WSMTATMC C82
by berryChapter 82
Sensing his discipleâs uncertainty, Master Lu nodded. âThis is the very âForemost Talent of Jiangnanâ you often mentionâLiang Liufang.â
Liu Changyi lost his composure, and his gaze toward Chen Qingyan and the others turned fervent. He turned and knelt before Master Liang. âThis junior greets the great scholar!â
âAh, I donât deserve itâplease rise.â
âIâve read your collected poems and essays. That lineââI do not know how high the blue sky is or how thick the yellow earth; I only feel the moonâs chill and the sunâs warmth, both consuming human yearsââit is truly stunning. I have always⊠always admired you!â Note 1
Master Liang knew his own strengths. That poem, Bitter Daylight Short, was something he wrote at nineteen; many scholars had first heard of him through it.
Old Master Lu stroked his beard with a chuckle. âLiufang, how long will you be in Jizhou?â
âAbout half a month, then we head to Laizhou.â
âThen let me prevail upon an old friendship. In these days, give my disciple some pointers. Heâll take the provincial exam next yearâperhaps heâll be a classmate of your students.â
Liang did not refuseâthis trip was meant to broaden his disciplesâ horizons, after all.
âIâll bring them to the academy these days. If any wish to listen, they may come. And I must trouble Master Lu to guide my three as well.â
âAs long as you donât mind this old man.â
Chen Qingyan and the others were both nervous and overjoyedâhow could they possibly mind receiving Master Luâs instruction?
The two elders fell into reminiscing, while the younger ones were waved off to read.
The library held many rare editions unseen elsewhereâbetter to read as much as possible while they had the chance.
Liu Changyi followed close by, introducing shelves and sections, his face full of envy. To be Master Liangâs disciplesâthese three must be extraordinary!
In truth, Chen Qingyan had an uncertain sense of his own ability. He had studied under Liang for two years, and self-studied for a year after being expelled from the exams.
In that time, he felt he had advanced rapidly. Yet, having never competed, he didnât know his levelâonly that he ought to be a little stronger than an average xiucai.
So, learning that Liu Changyi already held the rank of provincial student (bingsheng), he set his posture very low, almost speaking to him as a junior and asking about the academy. It made Liu Changyi quite uncomfortable.
In his impression, Master Liang was a proud talent who disdained the mediocre; therefore, his disciples must be brilliant and naturally aloof. But these young menâwhy were they more well-behaved than the academyâs own students?
Every question came with honorificsâhe felt embarrassed by their deference.
The halo of awe cracked a littleâŠ
Elsewhere, Liang Boqing and Lu Zhongqi talked on excitedly. Ten years apart had left them with too much to say.
âDo you remember Zhang Yaozhi?â Lu asked.
âI do. What of him now?â
âHe entered the capital. He now sits as Minister of Rites and has entered the Grand Secretariatâone close to the throne.â
Liang gasped. âOnly ten years to enter the Secretariat?â
âThatâs why heâs formidable. You praised him then, saying he had the talent of a prime minister. Turns out your eye for people was better than most.â
âI donât understand the court, but I did think he wasnât made for small ponds. I didnât expect to be proven right.â
Lowering his voice, Lu asked, âThese three disciples of yoursâthey must be remarkable as well?â
Liang waved it off. âThey have far to go.â
âIf you took them on, they canât be ordinary.â
âCompared to them, Iâd rather take a geâer as a disciple.â
âA geâer?â Lu was surprised.
âHeâs this eldest discipleâs husband. That little geâerâs mind and breadth of view surpass these threeâs. Heâs also skilled in agricultureâhis improved seed stock has caught the eye of the Grand Minister of Agriculture. A rare talent.â
âTo earn your praiseânow Iâm truly curious.â
âPity heâs a geâer and cannot serve as an official.â
Both men sighed. In Wu Dynasty custom, geâer were forbidden from holding office; to break that taboo was treason, punishable by deathâno one dared risk their life.
Liang brought up another old friend. âWhat of Qian Muzhou? I thought to visit him these few days.â
Qian Muzhou was gifted in calligraphyâhis running script was peerless, though he was eccentric. Liang had once asked him for a few inscriptions.
Lu paused. âQian Muzhou⊠passed away years ago.â
âMuzhou is gone?!â
âYes. Six or seven years now.â
âHe was younger than meâhow did it happen so suddenly?â
âThey say he drank too much at a tavern, fell from an upper floor, and diedâŠâ
Liang hissed softly, sorrowing. A great calligrapher, gone so early.
âThese days his works are worth fortunes. I hear people privately pay high pricesâten gold for a foot of paper. Alas, I didnât know him well then and never had him inscribe anythingâotherwise, Iâd be rich on just that.â
Liang didnât mention that they had in fact been close for a time, composing poems together in those days. He simply sighed, âAll the more reason to cherish what remainsâkeep mice from nibbling them.â
They talked straight past noon and took their midday meal at the academy canteen, bringing dishes back for the two teachers.
Benches and tables were set; each meal came with soup, both meat and vegetable dishes, and millet rice and coarse buns for staplesânot bad.
After lunch, the younger men continued to soak in the library, while Liang and Lu went out to visit another old friend.
âQingyan, take the two of them and read here. Weâll be back soon.â
âYes, sir.â
But the two old men didnât return for most of the day; dusk fell and they still werenât back.
Since lamps and flames were forbidden in the library, reading had to stop after dark. Liu Changyi took them outside to chat.
âWhere are you all from? How old are you?â
âTwenty,â said Qingyan. âQinghuai sixteen, Qingsong thirteen. Weâre from JizhouâLongquan Countyâs small town.â
âLongquan CountyâŠâ Liu thought. âYou have a famous spring there, donât you?â
They nodded. Qinghuai added softly, âThe Mountain Spring Travelogue wrote Dragon Spring Rhapsodyâthat was our teacher.â
âOhâright, right. Iâm not a Jizhou native either. My hometown is Tianyang Countyânot far from you. I passed xiucai there and later came to the academy.â
Qingyan blinked. âMy uncle is from Tianyang as well.â
âMay I ask his surname?â
âLiâsingle name Cheng.â
âLi Bingchen is your cousin?â
Qingyan nodded vigorously. âMm!â
Liu laughed. âHahahaâhe and I were classmates! I never thought youâd have that connection!â
From acquaintances to kinsmen by friendship, they warmed quickly to each other. Relaxed now, Liu asked more candidly, âWhen did you take the county exam?â By Master Liangâs disciples, they ought to have shoneâin the least, taking first place at the county. Why had he never heard of them?
âWe two are still tongsheng,â said Qingyan. âMy youngest brother hasnât even taken the childrenâs exam.â
âWhy not?â
âWe were delayed. Qinghuai attempted the county exam last year, but a severe spring chill struckâhe fell ill midway. This year is a major exam year, so we plan to take it together.â
âThe spring chill last year was brutal. They say some candidates even froze to death!â
They all sighed. Qinghuai added, âThe county exam is one thingâbut I hear the provincial exam has three sessions of three days, nine days sealed insideâhard to endure.â
âIndeed,â Liu said. âLuck matters too. The provincial takes place in mid-seventh monthâsweltering heat. If your seat is near the latrine, hope is slim.â
âWhy?â
âThinkâover a thousand candidates relieving themselves there for days, and the August heat. The stench can fell a manâwho could still concentrate on writing?â
They all felt queasyâand more awed by the ordeal.
âLetâs hope none of us gets a âstink seat.ââ As he spoke, Liang and Lu returned, and they stood to greet them.
âCome, go rest. Weâll return tomorrow.â
They bid Liu farewell and went back to the relay compound.
Master Liang, weary from the day, retired early. The others returned to their rooms.
There were many rooms; each had a private chamberâconvenient for Qingyan to enter the experimental field.
He barred his door, opened the fieldâand entered to the sound of Yuanbao wailing.
âWhat happened?â
Wang Ying stood there with a feather duster. âThe little rascal tried to sneak into the field again today. If I hadnât noticed in time, heâd have set Mother into another panic!â
By day, heâd been playing with the two new boys whenâsuddenlyâhe vanished.
Chunsheng burst into tears; Mutou was frightened too, but level-headed. He didnât rush to the old lady, but ran to Wang Ying instead and explained.
Wang Ying knew at once where the boy had gone. After calming the two, he entered the field and plucked Yuanbao back out.
With Li Shi present, he hadnât been able to scold him, so he brought him in at night to lecture him sternly.
Qingyan hardened his expression. âDidnât we tell you last time you arenât allowed to come in by yourself?â
âDo you know your mistake?â Wang Ying lifted the feather duster to scare him.
âYuanbao kn-knowsâŠâ The little one smeared tears across his face, aggrieved.
Qingyanâs heart pinched, but he could not coddleâthe matter was too serious. If word ever got out they had a place like a paradise, men would kill for it.
âFrom now on, you may only come in when Ah Fu brings you. If you come alone again, Daddy will spank your bottom!â
âWaaahââ Seeing both fathers ready to punish him, the boy plopped down and howled.
But after crying a long while and seeing no comfort, he got up on his own, shuffled to Wang Ying, hugged his leg, and hiccuped, âAh Fu⊠Yuanbao⊠knows wrong⊠Ah Fu holdâŠâ
Wang Yingâs resolve loosened. âHave you remembered?â
âRememberârememberâŠâ
He wiped the tears and picked him up. A small bundle nestled in his arms, and guilt pricked himâwas he too harsh? The boy was only a year and a half.
Qingyan patted his shoulder. âYou did right. If we donât make it clear once, heâll cause trouble again. Let this stick in his memory so he wonât dare next time.â
Footnotes:
- âI do not know how high the blue sky is or how thick the yellow earth; I only feel the moonâs chill and the sunâs warmth, both consuming human years.â A line from Bitter Daylight Short, a classical-style poem.