Chu Wanning's heart raced, and he was so mad his face flushed.
He could see, from the corner of his eye, that the man was still standing
frozen in the same spot. Despite not looking directly at him, Chu Wanning
could feel the man's stare, open and brazen, like a sword raised from the
crucible—still hissing with an overwhelming heat that vaporized the curtain
of water and pierced right through to him. Though he couldn't say why, he
felt absolutely scandalized. With an increasingly sour expression, he bit
down on his lip and retreated even farther into the waterfall.
But it turned out this guy was a moron. As Chu Wanning scrambled
backward to hide, the man took a step forward like a puppet on a string.
Chu Wanning was furious. There were always a couple of perverts at
Sisheng Peak; there had even once been a woman who, instead of going to
sleep in her bed like a normal person, had crawled onto the roof at the Red
Lotus Pavilion to peep at him bathing. Just thinking about it made his scalp
go numb, and gooseflesh rose along the arm that had been grabbed by that
guy.
Fortunately, after he'd retreated into the waterfall as deep as he could
go—inadvertently swallowing more than a few gulps of the water in the
process—the man finally decided to leave him be, returning to the
streaming water to continue rinsing himself, though he looked back several
times.
Chu Wanning tamped down his anger the best he could; he was in no
mood to soak in the baths anymore; his only thought was to finish up and
get out of there as soon as possible. He reached for the towel draped over
his shoulder, only to realize that the towel, together with the soap-bean bar
and fragrance bar wrapped inside, had fallen into the water during his great
tumble earlier.
They'd probably dissolved away by now. Should he get out to fetch a
new one? But he was naked, and getting out would involve walking past
that guy.
Chu Wanning's face had gone from red to blue. He pressed his thin
lips together, mortified. He was not going. Like an idiot, he remained
standing with his arms crossed over his chest and his back to the rock,
letting the water wash over him in the deepest part of the waterfall.
Chu Wanning stood there, silent, unmoving. So did that other man.
On the other side of the streaming water, that guy spoke up to ask
hesitantly, "Would you like a soap-bean bar?"
He received no reply.
"And fragrance bars?"
Again, no reply.
"Surely you're not going to just wash like that?"
Staying right where he was, Chu Wanning closed his eyes and replied
coldly, "Toss them over, then."
But the man didn't toss the bars over—perhaps he thought it would be
rude to do so with a stranger. After a short delay, Chu Wanning watched a
peach leaf enchanted with spiritual power drift slowly toward him under the
waterfall, bearing a soap-bean bar and two fragrance bars.
Chu Wanning picked up the items but paused upon taking a closer
look. The soap-bean bar was as it always was, since everyone used
basically the same thing. But the stranger had picked out a plum-blossomscented fragrance bar and a haitang-scented one, Chu Wanning's favorites.
He couldn't help but glance at the tall figure in the distance through
the sparkling, translucent curtain of water.
"Those two scents okay?" the man asked.
"Fine," Chu Wanning replied.
The man said no more, and the two continued their baths in silence
within their separate, distant corners, each occupied with his own thoughts.
Chu Wanning began to feel a little more at ease as he washed. Cautiously,
he stepped back out from the depths of the waterfall; the stream where he
was standing was actually a bit too strong for comfort.
But the man looked over again the instant he emerged. It would've
been one thing if he just looked, but there was something weird in his stare.
Chu Wanning got the distinct impression that the man wanted to say
something but was stopping himself, and that he was wavering between
coming closer or staying back. His skin prickled all over.
Chu Wanning washed for a bit until he finally couldn't take it
anymore and decided to leave first. But he had left his clothes at the
entrance, and he'd have to go back that way to get dressed. Chu Wanning
could do nothing but brace himself as he walked toward the man with his
face sullen and teeth gritted.
As he waded past the man, not too close but also not too far, that guy
unexpectedly also started to move, pulling up his long hair and shaking the
water from his bangs to follow Chu Wanning out of the bath.
A vein in Chu Wanning's temple throbbed. He started moving faster,
but that man was astoundingly shameless—he started moving faster as well.
The vein in Chu Wanning's temple throbbed harder. The tips of his
fingers had already begun to glow with the golden light of Tianwen, but he
held back from summoning his weapon—not because he was concerned
about injuring someone, but solely because he felt that he should get
dressed before beating anyone up. He started wading even faster.
This time, the man stopped instead of continuing to tail him. Chu
Wanning sighed in relief, but had only let out half a breath before he heard
the man say from behind him, "There are…soap bubbles in your hair."
Chu Wanning froze.
"Aren't you gonna rinse it off?"
Chu Wanning burned with anger. The man approached slowly, not
stopping until he was very close—right behind, where his voice could be
clearly heard. If Chu Wanning hadn't been so furious, he would've noticed
that the voice was familiar, despite its change in timbre. Unfortunately, he
was at present engulfed by the flames of rage.
"You…" The man seemed to still have something more to say.
But Chu Wanning had reached the limits of his forbearance. He
whipped around, golden light flashing to life in his palm as he lashed out
with an audible whoosh, a dangerous glint in his eyes. Chu Wanning was so
enraged that he was tempted to kill this guy and be done with it. "What the
hell is wrong with you?!"
Tianwen ripped through the hazy steam, snapping directly toward the
other man's chest. For an instant, the golden glow lit his face. Chu Wanning
saw a pair of eyes—clear, gentle, sheepish eyes that seemed to hold flowing
rivers of stars, like so many glimmering fireflies on the wind, yet were also
tranquil as still, deep waters, veiling bygone things beneath.
Mo Ran?!
He tried to pull back, but it was too late; the willow vine hissed as it
struck Mo Ran's firm, glistening chest. Mo Ran only let out a stifled grunt
and ducked his head a little. When he looked back up, his eyes held not the
slightest trace of anger or resentment, but were a little wet, as if washed by
the first rains of Lin'an.
Chu Wanning recalled Tianwen and stood frozen in place. A long
interval passed before he managed a hoarse, "Why didn't you dodge?"
Mo Ran replied, "Sh-Shizun…"
Chu Wanning was stunned. He had imagined so many times how the
two of them might meet again, but never did he think it would be at
Melodic Springs, in the hot spring pool. "What're you doing here? When
did you get back?!"
"I just did," Mo Ran replied softly. "I was too dirty and unpresentable
from rushing to get here, so I came to take a bath before going to see
Shizun. I didn't expect…"
For a moment, Chu Wanning was speechless. Neither of them had
expected something like this to happen. They had both wished for their
reunion to be proper and dignified. Mo Ran had probably, at the very least,
wanted to appear before Chu Wanning clean and well-dressed.
But in the end? Not only was their meeting not proper, it was straightup laughable.
Not only was it not dignified, it was absolutely ridiculous.
Not only were they not well-dressed, they were both completely
naked.
They were clean though. So clean they didn't have a single stitch on.
"Shizun, it's really… It's really you…"
Mo Ran, for his part, didn't care much for these things. For five years,
Chu Wanning had slept, and he had been awake; what had only spanned the
length of a dream for Chu Wanning had been more than a thousand
torturous days for him. His frame of mind was far more complicated than
Chu Wanning's. Forcing down his surging emotions, the rims of his eyes a
little red, he said, "It's been so long that I, just now…I didn't dare believe
my eyes. I thought I might've had the wrong person, I thought…"
Head ringing, Chu Wanning was at a loss for words. It was a long
moment before he said, "Why didn't you just ask me if you weren't sure?
Instead of silently creeping after me like that."
"I did want to ask," Mo Ran said softly, "but it's been five years…and
then to suddenly…see Shizun right in front of me, I thought… I thought I
was dreaming…"
As I approach home my nervousness grows, I dare not ask even those
passing by.
Those lines likely described what he felt when he first saw that
familiar silhouette. He'd dreamt such dreams too many times in the past
five years; he was afraid it was more of the same madness, and that he
would wake with tear stains on his pillow to find that the reunion he'd seen
was just another joyous delusion.
Chu Wanning maintained a calm exterior, but his insides were a
roiling mess. It was hard work, really, to speak so stiffly and dryly while his
heart felt so soft and gooey. "What kind of dream could be this absurd?"
Mo Ran stilled for a beat at Chu Wanning's response, as if he'd
remembered something. He pressed his lips together, and a light flickered in
his eyes. He hadn't planned to bring this up the moment they met again, but
he realized after some hesitation that if he didn't say it now, while Chu
Wanning hadn't yet had a chance to rebuild his walls, he probably wouldn't
get another chance.
So he said, after a pause, "…Does Shizun not remember?"
"Remember what?"
Mo Ran's eyes were deep and dark. "What you said to me before—
that the most wonderful dreams are rarely ever true."
"That was because…" Chu Wanning caught himself mid-sentence,
suddenly recognizing the words he had spoken to Mo Ran at Jincheng Lake
as he rescued him from the blood hourglass. Back then, he'd uttered this
melancholic sentiment in the depths of his own misery. He was a little
surprised Mo Ran remembered it so clearly after all these years.
But—how did Mo Ran know it had actually been him at Jincheng
Lake? Had Shi Mei told him?
Chu Wanning lifted his eyes to peek at him and found himself
meeting Mo Ran's steady gaze. Only then did he realize that Mo Ran hadn't
actually known the truth and had only said it to gauge his reaction.
"So it really was Shizun, then," Mo Ran said softly.
Chu Wanning kept his mouth shut.
Mo Ran raised a hand. His chest had been slashed open, and blood
seeped from the wound. He smiled wryly. "Over these last few years, I've
done a lot of thinking about the past. I wanted to understand just how much
Shizun had done for me. I thought back on a lot of things, including the
illusion at Jincheng Lake. Shi Mei never calls me by my full name."
He paused before continuing. "The more I thought, the more those
memories tormented me. There were a lot of things I wanted to ask Shizun
about once you woke."
Chu Wanning watched him silently.
"But the thing I wanted to ask about the most was… Shizun, the one
who saved me at the bottom of the lake back then—it was you, wasn't it?"
Mo Ran stepped closer as he spoke. Chu Wanning wanted to back
away. He'd suddenly realized just how tall Mo Ran had become, like a
mountain, with powerful strength latent in every inch of his body. He'd
suddenly realized just how bright Mo Ran's eyes were, like the very sun had
fallen into those twin pools, all the colors of dawn splashed across those
gleaming waters.
Chu Wanning found himself flustered for no reason whatsoever. He
said, "It wasn't me."
Mo Ran didn't buy it at all.
Grasping desperately at straws, Chu Wanning scrambled to change
the subject, but he was so startled, so nervous and so discomfited, that he
completely forgot about the question he'd already asked, and which Mo Ran
had already answered. Looking at the bleeding gash he'd inflicted, he asked
once more, "Why didn't you dodge when I struck you earlier?"
Mo Ran fell still for a second, then dropped his thick curtain of lashes
with a smile, answering once more: "You said that dreams that were too
good to be true probably weren't." He paused, before continuing at a
murmur: "I wanted to see if it would hurt. If it hurts, then it's not a dream."
He walked over and stood right in front of Chu Wanning. Maybe it
was because of how sudden their reunion had been, but in his heart, the joy
and fondness and tenderness and heartbreak overtook all. Mo Ran thought
of nothing else, no flights of fancy. He even forgot that he was supposed to
maintain a proper distance from Chu Wanning. He'd had every intention of
keeping that arm's length of propriety between a disciple and his master.
But he didn't. Whenever his emotions ran deep, he'd always think of
the person before him as Wanning rather than Shizun.
Mo Ran's eyes grew still more red and teary. He lifted an arm with a
grin—"I think some water got in my eyes just now"—and scrubbed at his
face.
Chu Wanning stared up at him in a daze. All this time he'd been
anticipating Mo Ran's return, so he was a little more clearheaded than his
disciple right now, but that portion of clarity also afforded him the presence
of mind to notice their current condition—talking face-to-face while buck
naked. And not only that; Mo Ran was so close that, were he to come just a
bit closer, he'd be able to wrap his arms around Chu Wanning the way he
had back in the underworld.
Chu Wanning didn't want to continue looking up at Mo Ran's unfairly
handsome face. But when he dropped his gaze a few inches, the sight that
greeted him was one of broad shoulders and a firm chest, the blood from
Tianwen's lash spreading slowly, and droplets of water shivering minutely
with every breath Mo Ran drew. Chu Wanning couldn't tell which was
hotter, that sculpted chest or the water of the hot springs. All he knew was
that he was surrounded by Mo Ran's scent, and that it was going to steal
away his soul.
"Shizun, I…"
He what? Before Mo Ran could say any more, Chu Wanning turned
on his heel and took off running. Mo Ran was flabbergasted—he was
literally running. He'd never before seen Chu Wanning fleeing like this,
running away like whatever was behind him was gonna eat him alive and
chew up his soul.
"…I've really missed you so much." Mo Ran finished limply. He
stood where he was, pursing his lips. What had he run away for… He felt a
little wronged.
When he got out of the pool and spied Chu Wanning, whose face
alternated between hues of red and blue as he scrambled frantically to get
dressed, he felt even more wronged. "Shizun," he mumbled.
Chu Wanning ignored him.
"Shizun…"
Chu Wanning continued to ignore him while wrapping the belt sash
around his waist.
"Shizunnnn…"
"What?!" Dressed at long last, Chu Wanning finally let out a breath.
He felt his dignity and composure return to his body now that it was
covered. His sword-straight brows slanted in anger, and his stern phoenix
eyes glared fiercely at the traitorous disciple who dared exceed him in
height. "What's so important that you can't wait till we're outside to say it?!
Talking to me naked like that, have you no shame?!"
A little chagrined, Mo Ran raised a fist to his lips and cleared his
throat. "…It's not like I want to be naked."
"Then why aren't you getting dressed!"
Mo Ran paused, fixing his gaze on a peach tree near the side of the
pool as he began. "So, it's like this…" He took a deep breath, then finally
steeled himself to say: "Shizun, those are my clothes you're wearing."
A faint blush spread across Mo Ran's cheeks as he stared intently at a
branch of peach blossoms swaying in the gentle breeze.