WSMTATMC C46
by berryChapter 46
Seated together in the muleâcart, the two clasped hands so tightly that neither could bear to let go.
âIn these two days that I was absentâdid you manage alone?â
âIt wasâŠfine. Only, I missed you terribly.â
Wang Ying chuckled at the unvarnished confession, flicking his forehead with a finger. âLook at youâwhen did you learn such honeyed words?â
Qingyan blinked with wide eyes. âThey are not honeyed wordsâthey are plain truth.â
Their gazes met, and soon they both broke into laughter, joy spilling over, filling the cart. How near was too near? There never seemed enough closeness.
âHow is home? My motherâs health?â
âQuite well. Only worried for you. I told her that once our country house is built, we will invite them all to stay a few days.â
Wang Ying paused and added, âBricks and timber are ordered, within days theyâll be hauled up. After lunch I mean to ask Steward Chen to comeâletâs walk together and mark the ground.â
âGood. All as you decide.â
When they reached the estate, the little pup bounded out wagging tail, weaving circles of welcome round their feet. Wang Ying quickly scooped it up, lest they tread on it.
This doglet had been a gift from Chen Xiâs grandson. Of a litter of guard dogs, this was the prettiest, kept aside to present the master.
âLittle one(Xiao Yi), tonight youâre blessedâweâll stew you a bone.â
The puppy seemed to understand, yipping cheerily.
Behind, Chen Bo and Dunzi unloaded goods; Madam Li and Aunt Chen had packed plentyâso much foodstuff that, but for concern over spoilage, theyâd have sent a whole pig!
At noon, a great pot of ribs was boiled. Ying had Dunzi send a platter to the steward with message: âTell him, after eating, come up to discuss the house.â
Soon enough, Chen Xi arrived with Dunzi.
âHave you eaten, Steward? Come take more with us.â
He waved both hands. âI already have. In spring lull, our family eats only two meals a day.â
âThen sit anywayâtoo much food, itâd be waste.â
Unable to resist, he joined them. âSo the young master means to build? Have you chosen a site?â
âNorth hill, near the warm spring.â
Startled, the steward frowned. âBut that lies apartâtoo distant from the village.â
âPrecisely why. Peace is worth the walk.â
After dining, they all walked there. Even from afar one could hear rushing water.
There were three pools in all, one great steaming at nearly fifty degrees, mist curling up like fairyland; two smaller, coolerâthirty to forty. The sulfur in the water meant no snakes or pests even in summer. Another reason Wang Ying fancied it.
âThis week, spread word in the villageâwhoever is free may help. Pay ten cash a day. Letâs have it built before the grain harvest.â
âPay? Heavens, no! You call, theyâll come!â
âNot without pay. Let them work earnestly. If any slack or cheatâdrive them out.â
âBe assured, Iâll keep watch.â
On the path back, their way passed wheat fields. Ying asked: âAnd the crops we planted?â
The steward frowned. âRain has been scarce. Since New Year, no snow or rain. Shoots rise still, but if warm days pass dry, yield will suffer.â
âThen irrigate from the river.â
âWe did last year, but when drought comes, streams dry. Fields far from river, nothing can be done.â
So even here, drought loomed. Would the hybrid strain âChangfeng No. 3â he had sown endure? If so, next year heâd spread it wider.
The steward proved efficient. That very evening, he summoned villagers. Ten cash a day was fine work in idle seasonâfolk vied for places.
Elderly too decrepit were turned away. Finally, thirty strong men and a few experienced craftsmen were chosen.
By morrow, they began. First, a stone path to the secluded site. Within two days, a twoâmeter road lay from village to spring.
Then excavation began.
Wang Ying conceived a twoâstory houseâbut carpenters warned:
âWindows you marked too wide. Winter winds will kill.â
âThen make them smaller.â
âAs for two storiesâjoists must be cypress. Anything less will rot.â
In their age, no steel or concreteâthe cost doubled quickly. After consideration, Wang Ying chose simpler:
A grand courtyardâfive main rooms, two flanking, side kitchen, and servantsâ quarters. Square, solid, stately. Beside it, a pavilion for chess and tea. Hot spring water channeled into bathhouseâwhat luxury then!
By the eighth day of the third month, bricks arrived. The foundation was laid. Construction commenced!
Back in townâsince Lin Qiuâs betrothal to Cao Kun, the latter appeared near every few days.
That morning, when Wang opened the shop, in he strode with a few courier lads. They all knew the story. âBrother! Sisterâinâlaw!â they teased.
âGet along! His face is thinâdonât embarrass.â
Lin Qiu blushed scarlet, retreating into the storeroom to sort yesterdayâs leftovers.
Cao Kun only scratched his head and laughed, then approached, producing a cloth pouch.
âOn my last run to Song County, I met an old stone carver. Had him carve this little sheep for you.â
Qiuâs zodiac was sheep. The thumbâsized carving, lifelike, made him smile. âFrittering money again.â
âNot at all. I carried a letter for him; he asked no fee.â
Qiu tucked it precious into his pouch, lips twitching in shy delight. âDonât keep coming, though. Each trip costs days; arenât you weary?â
âTo see you, no weariness.â
He flushed deeper, especially when spotting siblings Qingyun and Sui giggling nearby. âMy brother and sister are watching!â
âLet them. What shame in affections?â
He stomped on his foot and fled to the ledger. Cao chuckled, leaving him peace. âI depart again soon, to Yangting. Half a monthâs road.â
Timidly, Qiu murmured, âBe carefulâŠsafe journey.â
âYes.â Cao tossed him a money pouch and left with laughs from comrades.
Qiu opened itâover ten taels of silver! He dashed after them, but they were gone, cart rolling. From the back, Cao waved: âBuy whatever pleases! And new spring robes.â
âTruly generous, Second Boss,â his men jeered.
âThatâs my betrothed. Shouldnât he have the best?â
âNot yet wedâand you already coaxing motherâinâlaw?â
Cao grinned wider. âThen turn nowâletâs greet her.â
They roared with laughter. Yet as they reached the Chen gate, laughter froze.
For there, outside, stood a man with babe on his backânone other than Lin Zhangbin, long vanished.
âYou there! Tell my wifeâI am Lin Zhangbin, her husband! Let me in!â
The porter Linzi scowled. âBack where you came. Madam will not see you.â
âShe must! I have not glimpsed my own sons in months! Divorce or not, Iâm still their father!â
âStay. Iâll inform within.â
Soon, Chen Rong emerged, standing behind the closed gate. Her voice rang cold: âThe separation deed was clearââfrom this day, never meet again.â Why come now?â
âAhâRongâŠlet me inââ
âSpare me! Do you think you may still call me thus? Begone!â
âYouâyou wrong me!â
Anger broke her voice. âWrong? Did you not once try selling our sons, for a mistressâ smile? Now your whore has turnedâso you think of us? Roll back to her!â
âI erredâŠIâll change. Bring me back. Let Fugui be raised by you as son. Let Qiu marry properly under my roofâcome home.â
She nearly laughed. âStill dreaming! You want me to rear your bastard? Get lost, or Iâll have you whipped down the street!â
He pounded the gate in rage, while the babe, hungry, wailed pitifully.
Watching grimly, Cao Kun stepped forward. âYou are Lin Zhangbin?â
âAnd who are you?â
Without answer, Cao struck bluntly, felling him unconscious. He jerked a nod to his men.
âCarry him. Back to county. Let him not darken MotherâinâLawâs door again.â
notes
- Ten cash (ćæ): roughly the wage for common laborer per dayâquite decent in slack season.
- Warm spring æž©æł: common in northern China, seen as healthful, also symbolic of wealth and retreat.
- Separation deed (ć犻äčŠ): legally binding divorce document; once signed, both parties fully severed family relations.