Editor: Marcia
Living to Suffer chapter 3
The prequel to TDDUP
Living to Suffer by ayszhang is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
The prequel to TDDUP
III
Time seemed not to touch the mountains, and a month
passed in the blink of an eye. With his injuries largely healed, Shen
Liangsheng set off on his journey back to the sect. Before leaving, he removed
his hufa pass from his belt. The pass
was made of a yin piece and a yang piece, and he gave Ch’in Ching the yin piece
as the token for their future negotiation.
The
doctor acted rather formally this time because of the forbidden notions that he
harboured. He hid all the smiles and laughs, all the quips and remarks, and bid
the man farewell. “While I will not see you out, Shen-hufa, I wish you a safe journey ahead.”
With Shen Liangsheng gone, Ch’in Ching was alone again
in his little hut in the mountains, but phantoms of the man seemed to linger
all around.
When he
ate alone at the table, he would recall that he could not help but pay special
attention to the man’s hands whenever they shared a meal.
Shen
Liangsheng had skin paler than usual. His fingers were long and slender without
protruding knuckles. The calluses that should belong to a swordsman were not
discernible, but with one look anybody would be able to tell that the hands
belonged to a martial arts practitioner, one who had the power to decapitate
men with his bare hands. A few times he became so engrossed that his gaze followed
hand, chopsticks and food up to the man’s lips. He saw the lips part and the
food being carefully chewed and swallowed, but he was under the impression that
the man did not give a second thought as to whether it was fish and meat entering
his mouth or tofu and greens and that the man could not distinguish between
them, either.
Perhaps
a meal was nothing more than ingesting food to the man.
“Yes?”
One time Ch’in Ching’s gaze lingered a moment too long, provoking Shen
Liangsheng to question. The man’s voice carried no discontent, but it was more
than enough to bring Ch’in Ching back to reality.
“Nothing.
It shames me as a host that the food is so monotonous.” Ch’in Ching wore a
polite smile but was secretly wondering what his mouth would taste like.
“It is
of no concern.”
It
likely had no taste at all, Ch’in Ching thought while smiling. The man probably
could not taste all the flavours of life.
Sometimes when Ch’in Ching sat by the window with a book
and a pot of fine tea, he would still see the man practising his sword in the
courtyard.
Generally
speaking, Ch’in Ching should give the man privacy, for not every swordsman was
willing to let outsiders observe his techniques. Shen Liangsheng, however, did
not seem to mind the doctor’s observance of his every stance, every strike. At
times relaxed, at other times swift, the moves did not carry the man’s core ch’i or the intent to kill, but the
essence of the sword was evident.
More
than two centuries had passed since the Hsing[1]
Sect shook the chianghu with
apocalyptic carnage, and the event had nearly become a legend. Two hundred years later, the Hsing Sect had
not waged another war, but the mere mention of its name struck fear into the
heart of every person in the chianghu.
The horror of the incident was apparent.
Shen
Liangsheng likely was practising merely to pass the time and thus did not display
the unearthly ability to force a dozen sects into extinction that a hufa of the demonic sect was fabled to
have. All that could be perceived was his dancing sword and flowing charm.
Normally
after watching for a while, Ch’in Ching would look back down at his book,
lamenting. Nature’s creations were beautiful and mysterious, but no matter how awe-inspiring
this man was, he was nothing more than a demonic weapon of the Hsing Sect.
Rumour had it that the hufa of the
Hsing Sect all reached a state of selflessness, abandoning all sense of self
and mortal greed, and obeyed only the sect leader’s commands – if they were told
to kill a thousand men, they would not rest until all one thousand souls had left
their fleshly vessels. Ch’in Ching now judged the rumour to be true.
The yin pass that Shen Liangsheng left behind was
initially also used by Ch’in Ching as a belt accessory. Its material was most
peculiar. Neither stone nor metal, it was as cold as ice, and Ch’in Ching could
feel its temperature even through two layers of clothing.
Late on
one hot summer night, Ch’in Ching stuck the pass under his bamboo pillow. Rolling
onto his side with one cheek against the pillow, he fell asleep quite easily
with the indistinct coolness exuded by the pass.
Perhaps
he should not have brought the man’s intimate possession[2]
to bed. That night, Ch’in Ching had a sensual dream.
When he
woke in the middle of the night, his undergarments were wet with sweat and
clung to his skin. The member between his legs was still hard and his body
burning.
Unable
to hold back, he reached underneath the pillow for the pass, its icy touch making
the heat within him seem even more unbearable.
Closing
his eyes and tightening his grip on the pass, Ch’in Ching slowly brought it to
his collarbone as a shiver ran through him. In the dark room, an odd smile
found its way to his face.
His
fingers pushed the pass down over his shirt to a spot on the chest slightly to
the right. Under the chilliness, his right nipple began to perk up without
having been stimulated.
On the
front face of the pass was a yenwei,
the creature depicted in the Shan-hai
Ching[3]
as having the body of a snake and the head of a human. He who lays eyes upon the creature shall dominate the realm. Ch’in
Ching wondered delightedly if Shen-hufa
would still be able to keep that emotionless, impassive expression of his after
finding out he was using his hufa
pass to do this.
The
pass was rectangular, and its edges were polished to a blade-like point. A
little absentmindedly, Ch’in Ching began toying with the nipple through his
cotton undershirt using a corner of the pass. A slightly stronger move of the
wrist brought a light prick like that of a knife, but because of the
sensitivity of the location, he gladly welcomed the pain.
His
groin had already been frustratingly swollen, and now with the pleasure from
the nipple being played with, the sprightly member jerked in Ch’in Ching’s
pants as though it were trying to push its way out of its constraints. The head
poked at the thin cotton, wetting it with the juices leaking out of the hole.
The fluid seeped into the cloth and felt slightly damp on Ch’in Ching’s skin.
His
fingers slid the pass down to his crotch, pressing the face with the carving
against it. He applied more force to his fingertips and pushed the designs of
the pass against the sac hanging below his erection, bringing on an
indescribable, sinful sensation.
He then
slid the pass up over the sac slowly rubbing it on his member on its way up. Over
his underpants, the sensation felt vague and flirtatious and only made him more
anxious. More and more juices spewed from his member, completely wetting the
patch of cloth near the head. Wiggling around, Ch’in Ching eased his underpants
down, and the head of his member leapt out from under the cloth to stick
closely to his abdomen.
A sudden
gust of wind blew across the cloudy night sky, letting a ray of moonlight into
the dark room to illuminate more of the scene on the bed. Ch’in Ching kept
rubbing the carvings on the pass against his member as if he had fallen in love
with this vague and flirtatious sensation. The yin pass was eerily cold and his
member fiery hot. The coolness slipped through the cotton and wrapped itself
around the burning rod just as the lily-white, strong, slender fingers of the
man might. Closing his eyes, Ch’in Ching imagined the pair of cold, heartless
hands that had committed the most heinous, most sinful crimes taking a firm
hold on his member and stroking it. A soft moan escaped his lips.
The
sound was rather audible in the quietude of night. Opening his eyes, Ch’in
Ching pushed his upper body up with his left hand and saw under the hazy
moonlight his partly undressed bottom and his hips gyrating by themselves along
with his right hand’s movement. The messy, slick head of his member was peeping
from under his pants and had left a small pool of stickiness on his stomach
erotically reflecting the moon’s radiance.
To be
this aroused… Ch’in Ching chuckled. Although he mockingly called himself a
pervert, it was naught but a name. Because he was born with an unusual heart,
he harboured little lust, and other than his gambling habits, he led a rather
abstinent lifestyle.
But
Shen Liangsheng was different. With a light smile about his lips, Ch’in Ching
acknowledged that, to him, the man was different from the moment he knew his
identity.
But
this “different” was different from the “different” he had initially expected.
What a
funny little tongue-twister.
As these thoughts raced through his mind, his hands
did not cease to move. That he had become this aroused because of the man induced
in him a nearly masochistic pleasure.
He
watched himself masturbate with the pass, rub his member with the man’s intimate
possession, and become so uninhibited, all without even having direct contact,
his skin shielded from the item by his pants.
He
watched his penis envalley with so much blood that the swollen head almost
glowed red, and an endless flow of clear but impure fluids dripped from the
hole. He made a sudden change in motion and brought a corner of the pass to the
little hole on the head. The sharp pain mixed with the pleasure rushed to his
head, and his member trembled a few times before reaching release.
Ch’in Ching lay back down, panting for a while. He
held the pass up to study it under the moonlight.
A
dribble of cum[4] had
fallen just now on the pass, and the milky liquid was sliding down the designs,
stopping between the two heads atop the thick serpentine body of the yenwei.
Word by
word, Ch’in Ching recited the story in the Shan-hai
Ching:
The yenwei has the head of man, body of
serpent, and wears purple dress and a red crown, and he who sees it shall
dominate the realm…
…huh.
[2] The original term refers to something that is kept
close to one’s body at all times, such as a necklace, pendant or charm. This is
significant because these items are sometimes given away or exchanged as a
token of promise (e.g. betrothal) and often handed down from one generation to
the next as heirloom.
[3] Also known as Classic
of Mountains and Seas, a compilation of texts dated earliest back to 4th
century BC about the mythical geography of the land.
[4] The author repeatedly mentions that the pass is yin, and here she specifically uses the
term “yang essence” to refer to male
ejaculate.
Illustration of yenwei
Left: passes from the Qing Dynasty that indicate identity and that its bearer belongs to the residence of a prince; Right: passes used by Taoists to summon gods
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Further reading:
Further reading:
ayszhang: Chapter 3 and we get a masturbation session just like in TDDUP... Have you noticed any other symmetry?
If you enjoy my work and would like to help a brother out, please consider pledging a dollar or two on Patreon here. I will be posting extra goodies and sneak previews of chapters and projects there.
BTW, I'm in Quebec right now, participating in a 5-week language immersion program. If there are any francophone readers who has time to talk with me in French, please contact me at ays.zhang@gmail.com
BTW BTW!!! Gay marriage rights has been defined as constitutional by Taiwan!!! :D I just read the announcement from the court now!
If you enjoy my work and would like to help a brother out, please consider pledging a dollar or two on Patreon here. I will be posting extra goodies and sneak previews of chapters and projects there.
BTW, I'm in Quebec right now, participating in a 5-week language immersion program. If there are any francophone readers who has time to talk with me in French, please contact me at ays.zhang@gmail.com
BTW BTW!!! Gay marriage rights has been defined as constitutional by Taiwan!!! :D I just read the announcement from the court now!
Living to Suffer by ayszhang is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
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