WSMTATMC C48
by berryChapter 48
âLaizhou sent another letter?â
At once, Wang Ying and Chen Qingyan took it from Ershunâs hands.
Had Uncle succeeded already in reversing Qingyanâs case for the examinations?
They tore it openâbut inside there was no mention of the Imperial Exams. Instead, it spoke of an altogether different calamity.
Originally, Uncle Chen Jing was due to complete his term this year and be transferred to the capital. Yet in recent months, the Laizhou coast had suffered raids by Japanese pirates (ććŻ, wokou)âseven, eight merchant vessels plundered in succession, including an official vessel bearing the family of the Ministry of Justiceâs chief minister.
This enraged the throne. The Emperor, furious, punished all involved; as Laizhou prefect, Chen Jing was implicated and demoted prematurely, reassigned as Prefect of Shanzhou.
Though the rank remained the same (Sixth Grade prefect), Shanzhou was a barren hinterland, âa place where even birds would not defecate,â in contrast to fertile coastal Laizhou. One prosperous and vital, the other desolate and poorâthe difference stark.
Seeking to make achievements in such a wasteland was near impossible; Chen Jingâs career, they feared, had met a dead end.
The letterâs chief purpose, then, was a personal plea: that his only son Chen Qinghuai, age fifteen, already a tongsheng, should return to the Chen ancestral home. Next year he must attempt the county exam, but by law registration must be in his native longquan county. Travel to and from Shanzhou was too far. Thus he begged his nephew, Chen Qingyan, to shelter and guide the boy for a time.
Accompanying Qinghuai would be his old teacher, Master Liang Boqing, described as man of talent but âeccentric in temper.â His uncle hoped the family would be tolerant.
The two looked up from the letter.
Qingyan, face still, seemed little ruffled. âOur new house is ready. Letâs see whether they prefer to reside with us on the estate, or in the town house.â
âGood. Weâll prepare two chambers in the villa, two more in town,â said Wang Ying.
That eveningâs feast stretched until nightfall. Walking home, Ying felt the faint sorrow in his partner. He hooked a finger against his hand.
Qingyan clasped back, sighing. âThough I knew from the start hope was thin⊠I did not think it would vanish so soon. But no matter. Iâve long accepted it. In this life, the keju may never be mine.â
Ying answered gently, âLet me teach you farming and seedâbreeding instead. If we manage these lands well, is that not also success?
âAnd rememberâeven if crowned as juren, even as an official, safety is not assured. See your uncleâdecades of toil, yet with one disaster, stripped at once. At the capital, it is worse. One careless word may mean losing your head.â
Qingyan laughed at his comic expressions. âMe? I never dreamed beyond passing licentiate. To speak of juren or the capital is fantasy.â
âThen we only lose the scholarâs robe. Nothing too dire.â
âBrother is right. A title is not worth my grief. Tomorrow, let us return to town. Put the rear courtyard in order and furnish the villa.â
âGood.â
Three months it had been, since they fled to the estate. Returning to town still tightened Qingyanâs chest.
At least, in the cart, he need greet no one. Only at their own gate did he dare breathe.
Madam Li had waited since dawn. At sight of her son, tears filled her eyes; and his own spilled as they embraced.
âUnfilial childâthese months, I let you worry,â he murmured.
âYou are unharmed? Then Mother is content.â She checked every limb, only settling once sure he was whole.
Within the hall, Wang spoke of Chen Jingâs letter. âOur cousin and his mentor will stay for a while. We plan to repair the back courtyard, and order furniture for the villa so they may choose.â
âArrange it as you see.â
âWill you two remain at the estate henceforth?â Madam Li asked.
âYes, Mother. But Iâll return often.â
âThen fine. It is near enough. As long as you come home regular.â
âAnd where is Third Aunt?â
âShe is ill. Her old head pains flared up. Nights sleepless. I did not tell her yet of your return.â
âWeâll call on her soon,â Ying said.
âGo rest in the rear. Iâll send food.â
Their courtyard stood clean, tended daily. Last yearâs vegetable plot sprouted again; some melon vines already grew, needing pruning.
Ying could not help himselfâsleeves rolled, fussing.
âSit. These greens no oneâs eaten,â Qingyan said.
âOnce replanted in our secret field, we can move them to the villa plot.â
Soon they worked side by side, Qingyan deftly transplanting after several lessons.
Since the experimental fieldâs upgrade, entrance was easierâno longer needed overt activation; Wang had only to think, and he and Qingyan would step inside.
Meals came. They washed and dined under the stone table.
âThis fish is well stewed!â Ying exclaimed.
âIf you like, Iâll learn from Aunt Chen. Cook it for you next,â offered Qingyan.
âBut arenât scholars supposed to keep far from kitchens?â
He quoted solemnly: âMencius said: The gentleman feels pity at slaughter. He cannot bear to hear the cries of creatures, nor eat their flesh. Therefore, he keeps his distance. That teaching speaks of mercy, not laziness. To twist it as excuse for idleness is fraud.â
âWell thenânext time you cook the fish.â
âIâll even kill it. Did you not say you faint at fish stench?â
Wang grinned. âThen by your mercy, youâre no gentleman.â
âSt. sages taughtâthe gentleman does not fuss over trifles.â
âHehâcheek! Trying to sweetâtalk me like a girl.â
Later, they called on Third Aunt. Indeed, she had grown gaunt. âWhy didnât you say you returned?â she whispered.
âWe came today only. Hearing you were ill, we came direct.â
âOld affliction. Since Suiâs birth. If I catch a chill, my head pounds. Pills suffice.â
âAnd the doctor?â
âAlready came. Prescription taken.â
They sat briefly. She urged rest.
Back in their rooms, just as they lay down, their younger brother rushed in. Chen Qingsong burst through shouting, âBrother! Sisterâinâlaw!â
Stern, Qingyan barked, âStand straight! You, a scholar, carry yourself poorly.â
Chastened, Qingsong saluted properly. Ever since their fatherâs passing, Qingyan had served parentâs role; thus he heeded him deeply.
âYouâve entered the Jiang school?â
âYes, elders asked anotherâsince the first expelled me.â
But that teacher, Jiang Guangzhi, though decent at primers, had never risen beyond tongsheng. He could not improve Qingsong much.
âIn some days, both of you come to the estate. I will teach also.â
His face lit. âTruly? Excellent!â
âNot to playâbut to study hard. To pass licentiate early and enter county school.â
âIâll try, Brother!â
Indeed, he suffered pressures too. Since the scandal, their house was mocked among scholars. He had tried to argue onceâoverwhelmed each time. So now he endured. Though rumors dulled, shame still stung, robbing him of friends.
âAt least with Cousin Qinghuaiâs arrival, Iâll have a companion.â
Qingyan recalled the boy, last seen at his fatherâs funeral. Three years younger, but raised under Uncleâs eyeâbroad learning. His company would serve.
âAndâŠone more.â Qingsong hushed his voice. âThe Zhang licentiateâthe one who wronged youâheâs gone mad.â
âWhat?â Qingyan blinked.
Wang too startled: Had I driven him mad when I threatened him?
âThey say he went to the county yamen againâyet returned raving. He sits daily at the crossroads, cursing, soiling himself in public.â
Hearing, Qingyan only sighed. He tested Qingsongâs studies, then dismissed him.
Lying together that night, Ying asked softly: âDo you still hate him?â
ââŠBoth yes, and no. For ending my exam life, I cannot forgive. Yet he too has lost all, fallen into filth. That is balance enough. From now, Iâll treat it as if I never knew him.â
By Aprilâs bloom, a carriage halted outside Chen gates.
Alighting was a teenage boy of fifteen, and a slim, scholarly elder.
They were Chen Qinghuai, only son of Chen Jing, and his teacher Liang Boqing.
Qingyan did not yet knowâthis youthâs arrival was about to change his lifeâs course.
notes
- : Tongsheng (ç«„ç) â Literally âchild student,â the very lowest level of exam candidate, who has passed no formal degree but can proceed to attempt county exams.
- Keju (ç§äžŸ): Imperial Chinese civil service examination system; levels ran from tongsheng â xiucai â juren â jinshi (progressively higher).
- Wokou (ććŻ): Japanese pirates who raided coastal China from the 14thâ16th centuries, referenced here as a periodâflavored plot device.