WSMTATMC C140
by berryChapter 140
Liu Changyi came straight from the yamen to the Chen household.
Wang Ying, seeing him arrive, quickly called Qinghuai, Qingsong, and Lin Sui to go out and discuss the matter together.
In a private room at a teahouse, Wang Yingâs face was grave and shadowed with fatigue. He had not slept a wink last night, only slipping into the experimental field for a turn, leaving a note for Chen Qingyanâso that, if he entered, he would see it.
âAny news of Qingyan?â
Liu nodded. âIâve just come from the yamen. Elder Brother is held alone in a single cell. Itâs quite clean inside, and thereâs no need to worry about food. Father specifically told them to look after himâthey wouldnât dare slack.â
âThatâs goodâŠâ Wang Ying had never gone through such a thing in either life. Last night, thoughts ran wild, dragging in those ancient dramasâwronged men in prison, tortured with finger-press boards and the likeâuntil his heart thudded in fear. Hearing this, he finally relaxed a little.
Lin Sui asked, âWhen can Cousin be released?â
âThat must wait until the coroner finishes the autopsy. If it is truly poisoning, theyâll have to determine what poison, and whether it came from the popsicle. Only when itâs confirmed the popsicle had nothing to do with it can he be released.â
Wang Yingâs face darkened again. In an age without advanced techniques, investigations could take six or seven days at the shortest, longer by far at the longest. If Qingyan were kept inside all that time, what about schooling?
âI know whoâs behind this,â he said, âbut thereâs no evidence yet.â
The others all turned to Wang Ying.
âThe ice dealer in the cityâWei Linshui.â
âHow did Sister-in-law figure it out?â asked Qinghuai.
Wang Ying explained how he had noticed it was the same group stirring up trouble, then sent men to shadow them quietly.
âTian Ju and Ma Zhandong heard it with their own earsâthe man said he was ordered by Wei Linshui to cause trouble. When they saw our shop unaffected, they came up with this filthy trick!â
That set them all aflame. âIs this true?!â
âTrue as steel. The man being shadowed is named Wan Liang, lodging off Zhenghe Street. If we can seize him, we should be able to extract a confession.â
âIâll go tell Father the full account,â said Liu. âItâs a serious matter.â
â
Three days later, the autopsy results were outâit was indeed death by poisoning. There was a good deal of undigested food in the stomach; rats that ate the remains died soon after.
But with no instruments in this era, and a popsicle melting once swallowed, it was impossible to determine what caused the poisoning.
The deceased was named Yan Er, twenty-four, with no familyâonly one relative, the elder brother Yan Da who mourned that day.
Called to the yamen, Yan Da trembled inwardly.
A clerk asked the time and course of his brotherâs poisoning, and which physician had been summoned.
Yan Da answered one by one, insisting that the stomach pain began only after the popsicle.
The clerk glanced up as he wrote. In fact, these past days the constables had canvassed the neighborhood. Yan Da got on poorly with his brother. The younger was simpleâwit stunted to that of a four- or five-year-oldâsoiling himself even at this age.
Their father had tended the younger while he lived. Though the boy was foolish, his clothes were always clean, his hair combed neat.
After the old man died, Yan Erâkept by Yan Daâoften went hungry. His trousers were fouled with urine and feces, foul-smelling enough to send passersby skirting away.
The coroner also found sores and rashes on the legs and buttocksâlong-term damp trousers had done it. Though the body had been washed, it was clear his life was no good.
The clerk did not believe for a moment that the elder would âbuy a popsicleâ for the younger.
But pressure from the Assistant Prefect urged a quick close. The clerks dared say little more and wrote in the record: âPoisoning from eating a popsicle.â
â
Leaving the yamen, Yan Da hurried to the Wei household.
Within the Wei compound, Wei Linshui, in a light gauze robe, lounged on a luohan bed leafing through account books.
The heat had brought brisk trade at the ice store. The old Master Song had died, and he had ordered hundreds of blocks to chill the body. In a few days, Wei had pocketed over a hundred taels.
Counting the money, Wei mused: fortune lies in the richâif only a few more died this summer.
Hurried footsteps sounded outside. A boy came to report, âMaster, a man named Yan Da seeks you on business.â
âWhatâs he come for?â Wei frowned. âHave him wait in the side hall.â
âYes.â
Unhurried, rolling walnut beads fast through his fingers, Wei entered the side hall not long after. âBrother Yan.â
Yan Da sprang up. âBoss WeiâŠâ
âSit. What brings you?â
âWasnât it settled? Why did the yamen summon me to speak?â
âYou told it as I instructed?â
Yan Da nodded vigorously. âYesâpoisoned to death.â
âGood. Iâve smoothed things. Someone will bring you two strings shortly.â
âGoodâgood, good.â Yan Da brightened at the word of money. Wei had given him ten taels for the scene alreadyâmore to come after. If this came once a monthâŠ
Wei read his thoughts and snorted softly. âMy money isnât easy to earn. Take it, and do the job right. Otherwise⊠I have other ways.â
Cold sweat broke over Yan Daâs back. He abandoned his little schemes at once. âBoss Wei, be assuredâthis small one wonât breathe a word!â
Leaving Weiâs, Yan Da wiped his brow. This âWater Ratâ earned the nameâvile and vicious. With this money in hand, heâd better avoid dealings with the man hereafter.
â
Ordinarily, the case would have been closed at this point.
It was not the first time Wei had done such a thing, and past attempts had succeededâhe thought this one would fell the Chens as easily.
Unfortunately, he had provoked Chen Qingyan. Leaving aside Wang Yingâs and Liang Boqingâs ties, Chen himself had taken first both at the prefectural and academy exams. The court valued such talent; they would not close a case lightly.
With Master Liu beating the drum as well, things soon turned.
The clerks seized Wan Liang at a gambling den. Without resorting to severe punishmentâonly a few frightsâWan confessed everything. Heâd been paid to do a jobâhardly the worst of crimesâat most a few strokes. He would not shield anyone.
He not only named Wei as the man who paid him to stir trouble, but also the matter of hiring Yan Da to frame Mi Xue.
The prefectural yamen immediately sent men to seize Yan Da.
Wei did not yet know heâd been exposed. That night he personally carried a basket of silver to visit the Assistant Prefect of Jizhou. He knocked for ages with no answer; at last a porter poked out his head. âMaster has retired. Come tomorrow.â
Wei grinned. âIâve brought some local specialties for His Honor.â
âMaster takes nothing. Go home!â The door slammed shut.
Wei, rebuffed, sensed something amiss. The Assistant Prefect was usually a man whose eyes lit at coin, a man who âchewed meat and left no boneââhow was he suddenly so clean?
Anxiety stirred. He rubbed his temples, forced down the unease, climbed into his palanquin, and hurried home.
Before dawn the next morning, the Wei gates thundered. A squad of clerks stood outside.
âIs this the residence of Wei Linshui?â
The boy, startled, ran to report. Wei woke in a fright; before he could dress, he was escorted to the yamen.
All the way, he spoke softly, seeking any hint of wind. The bailiffs said not a word; his heart went cold.
At the yamen, the sight of Wan Liang and Yan Da kneeling broke the last of his hope. His legs gave, and he fell to his knees.
Before long, the Prefect, Assistant Prefect, and clerk entered to hear the case.
Wei looked toward Assistant Prefect Zhao. He had sent the man no small sums over the years, and more than once, Zhao had âhelped.â He thought it might be so again.
But Zhao did not glance his way. From start to finish, he kept his head down or turned aside.
Soon, Chen Qingyan was brought in as well. Being a licentiate, he did not kneel, but bowed with clasped hands to the court.
âIs the man below Wei Linshui?â
âThis small one is he.â
âYou are accused of deliberately framing others. What say you?â
âThis small one⊠is notâŠâ
âWan Liangârepeat yesterdayâs account, from start to finish.â
Wan Liang, trembling, repeated what he had saidâincluding Weiâs instruction to have Yan Da slander Mi Xue.
âWe ask you,â the Prefect said, âwhy did you tell Wan to stir trouble at their door?â
âThis small one⊠merely envied their business. I did nothing else but that!â
Yan Da also knocked his head and cried injustice. âMy brother truly did die of a bamboo-tube popsicle from their shop!â
âWe call Wang Ying to the hall.â
Wang Ying was brought up and at once saw Qingyan by the side. A few days in holding had not left him haggardâhis robe clean, his hair neatâand Wangâs heart eased.
âThis commoner Wang Ying greets Your Honors.â
âWang Ying, you accuse Wei Linshui of hiring men to frame you with a poisoning. Have you evidence?â
âThis commoner has.â Wang turned his head. âYou say, over and over, that you bought a bamboo-tube popsicle at our shop on the ninth of the fifth month to give your brother. Can you produce that tube?â
Yan Da blinked, then shook his head. âYou throw that out after eatingâwho keeps a bamboo tube?â
Wang had expected it. âThen tell usâwhere did you buy it?â
âAt your shop, of course!â
âCan you be certain? Not bought outside? Or from someone else?â
Yan bit down, âAt your shop. I queued a long time!â
âOn the ninth of may,â Wang said, âour shop happened to be closed. The neighboring shopkeepers can all testify. I ask Your Honors to investigate.â
Yan continued to wriggle. âThen I misremembered. It wasâit was the eighth!â
âCan a popsicle last a night without melting?â
He sputteredâand rolled his eyes and fainted. Two bailiffs sloshed him with cold water, and he came round.
The Prefect slapped the bench. âYan Daâconfess!â
Shaking, Yan cried out, âI confess! It was on Boss Weiâs orders that I poisoned my brother, then had his body carried to Mi Xueâs door to frame themâŠâ
At that, Wei burst. âHe lies! It was he himself who thought his brother a burden and drugged him!â