Chapter 24: Dream Rooster
In Luocheng, a young man held a small black cat, walking along the nightâs bluestone path. His steps started heavy but grew lighter.
Life goes on, doesnât it? I had new hope.
âDark Cloud, letâs talk about something fun,â I said, smiling. âTell me about Prince Jingâs Mansion.â
Dark Cloud, curled boredly in my arms, nibbled dried fish from its blue bundle: âThat rotten place? Nothing good to say. The mansionâs full of dirty secretsâmaids and matrons galore. Like, Chunhua was bought by Consort Jing to seduce Prince Jing, but he barely glances at her. Or Chunrong, that venomous woman, jealous of Chunhuaâs youth and beauty, spitting in her foodâŠâ
I laughed, shifting topics: âIn your three months at the mansion, anything big happen?â
âOf course!â Dark Cloud perked up. âThe mansionâs about to get lively.â
I looked expectant: âOh?â
Dark Cloud said eagerly: âThe Double Ninth Festivalâs coming. Prince Jingâs eldest son, Zhu Yunxi, Consort Jingâs daughter, Zhu Lingyun, and Consort Yunâs daughter, Zhu Baili, are returning from Donglin Academy. Oh, and a young monk.â
âYoung monk?â I asked, puzzled.
Dark Cloud explained: âConsort Jing says heâs a reincarnated Buddha child from Yunzhouâs Gening Sect. They need the courtâs support and sanction, so heâs been sent to the Central Plains as a hostage.â
âIs Donglin Academy famous?â I asked, recalling my two brothers returned from there.
Dark Cloud said: âItâs said Donglin Academy, alongside Qingya and Yuelu Academies, are the Ning Dynastyâs top three, where all the worldâs talents flock. Tuitionâs steep, and only noble heirs can study there. A third of imperial exam scholars come from Donglin.â
âThree years away, their return should stir things up⊠Whoâs the main consort, Consort Jing or Consort Yun? Whose child is Zhu Yunxi?â
Dark Cloud answered: âNeitherâs the main consort. Zhu Yunxiâs mother, the main consort, died years ago⊠Iâm heading back to Evening Star Courtyard!â
Nearing Taiping Clinic, it leapt from my arms and vanished.
I rounded a corner, and there was Old Man Yao, expressionless at the door: âWhereâd you go?â
I thought,
If I say I took a cat to find its mom, you wouldnât believe meâŠ
I said: âI forgot something at home during my day off, so I went back.â
Old Man Yao frowned, his forehead creasing: âThe tuition today wasnât from your family, was it?â
I froze.
He sneered: âI knew something was off. Your stepmotherâs narrow-minded. To avoid Donglin Academyâs ten-tael monthly tuition, she sent you here as an apprentice. She might pay your tuition, but gifts for me? No way.â
I stayed silent, unsure how to respond.
Old Man Yao frowned again: âWait, if not from your family, whereâd you get the money? Donât tell me youâre cozying up to some womanâŠâ
His face changed, beard quivering: âYouâre my Taiping Clinic apprentice! If word got out you did that, itâs like shitting in my pocket!â
I: ââŠHuh?â
âWhat âhuhâ?â
I hurried: âYouâve got it wrong. Iâd never do that.â
âThen whereâs the money from?â
I paused: âMaster, I canât say. I donât want to drag you in.â
Old Man Yao eyed me: âSecret Spy Division? Youâre working for them?â
I sighed. No wonder they say old age sharpens youâhe guessed it from so little.
I could only say: âMaster, Yunyang came to me. I had no choice.â
He stared long, then turned into the clinic: âChoice or not, youâve chosen. I donât care or askâjust pay tuition monthly. If you die out there, donât let me know⊠Get to bed!â
The clinicâs gate shut. At Anxi Streetâs end, three figures emerged. Yunyang, arms crossed, muttered: âPhysician Yao doesnât seem to like our Secret Spy Division.â
Jiaotu shrugged: âNo surprise there.â
Yunyang turned to the third: âDream Rooster, that apprentice is who I want interrogated. I need to know if heâs a Jing Dynasty spy.â
The man, Dream Rooster, wore a bright brown robe with dozens of vivid pheasants embroidered, like a stage costume.
He touched his neat sideburns, speaking shrilly: âA mere apprentice worth such a lavish expense? You dragged me from Kaifeng.â
âI paid, you work. I told you what you needâdonât ask more,â Yunyang said calmly.
âFine, Iâll satisfy you. In dreams, I control everything,â Dream Rooster cackled. Jiaotu rubbed goosebumps on her arms.
Yunyang asked curiously: âOne question: why openly reveal your cultivation path? Arenât you afraid of trouble?â
Dream Rooster laughed: âThe Inner Minister said Iâm the only one in the world on this path. What trouble could I face?â
He sat cross-legged, pulling a yellow talisman from his robe.
Biting his finger, he drew on the talisman with blood, wrapped it around a strand of hair, and swallowed it!
Instantly, his pupils rolled up, leaving only whites!
âŠ
âŠ
I didnât rest. I quietly lit an oil-slag lamp in the clinicâs main hall, studying
The Compendium of Medicine
.
Memorizing the 618 acupoints in the twelve main meridians was daunting.
It felt like a hot summer classroom, piled with papers and books, filled with the hum of reading. Study memories were the deepest of youth, tied to the sunâs rise and fall, rumbling loudly.
I wished for a
Five Years of TCM, Three Years of Practice
.
As I studied, drowsiness hit, like being wrapped in warm seawater in a gentle season, drifting to the oceanâs depths.
I grew alert. Since igniting the four furnaces, Iâd been full of energy. This drowsiness was illogical.
But no matter my vigilance, my eyelids closed.
After an unknown time, I opened my eyes in a dream, standing before the Zhou residenceâs vermilion gate.
What was I doing?
I looked at the yellow paper package labeled âTaiping Clinicâ in my hand, then at the âZhou Mansionâ plaque.
Right, I was delivering tonic medicine to Lord Zhou.
Knock, knock, knock. I lifted the copper ring and knocked, everything feeling natural, forgetting this was a dream.
The gate creaked open. Steward Wang greeted with a smile: âLittle Doctor Chen, youâre here? Come in.â
âWhereâs Lord Zhou? His medicineâs here,â I said, following him as the gate closed behind.
I scanned the surroundings. Maids polished redwood furniture in the main room. In the courtyard, a woman smiled, holding a girl, a boy kicking a shuttlecock nearby.
Steward Wang led me to the main room. It felt oddly familiar, but I couldnât place it.
Zhou Chengyi sat at a desk, copying a book with a brush, dismissing the steward and maids when he saw me.
I placed the package on the desk: âLord Zhou, your medicine.â
He looked up, asking: âDoes Prince Jing have new messages for me?â
I froze: âWhatâre you talking about, Lord Zhou?â
His voice darkened: âHave you forgotten? Weâre Jing Dynasty Military Intelligence spies sent south. I liaise with the Liu family; you, with Prince Jing. Iâll ask again: any news from Prince Jing?â
I frowned, thoughts racing, but didnât answer.
Zhou Chengyi pressed: âForgot your identity?â
âForgot how the Jing Dynasty Military Intelligence trained you?â
His voice grew louder, piercing: âForgot youâre a spy?â
Each question pounded like a spell, dizzying me. My consciousness felt manipulated, my eyes rolling back.
My pupils turned white, and I said: âLord Zhou, youâre mistaken. Iâm no spy!â
Zhou Chengyi smiled, satisfied, having gotten his answer to report to Yunyang.
But curiosity struck: âHow did you meet Yunyang?â
As he spoke, my dantianâs four furnaces blazed, burning away all inner demons and specters!
Unaware, Zhou Chengyi stood, leaning over the desk: âWhy does Yunyang suspect youâre a Jing Dynasty spy? Whatâs special about you that he didnât kill you?â
His last question came in a shrill voice, not his own.
My pupils snapped back. I turned and walked out!
âZhou Chengyiâ watched, stunned, as I strode to the vermilion gate and yanked it open.
Seeing it swing wide, he saw Yunyang and Jiaotu outside, smiling slyly, and gasped: âYunyang, Jiaotu, how are you in my dream?â
Wait!
No!
He realized Yunyang and Jiaotu couldnât invade his dream, nor had he conjured themâŠ
The Yunyang and Jiaotu were my creations in the dream!
The dream was no longer fully his!
I paused, pointing at âZhou Chengyiâ: âLord Yunyang, Lord Jiaotu, Zhou Chengyi is a Jing Dynasty spy, beyond doubt!â
Yunyang asked with interest: âGot evidence?â
I said firmly: âDoes the Secret Spy Division need evidence to catch spies? Stick him and be done!â
âZhou Chengyiâ roared as Yunyang and Jiaotu lunged: âWait⊠ah!â