WSMTATMC C94
by berryChapter 94
Outside, night had already fallen, and the rain still poured without end.
The mountain was unsafe at night, and no one knew how high the waters below might rise.
Chen Xi gathered all the able-bodied men of the villageâover sixty in allâdividing them into three teams to take shifts through the night.
A day of strain and fear had left everyone exhausted; some had already lain down, their snores rising and falling in waves.
Madam Li and Chen Rong were elderlyâtired, yes, but unable to sleep, their hearts fixed on children far away.
Wang Ying lulled Yuanbao to sleep and placed him into Madam Liâs arms. âIâm stepping out for a momentârest early, both of you.â
âYes, go on.â
With so many people crammed into the cave, eating, drinking, and relieving themselves had become troublesome, so Wang Ying had ordered two makeshift latrines erected outside the cavern.
Men to the left, women and gÄâer to the right; there was no need to worry about odorâthe rain washed all away in no time.
In truth, Wang Ying intended to enter the experimental field. It was awkward to do so inside the cave, so he slipped out to a deserted spot and went in.
Inside, the field lay bathed in sun and mild air. On the table sat a noteâlikely just written by Chen Qingyan that day.
Wang Ying opened itânothing urgent, merely a brief on daily life at the prefecture school. He lifted a brush to leave his own note in reply, assuring all was well at home.
Then he checked his stores. At the moment, he had three thousand three hundred jin of wheat in the system slots, and over one thousand seven hundred jin of millet; had he not exchanged for experience last time, it would likely be over ten thousand jin now.
This round of wheat in the plots was nearly ripe; once fully harvested, it would add another three thousand jin or so. There was no fear about food.
Before coming in, he had loaded all the household medicines into the field; he hadnât yet had time to sort them. Such things were lifesaversâif sickness struck, acquiring more would be hard.
When he had finished tidying, Wang Ying hurried out. At the cave mouth he ran into the watchmen, who greeted him respectfully. âGreetings, Master.â
âYouâve toiled hard.â
âItâs nothingâour parents, wives, and children are inside. This is our duty.â
Wang Ying nodded and returned to the cavern, where the chorus of snores had merged into a single hum.
Qingyun and Lin Sui were asleep; Madam Li and Chen Rong, worried for Wang Ying, had remained awake, but fell into dozes once he came back.
Wang Ying tugged the quilt about himself, curled on the mat, and closed his eyes. He did not know how long had passed when a volley of curses jolted him awake.
âDamn your itching crotchâgo rub it on a rock outside! You dare take liberties with me? Iâll beat you to death, you shameless cur!â
âShut it, you foul-mouthed hagâdonât push your luck!â
Their shouting roused the crowd at once. Someone raised a torchâthere stood Widow Qin and Song Ming, locked in a scuffle.
Chen Xi threw on a coat and stepped forward. âWhatâs going on?â
Widow Qin said, âHe crept into my bedding while I was asleep!â
âBullâwhen did I ever climb into your bedding?â
âThen how did my sash get untied by itself? You bastard! Think because Iâve no man at home Iâm easy to bully? Iâll fight you to the end!â She snatched up a cudgel and swung at him.
Song Ming, relying on his size, wrenched the cudgel from her and swung it back. The others hurried to separate them.
Wang Ying, understanding the likely cause, rose and asked Song Ming, âWhere were you sleeping?â
Song Ming swallowed. He pointed to an empty spot nearby.
Someone said, âWasnât Song Ming sleeping outside over there just now? His bundle is still there.â
Widow Qin spat. âLying even in front of the Masterâyour gall is beyond measure!â
Seeing the lie exposed, Song Ming dropped to his knees. âI didnât do anythingâjustâŠtouched her twice.â
Chen Xi kicked him in fury. âAt a time like this, thatâs where your head is! Masterâwhat shall we do with him?â
âThrow him out.â
âWhat?â Song Ming froze.
âGet out. Youâre not staying in this cave.â
âMaster, I was wrong. Have mercyâŠâ
When he still did not move, Wang Ying signaled to several men. âDrive him out. He is not to enter again.â
Four or five men seized him at once, dragging him toward the entrance. He was notorious for petty theft in the village; most had long disliked him, and now, even at a time like this, he dared such filth.
Song Ming panicked. With rain like that, stepping out might mean death. âMaster, spare me! Please!â
Even Chen Xi pleaded, âMaster, perhaps wait until the rain stopsâotherwise thereâs nowhere outside to shelterâŠâ
âOut!â
They flung Song Ming from the cave, tossing his bundle after him.
No one had expected the Master to be so unyielding; in an instant, all became more cautious, fearful of provoking him and being cast out.
Afterward, sleep would not come. Back at their sleeping place, Madam Li said anxiously, âIn such rain, wasnât the punishment too harsh?â
Wang Ying lowered his voice. âRain like this wonât stopâif we donât kill a chicken to warn the monkeys, this place will fall into chaos. We have widows and orphans with only Steward Chen and Guan to rely onâit wonât be enough.â
Madam Liâs heart lurched. âNoâŠsurely they wonât turn on each other at a time like this?â
âWho can say?â
In his former life, Wang Ying had seen too many films and books to trust human nature without proof.
For now, with food and shelter, harmony held. But if the rain did not stop and rations ran out, hunger would make men more fearsome than beasts.
â
By the Hour of Yin, dawn approached. Light filtered through the cave mouth, softening the darkness within.
The rain outside had slackened somewhat. People rose to catch water and cook.
Tian Niu and the others went down the mountain for a look, and when they returned, they reported, âOur estateâs become a riverâcanât even see the roof-peaks anymore.â
A murmur of sighs. âWe just finished our house last yearâseventeen strings it cost. We planned to marry our son with it, and nowâitâs gone.â
âSame here. Spent half a lifetimeâs savings, and now itâs nothing.â
Chen Xi clucked around his pipe. âCan any of us be worse off than the Master? That courtyard was a beautyâand itâs gone just the same.â
Silence fell. This flood had leveled all griefâevery home equally destroyed.
Soon the millet porridge was ready. The fragrant steam drove off a little sorrow as people lined up with bowls.
Wang Ying, with a conjurerâs sleight, slipped a boiled egg from his breast and passed it to his son.
There was little suitable foodâchildren so small could not lack nutrition. Wang Ying had, at the last minute, boiled dozens of eggs from the storehouse and stashed them in the field, bringing out a few each day for his boy.
After breakfast, the women and gÄâer gathered to chatter, voices rising and falling with talk of neighbors and kin.
Madam Li and Chen Rong fretted aloud about the three youths. âHow are they now? With rain like this here, is there any in Laizhou?â
Chen Rong said, âItâs been so longâno letter either.â
Wang Ying suddenly rememberedâtonight he must remind Chen Qingyan to send letters home. They left notes to each other daily, but the elders could not see them, and worry would gnaw.
Around the Hour of Chen, shouts and scolding erupted at the cave mouth. Chen Shun rushed in. âMaster, Fatherâmany people are outsideâthey want in out of the rain!â
Wang Ying started, rose at once, and followed him out.
Outside stood more than thirty menâvillagers from the neighboring Zheng estate, among the few who had fled to the mountain; most of their village had been drowned by the flood.
One of them, who had hunted in these hills, recalled a cave and led the others in search. But the downpour and unfamiliar terrain had thwarted them yesterday.
They had no food or rain gearâcold, hungry, and desperateâwhen they ran into Song Ming, cast out from the cavern.
Song Ming had nearly given up hope, but at the sight of this crowd, a plan sprang to mind. âI know where thereâs a caveâIâll take you there! But after we find it, you must let me in!â
The leader, Zheng Qun, frowned. âIf you knew where it was, why didnât you shelter there, and why stay outside?â
âOh, donât ask! I was wronged, thatâs all.â He twisted the truth, saying the widow had tried to seduce him; when spurned, sheâd slandered him. The Master, he claimed, had cast him out without hearing the facts.
Zheng Qun said, âDonât worryâlead us there, and weâll see you sheltered.â
And so Song Ming led them to the cavern.
The sentries at the entrance naturally refused them. They werenât from the same village, and inside were all the old, the weak, the women, and the childrenâif these men came in, what if trouble began?
Soon Wang Ying came out. In the crowd, he spotted Song Ming at once and swore silently.
âThis cave is on Chen family landâour entire estate is mine; the cave is mine as well. What are you doing barging in?â
Zheng Qun stepped forward and bowed. âMaster, forgive us. The rain outside is too fierce. We only beg shelter.â
Chen Xi said, âItâs not that we refuse you. The cave is fullâthereâs no space.â
Song Ming shouted, âThereâs room! We can all fit, easy!â
Chen Xiâs gaze went cold. He had even pled for the man last nightâand this ingrate dared betray them? He ought to be beaten to death with a cudgel!
At Zheng Qunâs gesture, the men moved forward again, edging toward the entrance.
Chen Xi barked, âShun! Call out the menâIâd like to see who dares play rough before the Master!â
In moments, the estateâs men emerged, armed with hoes, mattocks, and sicklesâover a hundred strongâdriving Zheng Qunâs group back from the mouth of the cave.
They had thought there were only a few dozen inside and hoped to seize the place by force.
But to find the entire estate gathered withinâclearly prepared, with tools in handâmade them think twice. In a real fight, they were no match.
From the back, someone muttered retreat. âForget itâletâs find another shelter.â
Song Ming grew frantic. âNoâyou wonât find a better place than this!â
Zheng Qun shot him a glance. He wasnât stupidâwas he to gamble lives against a hundred men for a cave?
The group turned and headed deeper into the mountains. Song Ming stood strandedâgoing or staying seemed impossibleâthen, stamping his foot, he slunk after the Zheng villagers.