Chapter 40: Climbing the Wall
General Wang asked gravely: âMiss Chunhua, did you find anything?â
Chunhua, stifling her sobs, said: âNoâŠâ
She turned around, eyes red, looking at She Dakang with disbelief, while She Dakangâs eyes held a mix of confusion and relief.
General Wang glanced at Chunhua, then at She Dakang, his voice growing cold: âMiss Chunhua, next time bring solid evidence before calling us. The Thousand-Year Army is Prince Jingâs guard, not petty constables chasing chickens or dogs. Letâs go.â
As the guards moved to leave, Old Man Yao blocked their path, saying lightly: âApologize.â
General Wang paused, then turned to me: âSorry, we offended you!â
I said slowly: âPlease, General Wang, clear my name outside, or the neighbors wonât deal with me anymore.â
General Wang shook his head: âI canât do that. Letâs go!â
The princeâs mansion guards came quickly and left just as fast. Chunhua looked at She Dakang, wanting to speak but stopping, her eyes welling up as she turned to leave: âYouâve ruined me!â
âWait!â I said.
Chunhua stopped, turning to face me with a hint of fear: âWhat do you want? I didnât want this, but I had no choice.â
âLetâs talk privately.â
I led Chunhua to the doorway and said softly: âPlease tell Consort Jing we didnât need to be enemies. I didnât kill Liu Shiyu, nor did the Secret Spy Divisionâit was the Liu Family silencing him. Since I helped her find the lead-barium glass cup last time, I can help her get revenge this time. Go back, deliver this message, and you should be fine.â
Chunhua froze, then left.
I stood at the clinicâs entrance, listening to the surrounding murmurs, watching Chunhuaâs departing figure.
The sun set in the west, its orange-red glow fading from my body, until night enveloped me.
The Secret Spy Division, Military Intelligence Division, Consort Jing, Consort Yunâeach a towering force in this world, seemingly able to crush me with a flick of their hand.
My fate wasnât in my control. As a newcomer, I could only survive in the cracks.
But now, a chessboard lay before me. I gently placed a piece on the âspring corner,â perhaps not deciding the game, but when I played, I always took sharp, unconventional moves, never predictable ones.
Back inside the clinic, I saw Old Man Yao glaring at She Dakang: âThink youâre tough now? Kneel!â
She Dakang knelt obediently, crying with snot and tears: âMaster, I didnât expect this. Chunhua said Consort Jing forced her, threatening to kill her tonight if she didnât comply. She said we just needed to hide a pearl in Chen Jiâs clothes to get him expelled from the clinic. She gave me all her savings to compensate Chen Ji, saying he could start a small business after leaving.â
With that, She Dakang pulled out three silver ingots, two silver hairpins, two silver bangles, and thirty-six copper coins from his chest.
Old Man Yao turned to me: âThis is your matter. What do you say?â
I stood silently.
Chunhua couldâve given ten taels, fifty taels, or five hundred taels, but she gave thirty taels and thirty-six copper coinsâbecause thatâs all she had.
Could I forgive her? No, I couldnât.
I knew in this era, a girl like Chunhua had no choice. If she didnât act, Consort Jing would truly kill her.
But if I had been framed, would my fate be just expulsion from the clinic? No, Chunrong wouldâve brought servants to beat me to death.
I thought I could treat the clinic as home, my martial brothers as family, but reality never followed my hopes.
The worst part of this world was that it didnât spare you for being good.
I wasnât a good person either.
I picked up the silver, bangles, hairpins, and coins: âIâll take these, but Senior Brother She, you and Chunhua each owe me a life. When I ask you to repay, you must. Agreed?â
She Dakang nodded frantically: âAgreed! Agreed!â
I turned back to the clinicâs main hall. Liu Quxing watched my back, wanting to speak but stopping, feeling nothing he said would help now.
Old Man Yao looked down at the kneeling She Dakang: âFool, swayed by a woman. Go kneel inside; donât be an eyesore here. Chen Ji isnât pursuing this, but if it happens again, this clinic wonât keep you.â
âŠ
âŠ
At night, Taiping Clinic grew quiet, as if nothing had happened during the day.
I stood behind the counter, propping my chin.
Dark Cloud emerged from the shadows, lightly hopping onto the counter and spitting a round pearl into my palm.
It meowed: âDonât be sad, donât be angry.â
I hid the pearl in my sleeve: âIâm not sad or angry. Sadness and anger are useless emotions of the weak⊠Letâs talk about something happyâletâs settle accounts!â
âIâve ignited sixteen furnaces now; I feel I could take on a secret spy. When the mansion guards restrained me today, I felt I could break free. I wonder how many furnaces Iâd need to beat a Division Officer, Lin Chaoqing, Yunyang, or JiaotuâŠâ
âThe pearl canât be sold now; weâll cash it out in another city later. I bought six ginseng roots at Hundred Deer Pavilion; one went to Old Man Yao, leaving five, costing one hundred ninety-five taels of silver⊠With the fifty taels under the bed and Chunhuaâs compensation, weâve got eighty-five taels of silver and one hundred twenty-one copper coins left.â
Dark Cloud asked curiously: âHow many roast chickens can that buy?â
I calculated for a while but couldnât figure it out: ââŠA lot, anyway! When buying the ginseng, that Division Officer didnât give me a discount at all. Should I try to become the Military Intelligence Divisionâs Sea Goshawk in Luocheng and manage Hundred Deer Pavilion? I studied Chinese medicine; itâs right up my alleyâŠâ
If I could run Hundred Deer Pavilion, even without skimming profits, I could buy ginseng at cost, right?
At that moment, Dark Cloud perked its ears, hearing faint but chaotic footsteps outside, as several people approached the clinic.
âChen Ji, someoneâs comingâseveral of them!â
I blew out the oil lamp, quietly moving behind the door to listen.
Who could it be?
The Ning Dynastyâs Secret Spy Division, the Jing Dynastyâs Military Intelligence Division, or Consort Jing, unrelenting, sending assassins again?
This was the plight of multiple identitiesâwhen an attack came, I couldnât even tell who sent it.
But before I could think it through, a voice came from the back courtyard: âHurry, keep it quiet!â
I spun around, peering through the corridor between the main hall and the back courtyard, and saw a tall figure climbing into the yard!
Surrounded!
I signaled Dark Cloud to hide in the shadows, then drew a short herb-cutting knife from behind the counter and stealthily moved forward.
Sweat beaded in my palm. Ten or more people closing in from front and backâthis kind of ambush was beyond my ability to handle.
But before I reached the courtyard, I saw another figure climbing the wall separating the clinic from the princeâs mansionâa little monk!
The little monkâs bald head gleamed in the moonlight, struggling to clamber over. The one already inside, I looked closelyâwasnât that the splendidly dressed Heir from the princeâs mansion I saw during the day?
In shock, a voice came from Anxi Street outside the clinic: âEveryone, stay calm; the Heir will be out soon!â
I glanced at the front door, then at the Heir and little monk in the courtyard, and another figure climbing the wall⊠Princess Baili.
Me: Huh?
In the dead of night, I thought Consort Jing had sent a dozen assassins, only to realize it was a misunderstanding.
I smacked the little monkâs bald head, exasperated: âHey, what are you all doing?â
At my words, the little monk and Heir jumped. Princess Baili, mid-climb, ducked back down, then cautiously peeked over the wall into the courtyard.
In the moonlight, I held a knife, a graceful girl clung to the wall, the Heir and little monk looked guilty like thievesânone of us expected to meet like this.
Like the start of any story, encounters between people were often sudden.
I raised an eyebrow: âHeir, climbing someoneâs wall in the middle of the night isnât exactly proper, is it?â
The Heir was puzzled: âYou know me?â
I smirked: âSure do. I held you when you were little.â
The Heir: ââŠâ
Princess Baili, clinging to the wall, burst out laughing: âBrother, heâs mocking you!â
âKeep it down,â the Heir hushed: âDonât attract the guards!â
The Heir looked at me, the clinic apprentice, without anger, grinning as he tried to sling an arm around me but backed off when he saw my knife: âHereâs the deal, little brother. You know who we are. The princeâs mansion has a curfew; weâre not allowed out freely, so weâre borrowing your clinic as a pass-through. Donât worry, we wonât damage anything!â
A curfew in the princeâs mansion? I hadnât heard of it, but recalling the Heirâs daytime comment about âthe old man keeping a tight leash,â maybe the curfew was just for him and the princesses.
So, they skipped the mansionâs front gate and climbed the clinicâs wall.
As I pondered, the little monk studied me in the moonlight, his eyes lighting up: âItâs you! Youâre at this clinic?â
The Heir whispered, puzzled: âYou know each other?â
The little monk smiled: âYes, we met during the day. Heâs an impressive person. I wanted to ask him something, but he vanished into the crowd.â