Editor: Marcia
Beta reader: Dairytea
Spring Once More chapter 17
(Traditional Chinese cover scanned by Dairytea)
Chapter Seventeen
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Spring Once More by ayszhang is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
What the hell!
Standing in
the inner courtyard’s walkway, I see before me a grim scene, a nation
collapsed! How did this happen!!
One jumped in
the lake, three jumped in wells, six hanged themselves, two cut their own throats,
four took poison, and one headbutted a wall. Other than Hua Yingxiong and Su
Yanzhi, all seventeen tried to do themselves in.
Heavens
above, I really didn’t do anything! I yell to the sky, WHY! WHY HAS THIS
HAPPENED!
WHYYY?
On the shores
of Lake Wangxing, I perform CPR on Master Pei. When he opens his eyes, he
grasps my arms, face full of grief. “I, Pei Qixuan, have lived a filthy life
and wish to die clean but, alas, am not able. Your Highness, I beg for your
grace to permit my end.”
Fucking hell!
He obviously planned this with the three well-jumpers! Their lines are exactly
the same!
I give CPR to
the eleventh master, Liuyun, after untying the belt that he hanged himself with.
He opens his eyes and pulls my sleeve, desperate and sorrowful. “Why did you
bother saving me, Milord?” Yeah, cliché but normal. “My Prince, please allow me
a clean end lest I cause trouble for Your Highness.” Pretty much the same as
the other five hangers.
Out of the
four poison-takers, I manage to get three back by flushing them with soap bean
water. That leaves the fourth master, Yueqing. Zhong-shu’s wife, Liu-shen,[1]
is apparently an expert in stomach pumping concealed among the commoners. She
rolls up her sleeves and pries open Yueqing’s mouth. After pouring in another
two bowls of soap bean water, she brandishes her iron fists and begins pounding
on his stomach. Meanwhile, I’m just on the sidelines enjoying the show.
According to Xiao-Shun’s
introduction, Liu-shen’s
daughter-in-law, Cui-niang,[2]
is an addict. She has a tub of Poisonfeather wine and takes a swig whenever she
gets upset. And so, Liu-shen has
developed an excellent skill through their familial interactions. She’s even
reportedly able to bring back victims of blister beetle poison.
Yueqing’s bluish
face has now turned waxen from the beating, and out from his opened mouth comes
a gush of white foam. Liu-shen rolls
down her sleeves, and two servants help Yueqing up and give him a bit of clean
water. His eyes barely slide open. I step forward, ready for what’s to come.
And sure enough, Yueqing looks around him with despair. “Not even the heavens
want me.” I start to count from one. He looks at me. “My Prince, I beg you…”
Before he can finish the next syllable, I reach number three. His eyes roll
back, and he loses consciousness again.
The two
throat-cutters have been bandaged at the neck and cannot talk at the moment. They
simply glance at me then at the ceiling while two tears streak down their face.
Lastly, I check out the wall-rammer.
It turns out
to be none other than Master Chenfeng who asked the question earlier this
morning. The nineteenth master was the latest addition to the lineup and chose
the bloodiest method. His forehead has been smashed open, leaving a ghastly red
wound. My first words to the doctor: “Will there be a scar?” You know, there’s
only so much I can do.
The capable live-in
doctor keeps a two-stranded goatee that gives him an otherworldly aura. “Rest
assured. You must have forgotten, Your Highness, that when Master Su sliced up
his own face, this old doctor was able to nurse it back to normal.”
Who would
have known? There are such crouching tigers and hidden dragons in the prince’s
manor.
Master
Chenfeng is pulling a Xu-Huang-reading-books-in-the-tent on me,[3]
eyes closed lying in bed. I’m still hoping to get a word or two from him. I pull
up a chair and earnestly ask him why.
He stays
silent, his eyelids barely moving. I sigh and let it go for now. I tuck in his
blanket and pour out a cup of water on the bedside table. Just as I turn to
leave, he starts, “My Prince.” I turn back around. His eyes are still shut. “Why
do you bother keeping me alive? Grant me a quick death and leave less trouble
for yourself. Isn’t that a tidy end?”
The hell with
this repeated bullshit!<
Can someone
please tell me! What’s with these people?!
I grab the
nearest servant and demand the whereabouts of Su Yanzhi. The servant tells me
that Master Su is in the west courtyard talking sense into the eighth and fifteenth
masters who also cut their own throats.
I rush to the
west courtyard, drag Su Yanzhi to an empty room and bolt the door. From the
bottom of my heart I just want to find out the reason why.
Su Yanzhi
responds with another question, “Young master, are you afraid of death?”
[1]
‘Shen’ is a general suffix for women older than the speaker and is also the
honourific for one’s father’s younger brother’s wife.
[2]
‘Niang’ is a general suffix for young women.
[3]
A reference to Xu Huang, a character in The
Romance of Three Kingdoms, who was reading military books when the enemy
general came to his tent to persuade him to surrender, essentially ignoring
him.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Spring Once More by ayszhang is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
No comments:
Post a Comment