Chapter 41: Buddhaâs Son
The handsome little monk, draped in a white monkâs robe, stood under the moonlight, serene and composed, exuding a Buddhist aura.
Looking at me, the little monk said: âMy name is Luo Zhuisajia, but everyone likes to call me Little Monk. You can call me that too.â
Princess Baili, perched on the wall, introduced me: âThe Little Monk is a reincarnated Buddhaâs Son, very impressive! If he says youâre impressive, you must be!â
I hesitated for a moment: âA reincarnated Buddhaâs Son struggles this much to climb a wall?â
The Little Monk looked a bit embarrassed: âI havenât completed my training yet. My master instructed me to recite the Ksitigarbha Bodhisattvaâs Original Vow Sutra ten thousand times. Iâve only reached over seven thousand, and my grand vow isnât fulfilled yetâŠâ
I pondered. The Little Monkâs words revealed much: his cultivation path involved reciting sutras and fulfilling a grand vow. Reaching ten thousand recitations was a milestone, likely making him stronger afterward.
He was quite candid, openly sharing his cultivation path like that.
At that moment, the Heir studied me curiously: âLittle Monk, you say heâs impressive? Doesnât look like it.â
The Heir had swapped his daytime marten-fur cloak for a black cross-collar robe embroidered with silver lotuses, looking somewhat refined but not quite matching his flamboyant demeanor.
The Little Monk brushed dust off his robe, his fourteen- or fifteen-year-old face clear and pure. Pointing to his heart, he said: âWhen I say impressive, I donât mean strength, but the heart. Everyone has three thieves in their heart: greed, anger, and obsession. This young brother has already rid himself of greed and anger, leaving only obsession. Thatâs impressive.â
âGreed is base desire. So many calamities in this world stem from greed. To be free of greed isnât to shun wealth, but to know restraint.â
âAnger is unwise rage. If a person still has anger, they canât be called wise, for anger clouds the mind.â
I thought for a moment: âAnd obsession?â
The Little Monk smiled: âObsession is fixation. With fixation, one cannot find liberation.â
Princess Baili sat astride the wall, dressed sharply like a man in a white robe, white pants, white boots, and a white jade hairpin, with only a red jade pendant at her collar, like the red mark on a white carpâs forehead.
Propping her chin, she asked curiously: âLittle Monk, you speak so mysteriously. How many thieves have you slain?â
The Little Monk thought for a moment: âLike him, Iâm left with only obsession.â
Princess Baili pressed: âWhy not slay that last obsession?â
âItâs not that I wonât, but I donât have it,â the Little Monk explained: âI havenât found my âobsession,â so I canât slay it. My master sent me to the Central Plains to find it and then overcome it. I havenât found it yet and donât know what it is, but my master said Iâll know when the day comes.â
âHuh, you never mentioned that before⊠Isnât it better to lack obsession? Why seek it? Isnât that unnecessary?â Princess Baili asked, puzzled.
The Little Monk shook his head: âItâs a tribulation. Without passing through tribulation, one cannot become a Buddha.â
The Heir, leaning against the wall, looked bored: âYou monks talk of compassion but always go on about slaying and killingânot good!â
The Little Monk shook his head: âOur Gening Sect doesnât speak of compassion.â
âOh? What do you speak of?â
âGreat fearlessness.â
Princess Baili, sitting cross-legged atop the wall, said: âBrother, stop chatting. Help me down.â
âHere,â the Heir went to the wall, letting his sister step on his shoulder to jump down.
I watched silently. The Heir and Princess Baili werenât born of the same mother, yet their bond was remarkably close.
And this Heir, already twenty, still acted so carefreeâŠ
Wait, Dark Cloud mentioned another princess born to Consort Jing, Princess Lingyun. Why wasnât she with them?
At that moment, the Heir looked at me: âThisâŠâ
âChen Ji.â
The Heir grinned: âChen Ji, youâre a fine-looking fellow. Weâll surely be great friends in the future. But no time to chat nowâfriends are waiting outside. Weâll go first. Weâre rivers-and-lakes folk; weâll meet again if fate allows!â
Zhu Baili hurriedly added: âRight, right! Iâll bring you Ma Familyâs donkey-meat pancakes in the morning!â
With that, the Heir led the Little Monk and Princess Baili to leave.
I raised my arm to block their path: âHold on.â
âHuh?â The Heir stepped back: âWhat?â
I said: âHush money. Ten taels of silver each, or Iâll call the mansion guards.â
The Heir yelped: âWhoa, think we donât know market prices? Ten taels could buy a house in the suburbs! Why not rob us⊠Little Monk, didnât you say heâd slain greed?!â
The Little Monk hesitated: âThis shows heâs already very restrained.â
The Heir: â?â
Princess Baili looked at me: âOne tael each time. Weâll need to pass through here many timesâthink long-term, or we wonât come through again!â
I said: âDeal!â
Princess Baili looked helplessly at the Heir: âBrother, did I lowball it? He agreed too fast.â
âSeems like it.â
I said: âOne tael per person, per time. Three of you this timeâthree taels.â
At that moment, someone called through the door crack: âHeir, Princess, are you out yet?â
The Heir looked at Princess Baili: âPay up; theyâre getting impatient outside.â
Zhu Baili reluctantly pulled a plain sachet from her sleeve, took out three âsilver peanuts,â and slapped them into my palm: âHere! Can we go now?â
I stepped aside, smiling: âThanks for your patronage. Have a fun night!â
The Heir hurried to open the main hall door, revealing over a dozen people outside, some with swords and sabers at their waists, looking like rivers-and-lakes folk.
I spotted Liang Gouâer and Liang Maoâer among them.
The Heir asked at the door: âWhereâre we going?â
Liang Gouâer grinned: âLuochengâs nights are lively only in one placeâEast Market. And the liveliest spot there is Red Cloth Lane! Come, Heir, lead us to drink in Red Cloth Lane!â
I was stunned.
The Princess and a monk, going to Red Cloth Lane?!
At that moment, Princess Baili carefully closed the clinicâs main door, leaving a small gap. Seeing me watching from afar, she wrinkled her nose, huffed, and quickly shut the door.
I weighed the silver peanuts in my hand. Dark Cloud climbed the apricot tree, tucking its paws and lying on a branch.
Dark Cloud meowed: âThey seem like nice people.â
I smiled: âAs Heir and Princess, they didnât get mad when I blocked their way and never used their status to pressure me. Theyâre indeed very good people.â