Cao Fa began practicing his voice on the very first day with Mr. Chen.
Being a Storyteller wasnât easy. Though Chen Changsheng was only average as a Storyteller, he was a strict teacher. He insisted on having it done correctlyâproperly, just as it should be.
To become a Storyteller, one needed clear enunciation and smooth speech, with no room for carelessness.
Cao Fa, being a front hall server, had some skill. That was good, but it also created problems.
Mr. Chen said: âYour enunciation is fine. The issue lies in your speaking pace and emotions. When storytelling, you mustnât sound servile like a server. Youâre acting out characters from the book, youâre not a teahouse worker.â
âThis humble one understands,â Cao Fa nodded.
âYou must learn how to refer to yourself. Saying âthis humble oneâ definitely wonât do.â
âUnderstoodâŠâ
Cao Fa felt awkward. He knew this skill required hard work, not half-hearted effort. He gritted his teeth and forced himself to change.
His biggest hurdle was practicing speech.
Cao Fa was quite talented in âactingâ, and he was deeply interested in this skill. If he could get the speaking part down solid, the rest would happen naturally.
Third Master Jin joined the practice too, but found the voice training unbearably tough.
Then there were those tongue twisters prepared by Mr. Chen.
How could anyone recite these smoothly?
Green grapes grow green vines, green vines cling to green grapes⊠Fourteen is not the same as forty⊠Eight hundred brave soldiers ran to the north slope⊠From the south came someone carrying a trumpetâŠ
After just a short while, Third Master Jinâs tongue tripped over itself.
He glanced over and saw Cao Fa practicing naturally. He felt quite discouraged.
âSo difficultâŠâ Third Master Jin smacked his lips, thinking the Storytellerâs craft wasnât simple at all.
Towards dusk, Chen Changsheng let both rest. They sat down for tea, and he taught them how to write story scripts.
Mr. Chen asked: âWriting scripts is very different from practicing enunciation. Third Master Jin, which do you find easierâscriptwriting or enunciation practice?â
âScriptwriting should be a bit easier,â Third Master Jin replied.
Mr. Chen shook his head. âActually, scriptwriting is much harder. Speaking clearly and telling a story at a well-paced, rhythmic pace can be achieved through long practice. But wanting to write a truly good story script? Hard work alone wonât suffice.â
âBesides imagination, scriptwriting requires broad knowledge, clear judgment about things, plus wild, unbound daydreaming. It demands exceptional insight.â
âI canât help you broaden your knowledge. That must grow slowly with your own experience. What I can teach you now is how to thinkâhow to dare to think!â
âDare to think?â Third Master Jin paused.
Mr. Chen continued: âYouâve heard several of these tales involving ghosts and strange beings from Strange Tales from a Chinese Studio. Think for yourselves: just what things can awaken wisdom and gain sentience?â
Cao Fa pondered. âMountain spirits and wild beasts?â
Third Master Jin added: âSnakes, rats, cattle, sheepâall can become spirits.â
Mr. Chen said: âSo, at heart, both of you believe only beasts or things from the mountains can gain sentience? Correct?â
Jin and Cao nodded. They indeed believed as much.
Mr. Chen stated: âThe meaning of âdare to thinkâ lies in breaking that mental barrier.â
âSince they are becoming spirits⊠why limit their origin?â
âGain wisdom, become a spirit demon. Amass power, turn into a monster. As the saying goes, all things hold living essence.â
âIf plants like trees and grasses can become spirits⊠what about a writing brush? It comes from wood⊠Could it become a spirit?â
Third Master Jinâs eyes lit up. âAh! Why hadnât I thought of that?!â
Mr. Chen pressed: âWhat about the characters written with the brush?â
âThe words could become spirits?!â Cao Fa gasped.
âWhy not?â Mr. Chen countered. âBut it still needs logic.â
Third Master Jin spoke up: âIf following the path of Strange Tales, characters gaining consciousness? These characters would likely have tremendous meaning before. Perhaps penned by wise scholars in important works⊠or Immortals! Then, through time, they gain sentience!â
Mr. Chen smiled warmly. âThird Master Jin speaks well.â
âThis is precisely what I meant by logic.â
âEverything has a cause. Characters donât simply appear on paperâsomeone must wield a brush to place them there. For words to become spirits? They must have a reason.â
Third Master Jin was deeply inspired. He murmured: âSo⊠this is daring to thinkâŠâ
The lesson on scriptwriting lasted only from dusk until dark.
That was the span.
Truly, teaching scriptwriting wasnât easy. Mostly, Mr. Chen used examples: one, two, ten, hundreds of them. Through this, he encouraged their thoughts to flow freely, letting them dare.
On this path, Third Master Jin showed exceptional insight.
Many concepts left Cao Fa baffled after lengthy thought, but Third Master Jin grasped the why.
Each man had strengths and weaknesses.
Luckily, Cao Fa refused to be discouraged by the challenge of scriptwriting. He focused more on mastering enunciation and the skill of âactingâ.
Once home at night, he practiced tirelessly, never skipping a moment.
That evening, Chen Changsheng filled a jug of wine at Li Laoâerâs place. They chatted briefly before heading home.
Ruyi and Pingâan had reached an age where they could manage books on their own now. Mr. Chen only needed to inquire each evening about any passages giving them trouble.
Wang Sanniang remained busy. Days saw her managing her market stall. At night, caring for the youngsters weighted her weary limbs. Tired, yes⊠yet it offered guarantee that the larder would hold wheat and rice again.
Life gathered strength slowly, rising steadily once more that season.
Mr. Chen checkd the glow within: his Soul Flame. Time dwindled. Thus he spent these weeks pouring effort.
Truthfully, he had little to offer Cao Fa. Yet Cao Fa pressed on, earnest diligence his gift. Guidance sufficed. The skill began to root. Even if the Teahouse saw Chen Changsheng gone soon after, Cao Fa could stammer enough to fill the stage if he kept training.
Mr. Chen suspected heâd complete no more chapters from memory now.
So, one wick burned late that night. He inscribed every tale he recalled from Strange Tales. These pages filled⊠simply reciting one daily would chain retellings for two full months.
The project complete, Mr. Chen settled in his chair. Then sleep claimed him there.
He reached the Teahouse next morning.
That manuscriptâseventy chapters of Strange Talesâhe gave to Manager Zhuang then.
Not that Chen held back purpose. Merely that only so much remained stored now.
Manager Zhuang stared stunned. âSir! ThisâŠ! This livelihood belongeth solely to thy skill! How could Zhuang dare acceptâŠ?â
Mr. Chen chuckled. ââTis no treasure held unto one path for life. Bound for record soon. Moreover, these Chen uncertain to speak the unwoven portionsâŠâ
Manager Zhuang caught the words, paused. Recalling recent signs, he asked quietly: âDost thou journey then?â
Mr. Chen dipped his head. âThis Chen intended to say as much today. Within three sunrises⊠Abyss River his path must cross.â
Manager Zhuang started at hearing this.
âWhen⊠does thought guide thy return?â
âPerhaps three years will flow back.â
Manager Zhuang fell silent hearing this⊠voicing nothing further.
Honest truth⊠letting this teacher fade seemed ill fitting to his mind.
The Sorcerer