Xue Zhengyong was practicing with his sword at the northern peak
when a haitang blossom floated toward him. He uttered a curious, "eh?" and
caught it while drying his sweat with a towel and muttering to himself.
"Yuheng's messenger haitang? He can't even be bothered to come over to
talk anymore? When did he get so lazy?"
He still took the golden orb of light from the flower's center and
placed it in his ear. Out from it came the unfamiliar voice of a child. "Sect
Leader, please come to the Red Lotus Pavilion at your earliest
convenience…"
Xue Zhengyong didn't believe it at first, but when he stepped off from
his sword in front of Chu Wanning's residence, he was perfectly
dumbfounded.
A child of about five or six years stood in the pavilion by the lotus
pond with a hand held behind his back, gazing at the lotuses with a dour face.
Seen from the side, this person had a frosty expression and icy eyes to match.
Though he was draped in Chu Wanning's robes, they were way, way too big
for him. They pooled on the ground, sleeve hem and all, making him look like
a fish towing a huge sweeping tail.
Xue Zhengyong stared mutely.
The child turned around, "If you laugh, I will kill myself right here,"
practically written on his face.
Xue Zhengyong didn't try very hard to hold it in before letting out a
deafening howl of laughter.
The child slapped the table, livid. "What're you laughing at?! What's
so funny?!"
"I am definitely not lau—ah ha ha ha, oh god, I can't, Yuheng, I told
you to go to the Tanlang Elder to get that wound checked out, but you just
wouldn't listen—ha ha ha ha, I can't breathe." Xue Zhengyong roared with
laughter, holding his stomach with both hands. "I've—I've never seen a kid
with such a murderous aura, ah ha ha ha ha!"
This child was none other than Chu Wanning, who had awoken to find
himself shrunken. The vine that had pierced his shoulder at Jincheng Lake
had seemingly been enchanted with some kind of curse that transformed those
stricken into their five- or six-year-old selves. Thankfully, his spiritual
power had not also diminished, or Chu Wanning felt like he really might as
well have just died.
Xue Zhengyong went to fetch a set of uniforms sized for younger
disciples, cackling the whole way there and back.
After changing into more fitting clothes, Chu Wanning finally looked a
little less comical. He straightened out the silver-trimmed blue bracers,
looked up to shoot Xue Zhengyong a glare, then said vehemently, "If you dare
tell anyone, I will end you."
Xue Zhengyong chuckled. "I won't, I won't. But what're you gonna do
about this? I don't know anything about healing, so you're gonna have to get
someone to take a look, right? How about I ask the Tanlang Elder to come
here?"
Chu Wanning swept his sleeves angrily—but the sleeves of the
disciple uniforms were tight and form-fitting, so waving them around didn't
have remotely the same effect, which left him even grumpier. "Come here and
do what? Laugh at me?"
"Then how about I ask my wife to take a look?"
Chu Wanning pressed his lips together and said nothing, looking
aggrieved.
"I'll take that as a yes, then?"
Chu Wanning only turned his back to him. Xue Zhengyong knew he was
in a bad mood, but the sight was just too funny. He tried to hold back, but
ultimately failed and once again burst into uproarious laughter.
Tianwen appeared with a whoosh as Chu Wanning glared at him out of
the corner of his eyes. "I dare you to laugh again!"
"Okay, okay, no more laughing. I'll go call my wifey over right away,
ah ha ha ha hahhh…"
Xue Zhengyong ran off and swiftly returned with a worried Madam
Wang in tow. Madam Wang froze as soon as she saw Chu Wanning, and a
long while passed before she finally managed to say, with disbelief, "Yuheng
Elder…"
Chu Wanning did not reply.
Thankfully, unlike her husband, Madam Wang was a kind and
compassionate doctor. She asked Chu Wanning some questions while looking
him over, then softly said, "The elder's spiritual energy circulation is fine,
and there's nothing abnormal about his body either. Nothing seems to have
changed, aside from your having turned into a child."
"Does the madam know of a way to break this curse?" Chu Wanning
asked.
Madam Wang shook her head. "The elder's injury was caused by an
ancient willow vine; I'm afraid there is no other known incidence of this
ailment, so I do not know how to treat it."
Chu Wanning lowered his lashes, stunned, and said nothing for a long
while.
Madam Wang couldn't bear the sight. "Yuheng Elder," she said
hurriedly, "based on what I have seen, the most likely cause of your current
state is that, rather than a curse, the willow vines contained a self-healing
secretion that seeped into your wounds. Otherwise, it wouldn't have taken so
long to take effect. You were moreover likely only tainted by a very small
amount of this secretion, and it was only able to affect your body after you
overworked yourself day after day. Why don't you take care and rest up for a
few days, then see if anything changes?"
Chu Wanning was silent for a while before he sighed. "There's nothing
else for it. Many thanks, Madam."
"You're welcome." Madam Wang gave him another careful once-over.
"With the elder's current appearance, as long as he doesn't confess, no one
will be able to tell it's him."
She wasn't wrong; even Chu Wanning had forgotten what he'd looked
like at this age. When he studied his reflection in the pond, he found he didn't
look very much like his grown-up self at all, other than some vague
similarities in facial features. Finally feeling slightly relieved, he looked up
at Xue Zhengyong. "Sect Leader, I'll be going into seclusion at the Red Lotus
Pavilion for a few days. Please look after my disciples."
"That's a matter of course. Xue-er is my son, Ran-er is my nephew,
and Shi Mei is a disciple of Sisheng Peak. I'll certainly look after them."
Xue Zhengyong grinned. "You just worry about yourself."
But three days of meditation later and Chu Wanning had yet to detect
even the slightest sign that his body was returning to normal. He couldn't
help but feel even more anxious, leaving him totally unable to "take care and
rest up" as Madam Wang had directed.
One evening, Chu Wanning could no longer handle his restlessness.
Meditation wasn't doing anything anyway, and he figured he might as well
take a stroll down the mountain to get some things off his mind.
It was after dinner and before evening classes, so Sisheng Peak's paths
and corridors were full of disciples, but no one really paid him any mind.
Chu Wanning strolled around for a bit, then went to the bamboo forest near
the Platform of Sin and Virtue.
The elders each had their own favored practice area where they
always took their disciples for cultivation and training. This bamboo forest
was Chu Wanning's.
The tranquil rustling of bamboo leaves filled the air. Chu Wanning
plucked a leaf and idly blew a melody with it, the crisp, serene notes
soothing his agitated mind. However, it wasn't long before the sound of
footsteps approached and stopped near him.
"Oi, kiddo."
Chu Wanning opened his eyes.
It was Xue Meng, long-legged and slim-waisted, standing proudly
amidst the bamboo forest, Longcheng glistening in hand as he called to him.
"I'm going to practice swordplay here. Go blow your leaf elsewhere."
The arch of Chu Wanning's eyebrow raised a bit. It was quite a strange
feeling, having Xue Meng boss him around. He thought for a moment, then
said, "I'll play my leaf and you can practice with your sword. There's plenty
of space for the both of us."
"No way," said Xue Meng. "Hurry and leave. My blade could hurt
you."
"You can't hurt me."
Xue Meng clicked his tongue, his patience running thin. "Don't say I
didn't warn you, then. If you get injured later, it's not my problem." He
unsheathed Longcheng with a powerful sound, like the hiss of a serpent
emerging from the depths of a lagoon and soaring into the skies.
Instantly, Longcheng in Xue Meng's hand became a dancing shadow
amidst the flying leaves, leaving a brilliant trail in its wake as light reflected
off the blade. One slice rendered a leaf into ten pieces, the force of its
passage plucking more leaves from the bamboo. Pierce, thrust, swipe, and
slash, every motion smooth as the glide of snow upon the wind. Even a fiftyyear-old cultivator would praise such an impressive display, to say nothing
of a five-year-old child.
Yet even after Xue Meng had gone through ten forms, that boy was still
just sitting on his rock, playing his leaf, as if there were nothing astounding
nor even noteworthy unfolding in front of him.
Xue Meng, irritated, sheathed his blade and leapt down from the upper
canopy of the bamboo forest, landing lightly before Chu Wanning. "Kid."
No response.
"Hey, kid, I'm talking to you."
Chu Wanning lowered the leaf and slowly opened his eyes to look
expressionlessly at Xue Meng. "What is it? Did your master not teach you to
be courteous when speaking to others? Don't just go, 'hey,' this, 'hey,' that. I
have a name."
"Why would I care to know your name?" Xue Meng had intended to be
nice about it, but after this thorny response, the remainder of his good humor
vanished. "Blades don't have eyes—scoot off to the side before mine cuts off
your head."
"If you can't even avoid my head, is there any point to your practice?"
Chu Wanning replied with an air of indifference.
"You!" Never in all Xue Meng's life had anyone ever talked back to
him like this—and to think it was coming from a beginner disciple who
didn't even reach his thigh! Angry and indignant, he said, "You sure are
impudent. Do you even know who I am?"
Chu Wanning glanced at him mildly. "Who are you?"
"I am the young master of Sisheng Peak." Xue Meng was about to
suffocate from indignation. "How do you not know this?"
The corners of Chu Wanning's lips quirked up slightly. The smile
would have looked terribly mocking on his original face, but on his current
childish, adorable one, it was even more infinitely disdainful. "You're just
the young master. It's not like you're the sect leader, so why would I know
you?"
"Wh—wh-wh-wh-what did you say?"
"Quit putting on airs and practice with your sword." Chu Wanning
lowered his long lashes and went back to playing his leaf, the melody
floating leisurely in the wind, the notes rising and falling.
About to die from pure fury, Xue Meng let out a roar and actually
committed to picking a fight with a little kid. But no matter how mad he was,
he wasn't going to hit a child, so he could only leap up and hack ruthlessly
away at the bamboo, which broke and fell in batches amidst the leaf's serene
song.
Xue Meng's blade was swift and vicious; after several flashes, dozens
of bamboo stalks had been carved into blunt points. If he were facing an
enemy, he would've made the points razor-sharp, but this was sufficient for
teaching a junior disciple a lesson.
Hundreds of pointed bamboo sticks hurtled directly toward Chu
Wanning and were mere inches from hitting him. Xue Meng swooped down
to move this cheeky little disciple out of the way.
He didn't actually want to hurt the kid, just scare him a bit.
Unexpectedly, in the same instant he swooped, the child stopped playing and
flicked the leaf between his fingertips. That tender bamboo leaf suddenly
turned into hundreds of fine threads.
Instantaneously and with stunning precision, the hundreds of threads
struck out toward the falling spikes.
Even the wind seemed to stop blowing.
Chu Wanning stood. Simultaneously, the hundreds of spikes
surrounding him were reduced to mere powder. Perfectly obliterated.
Xue Meng stood frozen in shock, face both pale and red, unable to
manage even half a word.
The little kid before his eyes looked up, silver-blue uniform fluttering,
and grinned at him. "You wanna go again?"
Xue Meng gaped wordlessly.
"Your strikes are vigorous but disorderly. They're far too erratic and
unsteady."
Xue Meng opened his mouth, then closed it.
Chu Wanning continued, "Start over from sparrow form. Follow my
music and go through each form in time with the segments of the tune—and no
faster than that."
Upon receiving such instruction from some little kid, Xue Meng's face
became even more overcast. He bit his lip and didn't move. Chu Wanning
didn't rush him, waiting quietly to see if Xue Meng would lay down his ego
for the sake of improvement. If he would be willing to listen to a half-grown
child.
A while passed before Xue Meng suddenly stomped his feet in
dejection, flung his sword aside, and turned to depart.
At the sight of this fit, Chu Wanning's expression darkened a little. It
was truly such a pity that Xue Meng couldn't humble himself to accept
guidance…
Before he could even finish that train of thought, he saw Xue Meng
pick up a branch from the ground and turn around. "Then—then I'll use a
branch," he said huffily. "Just in case I hit you."
Chu Wanning paused, then nodded with a smile. "All right."
Xue Meng plucked a bamboo leaf for him and wiped it clean before
handing it over. "Here, Xiao-didi, for you."
So he was "Xiao-didi" now, not "kid"? Chu Wanning threw an amused
glance at Xue Meng, accepted the leaf, and sat back down on the rock to once
again begin leisurely playing.
Xue Meng had a rash personality. One maneuver included a move
where the wielder leapt and turned in midair while unleashing six stabs
followed by a strike. Xue Meng could never get it quite right, often stabbing
over a dozen times before the strike, which led him to miss the optimum
window by a long shot.
Xue Meng messed it up five, six times in a row, his brows drawing
increasingly tighter as he grew more and more agitated.
In his agitation, he caught a glimpse of the child sitting on a rock,
playing the bamboo leaf. Despite his tender years, he was the very image of
composure, without even the slightest hint of frustration. Xue Meng couldn't
stop the sense of shame that crept into him.
So he rallied his spirits and tried several more times, slowly getting a
feel for the maneuver with the melody's rhythm. But he didn't get ahead of
himself. He kept at it until late in the night, when the moon hung high in the
sky, and he could at last perform the maneuver flawlessly.
Xue Meng wiped away the sweat on his brows. "Today was all thanks
to you," he exclaimed happily. "Which elder's disciple are you, Xiaoxiongdi? You're pretty amazing. How had I not heard about you before?"
Chu Wanning was already prepared for the question. The Xuanji Elder
had many disciples, so many that even he couldn't remember them all. He put
the leaf aside and said with a small smile, "I am the Xuanji Elder's
disciple."
Xue Meng seemed to think rather little of Xuanji. He hmphed. "Oh, the
Rubbish King, huh?"
"Rubbish King?"
"Ah, pardon me." Xue Meng misunderstood the surprise in Chu
Wanning's eyes. He assumed the child was upset because Xue Meng had
derided his shizun, so he smiled and explained, "It's just a nickname. Your
shizun accepts anyone and everyone. The rubbish part refers to those
disciples of his who are totally talentless, not the Xuanji Elder himself.
Don't mind it, Xiao-xiongdi."
Chu Wanning paused, then asked, "Do you guys often give the elders
nicknames in private?"