at yearâs end. This year, Madam Li took ten taels from her private savingsâone full string per person.
Wang Ying and Chen Qingyan sat to help string the coins. One string was a thousand cash; once finished, it weighed heavily in the handâa real heft.
Soon, Chen Qingsong came in. âMother, why string so many copper coins?â
âItâs New Yearâhanding out rewards so folks can buy food and clothing.â
âWouldnât small silver ingots be more convenient?â
Madam Li said, âYou donât understand. Silver is precious, but one tael is only as big as a thumb padâtoo light in the hand. Copper cash feels better and spends easier.â
This was the wisdom of the ancientsâthey knew how servants thought.
After the strings were prepared, Chen Qingyan called all the servants in. Steward Chen needed no mentionâbeyond the one string, Wang Ying would privately give him more.
Then Aunt Chen and Nurse Zhang who looked after Yuanbao, and also Chen Ershun, Ma Zhandong, Tian Ju, and Chen Fangâeach received a string.
The two Huang boys also received a string. Mutou and Chunsheng, of course, were not left outâeach a string.
After the division, Huang Baiguan tugged his brother forward, then dropped to their knees to kowtow. âMaster, we canât accept this money. Youâve taken us in and fed usâhow could we still take your money?â
Sensible children. Wang Ying motioned for them to stand. âAfter the New Year, Baiguan will be fifteen. Though your father entrusted you to me, youâre not my servants; so Iâve never assigned you regular work. Itâs a good time to ask: what plans do you two have?â
Huang Qianguan looked up at his brother; Baiguan gathered his courage. âI plan to take my brother to a martial hall to train. Once weâve learned, weâll stay by the Master and Second Master to guard themâlike Uncle Chen Guang.â
Wang Ying was surprised. He had not expected the brothers to make such a plan.
At home, they couldnât help much; even watching Yuanbao was mostly handled by Mutou and Chunsheng. To freeload long-term would breed resentmentâso better to carve out a path of their own.
A few days ago, Baiguan had heard that a martial hall in the city was recruiting pupilsâroom and board covered and ten cash a monthâbut in exchange they had to give the hall ten years of service after learning before they could leave.
He thought it suited them. They had few other means; if they learned some skill, they could serve the Chen householdâor find work elsewhere and stand on their own.
Wang Ying said, âIf youâve decided, then after the New Year, weâll send you to a martial hall in the prefectural city. But training is bitterâare you prepared to endure it?â
The two kowtowed. âRest assured, sirâweâll endure any hardship!â
The flood had taken their kin, but not their will. Wang Ying esteemed them more for it.
âThis is the Old Madamâs New Yearâs giftâtake it.â
Madam Li nodded. âA gift from elders mustnât be refused. Take it.â The boys accepted the coins and withdrew.
As for Liang An, who had come with Master Liang, and Chen Guang, the retainer sent by Chen Jing, they should not by rights be givenâbeing not household servants.
But Wang Ying treated all alikeâeach received a string.
Liang An, much the same age as Steward Chen, grinned to show all his teeth. âThereâs some for me too?â
âFor good fortune. May Uncle Liang be healthy in the New Year.â
âDonât dareâbeing called âUncleâ by you and the Master is plenty. Liang An is enough.â
âYou deserve it. Youâve looked after me and the two younger brothers along the wayâplease accept this small token.â
âAll right, Iâll take it.â
When handing it to Chen Guang, he said nothingâjust nodded as he accepted.
Chen Guang spoke little, reserved and unwilling to chat. With formidable skill at his back, Wang Ying always kept a careful distanceâbest not to provoke this ancient-era bodyguard-spy.
Once the servantsâ rewards were done, the elders began gifting the juniors.
As the eldest, Master Liang started by showering gifts. Of the brocades heâd brought from Yangzhou, after setting aside two bolts for Assistant Prefect Wang, the remaining six he gave one eachâto everyone, even little Yuanbao.
Such things were truly preciousâone bolt often cost several hundred strings, and were sometimes unavailable even for a price. All received them with deep bows to the old gentleman.
Next was Madam Liâmore practical: one red pouch each, containing a five-tael silver ingot.
Yuanbao was too young; Wang Ying accepted on his behalf.
Finally came Fang Ling. She had the servants carry in a wooden chestâfilled with items carefully chosen by the couple.
âNext year is the imperial examâyou must all strive. These Que Scholar inkstones were specially sought by Brother Jingâmay they help you win first rank in one stroke.â
Each person took the heavy inkstone and gave thanks. Donât underestimate these slabsâthose who donât know would call them black rocks; those who do know that the stone came from Kunlun in the northern marchesâexceptionally hard and rare. Carving them takes a year for two inkstones at most.
Master Liang eyed one. âFine things indeed. Had I owned one back then, perhaps what followed would not have happened.â
Wang Ying already knew Master Liangâs story from Chen Qingyanâthat year a half-brother had switched his inkstone for a layered one hiding prewritten cheats.
When treachery sprouts within oneâs own family, it is hard to guard against.
After distributing to the others, they produced a set of Hetian jade jewelry for Qingyun. In Shanzhou, Hetian jade was a specialty; prices varied with quality.
This set was clearly exquisiteâfine, smooth white jade: a hairpin, a pair of bangles, and a pendant.
When it was Wang Yingâs turn, Fourth Aunt lifted out a box with a secretive smile. âThis is a special gift prepared by your Fourth Uncleâguess what it is?â
Wang Ying shook his headâhow could he guess?
She opened it slowly. Inside lay half a box of seeds.
Four or five kinds were mixed togetherâbut not beyond a student of agronomy. At a glance, he recognized among them chili pepper seeds!
âWhere did these come from?â
âWhen your Fourth Uncle served in Laizhou, he befriended many sea merchants. These were shipped from overseas. We donât know how to plant themâso we thought to give them to you to try.â
This was precisely Wang Yingâs weaknessâand delight. He quickly accepted, with thanks.
Little Yuanbao, standing by, waited and waited without receiving anything. He pouted and whispered, âDid Fourth Grandma forget Yuanbao?â
All burst into laughter. Fang Ling hurried to scoop him up and kiss him. âHow could I forget my good boy? Fourth Grandma prepared this.â
She produced a large jar of milk candiesâa Shanzhou specialty, handmade by herdsmen, rich with dairy sweetnessâchildrenâs absolute favorite.
In a chorus of happy voices, they welcomed the New Year.
Footnotes
- String (č´Ż/串): 1 string = roughly 1,000 cash coins, often threaded together for ease of carry; weight conveys a sense of âsubstanceâ vs. light silver.
- Beggarâs Bride trope: A common opera/fiction motif of poor scholars marrying into wealth post-examâhere discussed and dismissed within the dynastyâs bureaucratic realities.
- Hetian jade (ĺç°ç): Highly prized nephrite jade; quality varies widely; fine white jade commands very high prices.
- Que inkstone (éç ): High-grade inkstones; in this story, carved from hard northern âblack stoneâ akin to Kunlun stone, symbolizing scholarly excellence.