Chen Changsheng said, âYour stall is all tidied up.â
âHmmâŠâ
Yan Huanglou acknowledged, then added, âI didnât think Iâd last any longer.â
âHereâs something for you.â
Chen Changsheng spoke and placed an Elixir into Yan Huanglouâs palm.
âWhat is it?â Yan Huanglou asked.
Chen Changsheng replied, âThe Elixir for Immortality. Will you take it?â
Yan Huanglou chuckled weakly. âYou really havenât got much conscience, cough coughâŠâ
âAnd here I am, dying, while you tease me.â
Chen Changsheng asked, âRemember what I asked you before?â
âWhat?â
âTo live for a couple more years.â
Yan Huanglou thought back, pausing before saying, âThat was a joke, wasnât it?â
Silence settled over the room.
Seeing Chen Changsheng kept quiet,
Yan Huanglouâs heart skipped a beat, as if heâd realized something.
With effort, he turned his head towards Chen Changsheng.
Chen Changsheng spoke evenly, âIt wasnât a joke.â
Yan Huanglou stayed silent for a while.
Truth was, he believed. No solid proof came to mind, but he trusted Chen Changshengâs words were true.
âYouâre hardly ever this serious.â
âHmm.â
Chen Changsheng simply grunted, then added, âThat Elixir might not grant immortality, but it can extend your life by three years.â
âSo incredible?â
Yan Huanglou suddenly broke into a smile.
Chen Changsheng said, âIf you donât want it, give it back.â
âI do!â
âOf course I want it!â
Yan Huanglou tucked the Elixir closer to his body, muttering, âWho ever heard of giving something then wanting it back?â
Chen Changsheng said nothing more. Waving a hand, he rose. âHeard from Wang Sanniang that Ruyiâs sick. Iâm gonna check on her.â
âAlright,â Yan Huanglou responded.
Chen Changsheng left the room and headed to the neighboring courtyard.
The house fell silent.
Yan Huanglouâs gaze drifted to the Elixir in his palm.
He stared at it a long time, struck still by its meaning.
Wang Sanniang brought out a few treatable snacks to offer Chen Changsheng.
âNo need for formalities, Sanniang. Letâs see Ruyi first.â
âAlright, okay.â
Ruyi lay in bed, lips pale and complexion noticeably off.
An occasional cough shook her frame.
Chen Changsheng saw her and said, âThis bad?â
Wang Sanniang explained, âLast night was truly frighteningânonstop coughing, her whole face ghostly white. Saw Doctor Wang early today. Some medicine helped⊠eased it a little.â
Chen Changsheng stepped forward and placed his fingers on Ruyiâs wrist.
âBrother Chen knows medicine?â Wang Sanniang asked.
âI know a little.â
He spoke modestly, but Chen Changsheng had little real medical skill. At best, he grasped medical principles. Actual healing wasnât his expertise; but then again, saving lives wasnât limited to medicine alone.
A faint Golden Light traveled deep inside Ruyi. Instantly, her illness lay bare to him.
Just a common cold, but stubbornly fierce.
The root cause was Ruyiâs body was too weak, likely weakened by years of scarce meals. That let an ordinary cold ravage her fiercely.
âUncle Chen, is Elder Sister gonna get better soon?â Ping Anâs small voice piped up nearby.
Chen Changsheng guided a trace of Magical Power inside Ruyi, then withdrew his hand.
âYour sister will be healthy before long.â
He placed a hand reassuringly on Ping Anâs head, sending another wisp of Magical Power within him.
This Magical Power served no grand purpose. Itâd slowly reinforce their bones and flesh, mending the fragility poor nourishment caused. Small sicknesses wouldnât threaten their lives now.
Ping An nodded, relieved. âThatâs good.â
He trusted Uncle Chen completely.
Chen Changsheng stood to look at Wang Sanniang. They walked outside the room. Once outside the girlsâ hearing, he said, âDefinitely just a cold, Sanniang. Try not to fret.â
Wang Sanniang still looked uneasy. âDoctor Wang said cold too⊠But I never got this sick with one myself. Made me panicky.â
âRuyiâs illness is worse because her body was too weak. Those hungry years you mentioned likely lie behind it.â Chen Changsheng explained gently. âSheâll suffer more discomfort and need extra medicine, thatâs all. Not truly dangerous.â
âUnderstood.â Wang Sanniang breathed out, shoulders visibly relaxing. Then tears welled. ââŠJust means I failed as their motherâŠâ
Chen Changsheng said firmly, âRaising two children alone in chaotic times is hardship enough. Far harder for a woman like you. Donât carry this burden.â
Tears slipped silently down Wang Sanniangâs cheeks. She wiped them quickly, taking several steadying breaths.
âThank you, Brother Chen.â
âI did little,â Chen Changsheng dismissed. âIf thereâs nothing else, I should head back. Also⊠best Ruyi stays indoors awhile. Once the sunâs strong, let it warm her. Shield her from cold breezes.â
âYes, yes⊠Iâll walk you out.â
âJust few steps. See yourself back.â
Chen Changsheng left the Wang home, returning to his own courtyard first. He pushed the reassembled stall deeper into the main room.
His step stalled. His focus shifted towards Yan Huanglouâs shut door.
He stood briefly, motionless, before walking towards that door.
Inside lay deeper stillness.
Yan Huanglou bent unmoving over the aged tableâs scarred wood, as though deep asleep.
Chen Changsheng reached the table. His eyes found a half-written letter laid open.
Beside the unfinished words rested one Unconsumed Elixir⊠and the old Folding Fan.
He hadnât taken it.
Chen Changsheng picked up the letter.
Yan Huanglou knew words; could write. Years dulled fluency, though. The letters sprawled unevenly, clumsy across the page.
Written faintly, it read:
> [Changsheng,
> Thanks for the Elixir.
> You claimed it adds three years; yet I refused to swallow it. Not disbelief. Truth is⊠long ago, I knew you werenât ordinary. But some truths lose their charm spoken aloud. Maybe you felt the same?
> I often wonder what life truly holds. Wealth? Fame? Or⊠hollow nothings? All of it feels empty sometimes. Memories seem more real to meâold faces, past moments. Like the decades wasted chasing down this Fanâs historyâŠ
> But those faces faded one by one. Things worthy of remembrance grew fewer by the day. Thatâs when âsolitudeâ truly sank its claws in. Meeting you eased my later years. Someone to talk to mattersâsomeone human. Even if your strangeness often baffled me, you remain the sole friend my fading twilight knew.
>
> Yet I understand: freedom calls your spirit. Qingshan City is too small a cage for you. Iâve lived long enough⊠grown weary⊠tired. I just waited patiently for this final quiet day.
> Changsheng, immortality⊠must surely tire you?
> Deep down, I knew all along. Playfulness just⊠hid discomfort, I suppose. Made it easier to tease holes in your gravity.]
At this point, ink smudged wildly; letters grew barely legible. Likely his final ounce of fading effort:
> [Silver saved⊠beneath the second tree⊠Hu Mountain road outside the city. Remember⊠claim it.]
> [Donât⊠worryâŠâŠ]
Chen Changsheng stood frozen after reading the last faint scribble.
Silence clung thick around him for many long breaths.
He finally murmured aloud,
âSince when⊠did you become so seriousâŠâ
A sharp, lonely sigh echoed abruptly through the small room moments later.