Well now, this was awkward.
Everyone else, from Madam Wang to Xue Meng and even Xue
Zhengyong, had politely stood in greeting when Nangong Liu came in. Chu
Wanning hadn't cared to do so, but had remained standing where he was by
the window.
But to Mo Ran, Rufeng Sect was no more than some worthless
garbage sect he had trodden underfoot in his previous life. He knew the
place was a disordered mess beneath the surface glamor, hardly worthy of
respect. Still, he hadn't meant to make things awkward for Nangong Liu—it
just never occurred to him to stand.
It was quite the strange scene. Nangong Liu, the host and elder, stood
with an amicable smile, face not at all angry but full of warm familiarity.
Mo Ran, the guest and junior, reclined languidly in the taishi chair with his
legs crossed and a piping hot cup of tea in hand.
Xue Zhengyong hadn't paid any attention to what Mo Ran was doing,
but as he turned to look now, he couldn't help his mortification. This boy
really had no manners!
"And you must be…the famed Mo-zongshi that everyone talks of
these last few years?"
Setting the lid back on his teacup, Mo Ran lifted his eyes and replied,
"That's me."
"Such gallant y—"
"Nangong-xianjun." Mo Ran cut him off with a smile. "You've
already used 'gallant youth' on my cousin, so perhaps not on me as well?"
He spoke courteously, with an easy tone and a warm smile, but the
words were anything but. Nor did he bother to stand. In fact, after casually
saying those words, he lifted his teacup once again, scraping the celadon lid
against its rim, and blew at the gently rising steam. Lowering his gaze along
with those long, dense eyelashes, he returned to leisurely sipping his tea. He
was young, handsome, tall, and poised. His attitude and mannerisms gave
the impression that he was the true master of Rufeng Sect, the one who
stood at the apex of the entire cultivation realm, while Nangong Liu was no
more than a dog perched by his seat.
"Ha ha, Mo-zongshi is quite right. This humble one simply couldn't
think of a better phrase due to my own ineloquence, so—"
"That can't be right." Mo Ran put down his teacup and looked up
with a faint smile. "Nangong-xianjun has had no end of praise to dole out
since entering this room. If you aren't a smooth talker, who out there is?"
"Aiya, Mo-zongshi flatters me too much."
"Who said I was flattering you?" Mo Ran smiled, bright eyes fixed on
him. "Being a smooth talker isn't always a good thing."
Xue Zhengyong finally couldn't take it anymore. Lowering his voice,
he scolded, "Ran-er—!"
It was understandable for Chu Wanning to be hostile toward Nangong
Liu; at least there was history between them, and Chu Wanning had the
social status to rival him. Mo Ran, on the other hand…
Mo Ran paid Xue Zhengyong no mind, speaking instead to Nangong
Liu. "Nangong-xianjun should save the honeyed words for the other
juniors. I'm a crude person; I won't understand it, and I don't want to hear
it."
Xue Zhengyong was completely speechless.
Although Mo Ran knew his uncle would be displeased with his
behavior, he didn't regret it in the least. The world was filled with so many
vile things. Chu Wanning, with his fierce temper, was always sticking his
neck out—take for example the exorcism of Luo Xianxian when he had
beaten up Landlord Chen, the paying client, for mistreating a helpless girl,
heedless of any damage to his reputation. He'd done nothing wrong, yet his
name was ever maligned in the mouths of others. Those people would call
him "coldblooded," "intractable," and "unfeeling."
Mo Ran was determined to stop others from calling his shizun "illmannered" ever again. Thus he vowed to act even more egregiously than
Chu Wanning did, even more over-the-top. It was a dumb plan, but it was
the only one he could conceive of to protect his shizun. While the other
three in the room accepted Nangong Liu's flattery and favor out of
politeness and decorum, Mo Ran did not. Nor was this determination a spurof-the-moment decision. Since the day he learned that it had been Chu
Wanning who carried him from that bloody battlefield on his back, crawling
when he could no longer walk; ever since he'd laid eyes on that human soul
and that bowl of wontons in Mengpo Hall; ever since he'd traveled to the
depths of the underworld to bring Chu Wanning back, Mo Ran had vowed
to stand with Chu Wanning for as long as Chu Wanning would have him.
Nangong Liu had run into two walls in a row. Any other sect leader
would have flipped his lid and kicked them all back onto the street. But
Nangong Liu did no such thing. He acted as if it never happened, cheerfully
chatting with Xue Zhengyong until Xue Zhengyong couldn't take the
embarrassment and pulled him aside to quietly apologize for not getting his
nephew in line.
Nangong Liu laughed it off. "Aiya, it's expected for a youngster to be
bold. I think it's a wonderful thing that Mo-zongshi is so forthright."
After the meeting with Nangong Liu, Rufeng disciples led the party to
the courtyard where they would stay for the duration of the wedding.
Mo Ran sneezed the whole way there. Xue Meng turned to look at him.
"Maybe Sect Leader Nangong laid a curse on you for all that mouthing off
just now…"
"Shut it, more like you got cursed." Mo Ran's eyes were watery. "I…
achoo, I can't handle such strong incense, that room back there—achoo!
The incense was really too…achoo! Too…"
"Too unpleasant."
"Ah, Shi—achoo—zun."
Chu Wanning furrowed his brow and disdainfully passed him a
handkerchief. "How unsightly. Wipe your face."
A teary-eyed Mo Ran accepted the haitang-embroidered handkerchief
with a grin. "Shizun is so kind to me; thank you, Shizun."
Chu Wanning was a little flustered. "Who's kind to you?!"
"That's right!" Xue Meng piped up, unwilling to be second. "Who's
kind to you, I'm clearly the one Shizun is kindest to!"
Mo Ran taunted him: "Aren't you a little too old to be making a
contest of that?" He turned quite serious and held up the handkerchief. "See
this? Shizun said he'll make me one just like it. Do you have one?"
Mortified, Chu Wanning snatched the handkerchief back with
lightning speed as he snapped, "Mo Weiyu!"
Xue Meng momentarily froze in shock, then flew into a rage. "Yeah
right! As if anyone's gonna believe Shizun would make you a handkerchief!
Keep dreaming! Shameless!"
Thus, chatting and bickering, they arrived at the lodgings Nangong
Liu had arranged for them. There were four rooms around the courtyard,
one for Xue Zhengyong and Madam Wang, and one each for the rest.
Flowers danced gently between winding paths to quiet retreats, and the
soothing sound of running water babbled in the background. It was a scene
of singular elegance.
Mo Ran, who had been in good spirits, faltered when he saw which
courtyard they would be staying in. His eyes glazed over for a moment
despite himself. As he followed the rest into the courtyard, his mood grew
grimmer as he took in the details of their surroundings.
This was the one place in Rufeng Sect that had left a deep impression
on him in his previous life. Being back here made him think about other
possibilities; if Chu Wanning had not recalled him from that path at the cost
of his own life, perhaps he would've walked the same road in this lifetime
and become Emperor Taxian-jun. Even now he would be commanding
millions of Zhenlong chess pieces and burning this renowned sect to the
ground. The thought sent streams of cold sweat down his back and a
thousand thoughts rushing through his mind. Mo Ran closed his eyes. He
was no longer the youth who wore his heart on his sleeve. He could keep
his emotions in check, and so it was that no one noticed the haze clouding
his heart.
Each retired to their own room to rest. Mo Ran stood in front of his
for a while, hands clasped behind his back, but did not go inside. One of the
maids in the courtyard, a little uneasy, asked carefully, "Does Xianjun not
find the room satisfactory?"
"Oh, no, no." Coming back to himself, Mo Ran smiled. "This
courtyard just reminded me of somewhere I used to live, is all."
"What a coincidence. I was worried Xianjun didn't find the
accommodations to his tastes. If Xianjun has any request, please let me
know and I will do my best to fulfill it."
"I'm good, thank you," Mo Ran replied with a smile. He looked up at
the hundred-year-old osmanthus tree in the yard, its trunk so thick he could
barely wrap his arms around it. The dancing shade of its foliage swept
across his vision like ghosts from his past. His eyelashes quivered minutely,
and melancholy flooded his chest.
He spun around and called out to the maid who was leaving. "Wait!"
"Yes, Xianjun?"
Mo Ran hesitated. "I wanted to ask about someone." He paused, and
when he lifted his eyes, his gaze was torch-bright. "Do you know of a…"
"A…?"
"Actually, never mind, let me ask about someone else instead,"
Mo Ran said. "Do you know where I can find Ye Wangxi?"
"Ye-gongzi is Elder Xu's direct disciple," the maid answered. "He
lives with him in the same courtyard. Xianjun can find Ye-gongzi there."
Mo Ran secretly let out the breath he'd been holding. The last time
he'd seen Ye Wangxi had been at that restaurant, where Ye Wangxi had
begged Nangong Si to go back with him and Nangong Si had refused. Back
then, Ye Wangxi had said, "If it's my presence back home that's upsetting
you, then I'll leave, and you'll never have to see me again."
To be honest, Mo Ran had been worried about Ye Wangxi. He felt that
the man had suffered enough in the previous lifetime. To Mo Ran's mind,
Ye Wangxi was not unlike Chu Wanning—both were people of morals and
conviction, though one was reserved while the other was fiery. Yet neither
met a good end. He regretted the past and had hoped Ye Wangxi would be
better-off in this lifetime. He was relieved to hear that Nangong Si hadn't
been so heartless as to chase Ye Wangxi off in truth.
Elder Xu's courtyard was called Farewell to Three Lifetimes, the
name supposedly taken from the phrase, "One sip of Mengpo's soup bids
farewell to three lifetimes of memories." It meant that life was fleeting, and
that it was best to forget that which ought to be forgotten instead of
wallowing. All would be forgotten in death by the time one got to Naihe
Bridge anyway.
How pessimistic. No wonder Ye Wangxi had turned out so repressed
you couldn't beat a fart out of him.
"What a clever parrot, how interesting. Now recite this: one bowl of
rice, one scoop of water, in a humble alley…"12
A guard had gone ahead to announce Mo Ran's visit and his
intentions. Mo Ran had scarcely stepped around the partition wall when he
heard the languid, teasing voice of a man from within. He took a few more
steps and saw the speaker standing in the sun-drenched courtyard. He
looked to be in his early thirties and was dressed in a robe so humble it
sported a few patches at the corners of its sleeves. Despite the chill, he wore
no shoes but stood barefoot on the cold stone pavement with a handful of
sunflower seeds, teasing a snow-white parrot with blue eyes and a long tail.
The parrot flapped its wings as it rocked side to side on its perch. It
seemed pleased with itself as it sang loudly back, "Ah—one bowl of rice,
one scoop of water, in a humble alley—"
"Mm, not bad, not bad. You're smarter than Little Ye-zi,13 you know.
He wasn't nearly this clever when he was young, couldn't memorize this bit
no matter how he tried." The man fed the parrot some seeds. "Here, treats
from Daddy."
Mo Ran stared, speechless. Calling himself a bird's daddy… Did that
make him a birdbrain then?
When the man turned and saw Mo Ran beside the partition wall, he
cracked a sunflower seed between his teeth and spit the shell. Then he
suddenly beamed. It was a bright smile, yet hints of something disquieting
lurked beneath. Under the radiant sunlight, he projected an air of breezy
nonchalance.
"Mo-zongshi, Mo Ran, yes?" He smiled. "Pleased to meet you."
Mo Ran returned the smile. "Same here."
With pleasantries duly exchanged, Mo Ran took a closer look at this
man's face. He looked vaguely familiar—as if Mo Ran had seen him before,
during his slaughter of Rufeng Sect in the past life. Was he…
"Yifu, you're running around without shoes again."
A familiar voice rang out. A remark of such little import, but one that
was thunderous to Mo Ran's ears. Mo Ran whipped his head around to find
Ye Wangxi striding in through the moon gate, tall and slender as ever with a
gentle expression softening his features. He walked straight over, holding a
pair of yellow satin shoes which he set down at the man's feet.
Yifu? Ye Wangxi's foster father…
Through the thrumming of blood in his ears, Mo Ran could hear the
cries and screams from a lifetime past, the clang of sword against sword,
the thunder of battle drums.
"Yifu—!"
A face marred with bloodstains burst through his memories.
Ye Wangxi, crying and screaming, voice splitting the heavens…
When Mo Ran had razed Rufeng Sect, Nangong Liu had fled to save
his own hide, leaving the seventy-two cities headless and floundering. Elder
Xu, Rufeng Sect's foremost warden, had stepped up to take the reins,
marshaling the panicked masses—masses that Mo Ran would've otherwise
wiped out in an instant—in resistance with the aid of Ye Wangxi. The man
wasn't even a Nangong, yet he'd shouldered the responsibility that
should've fallen on a sect leader of that surname and used his position as
elder of Rufeng Sect to defend its seventy-two cities to the last.
He wasn't even Ye Wangxi's father by blood, yet he'd moved to
intercept the sharp blade filled with spiritual power aimed at Ye Wangxi's
back, sacrificing his own body to protect the child he raised. Mo Ran had
watched this scene from atop the city walls, and his lips had twisted in a
sneer—heavens only knew how jealous he'd been in that moment. To think:
there was someone out there who would willingly die for another without a
blood tie! His narrow-minded self had felt shock and pain. He was so
jealous he'd almost gone mad, so jealous his eyes had gone bloodshot.
He'd thought, Great, that's just great, look how lucky Ye Wangxi is.
Had there been a single person in this vast world other than his mother
who'd been willing to die for him, would he have ended up like this?! The
heavens were kind to everyone else; it was only to him that they were so
grudging, so cruel!
He'd wanted to destroy everyone he was jealous of. All these people
huddled together for warmth: he was going to send every last one of them
to hell. How was it fair that he was the only person to never experience a
single day of contentment or a single spark of warmth, that the only person
who had ever been kind to him had died long ago. It was the only bit of
warmth he'd ever had; why did it have to be taken from him?!
He hated.
Looking back, Mo Ran could only think of how stupid he'd been back
then. There was someone in this world who would willingly die for him. He
was the one who had missed it. Who hadn't realized, and who had let that
person down.
Mo Ran closed his eyes and took a moment to settle his turbulent
emotions before looking up again. He knew who this man was now: this
was Ye Wangxi's shizun, as well as his yifu, Xu Shuanglin. The man who,
on the second day of the slaughter of Rufeng Sect, had died in battle to save
Ye Wangxi.
Mo Ran turned away, a bitter ache in his heart. He couldn't bear to
look at that smiling, carefree person bathed in sunlight any longer. He went
over to greet Ye Wangxi instead. "Ye-gongzi."
Ye Wangxi paused when he noticed Mo Ran standing a short distance
away. Then he smiled and said, "Ah, Mo-xiong is here too. Long time no
see."
"Long time no see."
In this lifetime, Ye Wangxi had only met Mo Ran a handful of times
and wasn't terribly familiar with him. He continued to smile politely as he
asked, "Are you here for my yifu?"
Mo Ran silently glanced over at Xu Shuanglin before shaking his
head, a little awkward. "No. I'm here to see you."
"Well, look at that, Little Ye-zi. When was the last time someone
came here looking for you?" Grinning lazily, Xu Shuanglin popped another
sunflower seed in his mouth. "Where did you meet Mo-zongshi, anyway?"
"At Peach Blossom Springs."
"That's nice, that's nice," Xu Shuanglin said, smiling as he poured the
rest of the sunflower seeds into the bird's food bowl. "You young ones keep
chatting; I'm going to go take a walk around."
Ye Wangxi tugged at him. "Yifu, you aren't wearing your shoes
again."
"Oh, I forgot." Still smiling, Xu Shuanglin slipped the shoes on.
"There, better?"
But, out of the corner of his eye, Mo Ran saw the man stroll leisurely
around the corner, bend down, take the shoes off again, and tuck them into
the front of his robe before continuing on his merry way.
This father-son pair, in terms of both appearance and personality,
was…really very strange. Xu Shuanglin looked very young on account of
his cultivation method, not a day past thirty. He seemed more like Ye
Wangxi's brother than anything else. In fact, with his willful, mischievous
temperament, he seemed more like a younger brother. What was with that
plaque outside solemnly inscribed with "Farewell to Three Lifetimes" then
—was he just messing around, or what?
Side by side, Ye Wangxi and Mo Ran walked unhurriedly along a
shaded path. The courtyard was full of trees that flowered and bore fruit,
but it was now the middle of winter, and everything was withered. Only a
few dry, yellow leaves clung to the branches, quivering in the wake of the
passing wind.
"Sorry about what happened at the restaurant last time. It was quite
embarrassing."
"Not at all," Mo Ran said. "How have you been lately?"
He regretted the words as soon as they'd left his mouth. Ye Wangxi
wasn't the type to say anything even if he was miserable. Sure enough, he
smiled a small smile and said, "I'm all right, and you?"
"Pretty good."
The two weren't close. Mo Ran had only sought him out because he
remembered the sins of his past life, felt remorseful, and wanted to see for
himself how this still-living Ye Wangxi fared. But now that he was alone
with him, he really didn't know what to talk about. Mo Ran knew many of
Ye Wangxi's secrets, none of which were appropriate topics of discussion;
he found himself with nothing to say.
The two strolled in silence for a time. Ye Wangxi asked, "How's Xia
Sini doing?"
Mo Ran was caught by surprise for a moment, then chuckled. "You
still remember that name? Impressive."
"His name is rather memorable."
"Ha ha, I suppose. Xia Sini is here too; you can see him later."
Ye Wangxi seemed bewildered. "He's here too? But…I don't think
the sect leader would've invited…"
"You don't know who Xia Sini really is yet, do you?" Mo Ran said
with a laugh. "Let me tell you, then. It's a long story."
So it was that he recounted the chain of events that had led to Chu
Wanning becoming Xia Sini. Ye Wangxi looked pensive for a while, then
sighed. "Mo-gongzi is very fortunate to have him as your master."
"And Rufeng Sect is very fortunate to count Ye-gongzi among its
disciples."
Ye Wangxi, a little embarrassed, replied with another small smile,
"Mo-gongzi is too kind."
They arrived at a small, red-painted pontoon bridge. The path here
had been all dry branches and shriveled leaves, but this place was verdant,
with tall stalks of bamboo that stood proud and unyielding in wind and
snow. The waters of Rufeng Sect had been infused with spiritual power to
prevent freezing, and the foot of the bridge was awash with the sweet
tinkling of running water embraced by twin groves of lush green.
When Mo Ran turned, he saw Ye Wangxi with eyes downcast, his
gaze fixed on the sparkling stream and its reflected light dancing across his
dark pupils. He was the same person, but the new weariness on his face was
hard to miss.
Nangong Si's marriage was indeed too, too cruel to Ye Wangxi.
Mo Ran suddenly found it hard to stomach. He felt as if he were looking at
Chu Wanning, who gave so much of himself yet hardly received as much as
a backward glance.
"Ye-gongzi, why don't you come to Sisheng Peak instead?" Mo Ran
asked.
"What?"
Mo Ran shut his mouth. The words had felt overly impetuous the
instant they'd passed his lips, and he well knew what Ye Wangxi's answer
would be. He sighed and said, "It was just an offhand remark. Don't mind
me."
Ye Wangxi smiled in response. He had used to have a handsome,
alluring smile, seven parts gallantry and three parts elegance. Here was still
the same person with the same smile—but his cheeks were now sunken, and
though the gallantry remained, the elegance had withered, leaving twin
pools of sorrow. It was obvious that he had tried to hide it. But despite his
best efforts, this sorrow was too deep to be concealed.
"Is Mo-xiong here to poach people for Sisheng Peak?" Ye Wangxi
quipped.
"Ha ha, sure am. Though Ye-gongzi probably won't bite, so just take
it as a joke."
"Mn, my yifu is here, so I'm not leaving."
"What do you plan to do, then?"
Pain flashed across Ye Wangxi's face, and for once he didn't have a
ready answer. What did he plan to do? He didn't know either. Ye Wangxi
felt he was a moth to Nangong Si's flame. He couldn't help being drawn to
that warmth even if it led to his own ruin.
But Nangong Si didn't want him.
"I'll just…stay here at Rufeng Sect, keep doing the things that are my
duty," Ye Wangxi said with a wan smile. "Serve the sect leader, serve Yifu,
and later, serve the young master…" He paused, and his hands tightened
into fists, the joints as pale as jade.
Mo Ran was perturbed. How could Ye Wangxi say the rest of that
sentence so calmly, how could he say the next words at all…
"And serve the young mistress."
Ye Wangxi finally dropped his gaze, as if unable to bear it any longer.
But only for an instant. Then he raised his eyes, looking at Mo Ran in that
gentle, polite way of his. He even managed to keep a smile on his face as he
stood in the bitter cold of winter, resilient as the bamboo all around.
A sudden gust sent the fresh-fallen snow scattering in the bamboo
groves.
In that moment, Mo Ran decided: no, Nangong Si was not going to
marry Song Qiutong.