It was customary for imperial offspring to study when they reached the age of five. As the days gradually grew warmer, Prince Wei decided to send Jin geâer to the Higher Study.\n
On his end, he informed the Jianping Emperor of this matter, while on the other, Feng Sheng trained her son to be mentally prepared.\n
Feng Sheng had asked Prince Wei beforehand. Going to the Higher Study for erudition was extremely toilsome. One would have to study early in the morning around the period of rabbit up until the period of ram,<sup>1</sup> but they couldnât return home afterwards, as they also had martial arts, archery, and riding lessons to attend.\n
In other words, Jin geâer had to rouse earlier than chickens and could not return home until it was dark. A five-year-old child could only persist for a day or two. After the novelty had worn off, how could he hold on?\n
An incident had occurredââthe fourth son, that great ancestor of some other princeâs manor, had made a fool out of himself. After attending the Higher Study for a few days, he no longer wanted to go. He cried and quarreled with Princess Consort Qin in the manor, and when he was forcefully sent back there to study, he squabbled with the masters in the Higher Study.\n
A child who was only a little over the age of five knew nothing about bearing responsibility and blame as well as studying with utmost diligence. When the Jianping Emperor learned of it, in a fit of rage, he ordered Prince Qin to take the child back home.\n
Anyhow, Feng Sheng had heard that Prince Qin had beaten the boy when they returned home.\n
Feng Sheng explained the advantages and disadvantages of studying to Jin geâer and took Prince Qinâs fourth child as an example.\n
âAlthough you have Mother, and although your dad wonât beat you, you are our familyâs only child. Should your dad lose face because of something you did in the study, all of us in the Wei Prince Manor will similarly lose face. You should think about it well. If you really cannot bear it, it will be a better choice for us to delay your studies for another year.â\n
âHow can I do that? Sixteenth Uncle already studied when he was five.â\n
âIn fact, with the rudimentary knowledge your dad and I had taught you, you wonât lag behind others even if you go a year later. But if you really insist on going, you mustnât back out to avoid losing face once youâre in thrown into the palace.â\n
Feng Sheng had already blathered on about this back and forth several times, and Jin geâer had grown a little impatient listening to it.\n
âMother, this son has already decided. Your honored self need not say anything more.â\n
Feng Sheng smiled. âAll right. Now that youâve decided, Mother will not say more. When that moment comes, donât say that Mother treats you badly or even try looking for your grandmother to complain about me.â\n
Jin geâer was close to flying into a rage out of indignation. âIs this son such a person in Motherâs heart?â\n
Feng Shengâs mouth spouted no words, but her eyes clearly exhibited an expression of âdidnât you do such things when you were younger?â\n
Jin geâer flounced out, greatly irritated. Feng Sheng ordered someone to prepare the things he would bring to use in the Higher Study. Once all that was over, she leaned back and stroked her raised belly.\n
Prince Wei strode in from outside, garbed in the solemn and dignified attire of a first-rank prince, looking like he had just returned from the palace.\n
The weather was so hot that Prince Weiâs collar was damp with sweat. De Wang bid two young eunuchs to wipe his perspiration and change his attire into cool kesi summer robes, and his boots to open-toed cloth shoes. He ambled to the kang, took a seat, and asked, âDid the child trouble you?â\n
Feng Sheng shot him an annoyed glance. âHow old is he? What can he trouble me with?â\n
A maidservant brought some herbal tea, and Prince Wei took a sip. âWhereâs Jin geâer?â\n
âHe ran away annoyed at what I said.â\n
Prince Wei was aware of her temperament. When his son grew old enough, this mother also became increasingly unscrupulous and either bullied her son so much until he cried, or tricked him until heâd be completely lost.\n
He felt that the reason why Jin geâer was growing more and more slow-witted was entirely that his mother was too devious. Not at all did she possess the consciousness of a mother, and this slightly worried him as he thought of their second child who would be born in the near future.\n
âWhat did Imperial Father say when you entered the palace? Did he agree?â\n
âThereâs nothing to agree or disagree on for this particular matter. Itâs merely a formality. Imperial Father has long mentioned Jin geâerâs entry into the Higher Study.â\n
âItâs likely that Imperial Father said so because Little Sixteen wants Jin geâer to play with him. People say that the emperor loves the eldest son, while the common people favor the youngest. Our Imperial Father is the other way around.â\n
The Jianping Emperor truly loved Sixteen dearly probably because Sixteen was the youngest. The palace had never again witnessed the birth of another child since Sixteen was born. However, this was also natural. After all, the Jianping Emperor was advanced in age and had since been favoring only the Imperial Noble Consort.\n
âThose words arenât wrong. Imperial Father indeed favored his eldest son most in the past.â\n
âAh, itâs pretty much the same now, too.â<sup>2</sup>\n
The married couple discussed matters the servants were unable to comprehend. It was no longer early, just in time to set the noon meal.\n
Most people would scarcely have an appetite on such a hot summer day. Feng Sheng was pregnant. Although she didnât have morning sickness since the start of her pregnancy, she was still weak and weary.\n
Since she had not been eating well as of recent, Prince Wei paid close attention to her. Those at the kitchen racked their brains to think of ways to get the Princess Consort to eat more. For todayâs noon meal, in addition to stir-frying a few fresh and tasty dishes, they also prepared cold noodles.\n
It comprised of shredded cucumber, blanched bean sprouts, and thin white noodles cooked in clear water, topped with a layer of minced meat sauce, vinegar, spicy oil, and garlicââdelicious and refreshing in every way.\n
As soon as the meals were set, Jin geâer came rushing from outside. He let Tao Zhi mix the noodles for him and enthusiastically ate a bowl.\n
Tao Zhi was one of the newly promoted first-class maids after Zhi Qiu married. Although Zhi Qiu had always professed that she would never marry, when a marriage predestined by fate swept in, nothing could stop it. She had served beside Feng Sheng and often dealt with Prince Weiâs own people, and she happened to exchange glances with one of Prince Weiâs bodyguards called Huo Wu.\n
Although Huo Wu was ranked fifth among his generation, he was actually the only child in the family. It was said that his mother had raised four children before his birth, but they all died early, and only he survived. When he was born, he was thus named so. The Huo family wasnât extremely affluent, but they were still well-off. Their family only had one such son, and he was also one of Prince Weiâs trusted aides, so needless to say, the days of his life were tolerably well.\n
After Zhi Qiuâs marriage, she originally should have stayed with Feng Sheng to wait upon her. However, she was pregnant and thereby went home to nourish the baby in her womb.\n
Jin geâer gobbled a bowl of noodles and asked Tao Zhi to mix another bowl for him. Taking advantage of the gap in time, he didnât forget to report Feng Sheng to Prince Wei.\n
âYour mother was saying that for your own good. Look at your sixth uncleâs fourth child. Your sixth uncle lost all face because of him,â said Prince Wei with an indifferent expression.\n
âRoyal Father,<sup>3</sup> youâre too partial. Everything Mother says is right to you. This son certainly isnât like him.â The little rascal was once again angered just as he finished another bowl of noodles. Visibly disgruntled, he wiped his mouth and ran away.\n
Had they been ordinary people witnessing their child behave like this, they would no longer feel like eating and would have others go and look after the child, but it seemed that this husband-wife pair took little heed of it. Noticing that Feng Shengâs appetite was better, Prince Wei served her another plateful with his chopsticks.\n
âWhatâs wrong with him these days? Why is he so easily provoked?â\n
âIsnât it because the weatherâs been too hot?â\n
âBoys grow up naughty and arenât as lovable as girls. It will be better if this baby is a daughter.â\n
Eh, again about having a daughter. Recently, Prince Wei would direct everything he would say to having a daughter.\n
âI havenât given birth yet, so who knows whether itâs a daughter or a son.â\n
*\n
Although Jin geâer spoke well, he was still unable to rise early on his first day of class in the Higher Study.\n
Fortunately, Feng Sheng had given orders in advance. Seeing that the little master hadnât called anyone to come, the maids and eunuchs serving Jin geâer carried him off the bed out of their own accord, clothed him, wiped his face, and had him rinse his mouth. Well, he actually wasnât able to rinse his mouth. When all this was over, the sky outside was still dark.\n
Standing in the darkness, Feng Sheng watched as Jin geâer was being carried into the carriage. The eunuch accompanying him immediately followed him inside. Several guards escorted the carriage as they departed from the prince manor and headed to the palace.\n
Prince Wei walked to her side and draped a cloak on her shoulders.\n
âGo back and sleep some more.â\n
Feng Sheng ignored his statement with her reply, âWere you also like this back then?â\n
Prince Wei nodded. âHow much honor and glory one enjoys, thatâs also the price one must pay. What, did you believe that imperial offspring do nothing but live out their days in dissipation?â\n
Having really thought as such, Feng Sheng inwardly gave out a dry laugh and said nothing.\n
âAlright, you shouldnât worry about him. As this princeâs son, he wonât lag behind others.â\n
Feng Sheng was not worried about such things, but she felt that it was too arduous for her child. However, this kind of hard work was essential, as there was nothing in this world that one could reap without sowing. When she was younger, the hardships she had to endure just so she could study also werenât any less.\n
But knowing and understanding were two entirely different things. What would hurt the sonâs body would wound the motherâs heart. For the most part, this was probably the one thing that mothers all over the world could not escape from.\n
On the other end, Jin geâer had actually awoken after all the tossing and turning, but he was still in a daze.\n
The carriage was still journeying, and Da De Zi, the eunuch who served him, was assailing his ear with long-winded chatter.\n
They were nearing the palace, but the little master had yet to eat the morning repast. If he wouldnât take advantage of this time to have even a bite of food, he wouldnât be able to eat at the Higher Study later on. When the Prince and Princess Consort had gotten up today, they saw him off at the gate. Anyway, Jin geâer had never met anyone as garrulous as Da De Zi, but it was also effective, as all his noise staved off his drowsiness.\n
Seeing the little master sit up straight, Da De Zi promptly shot the young eunuch beside him a meaningful look.\n
Everything was available in the carriage, and they had taken along with them whatever they might need. The young eunuch poured hot water from the warmer and gave it to Jin geâer to wipe his face awake with, while on the other side, Da De Zi had already taken out the morning meal from the food container.\n
âYoung Master, your honored self should eat even a little bit.â\n
Jin geâer, who always had an excellent appetite, had little interest in it. His drowsiness and lack of appetite truly troubled the people serving him.\n
âIf you donât eat your fill this time, the snacks you eat on your break in the Higher Study certainly wonât last until noon. Princess Consort ordered us to prepare millet pumpkin porridge, golden jujube cake, sesame milk roll, honey cake milk roll, and your favorite stir-fried bean sprouts with shredded tripeâŠâŠâ\n
His prattle was so lengthy that to Jin geâer, it no longer registered in his head.\n
However, as Da De Zi wished, he also eventually ate some dishes. When the morning meal was taken away, the carriage arrived at the gate of the palace.\n
By this time, the marble white color of the dawn sky had just appeared in the east. Jin geâer had never entered the palace this early.\n
Their journey wasnât totally lonely. As the princes gradually grew older, the children grew in number in every manor. The fewest was three to five, and Prince Weiâs family with only one son was among the minority.\n
The Higher Study wasnât just a place where princes and imperial grandchildren convened to study, but descendants of some imperial kinsmen and important ministers as well. Frankly speaking, however, they merely served as props. Just that, it couldnât be helped that this place would be hailed the absolute best to outsiders. How many families would break their heads just to get their children to this place?\n
Jin geâer was not familiar with these people. Feng Sheng wasnât a person who liked to go out and socialize, so she naturally seldom took him out. His most frequent playmate was his Sixteenth Uncle, and even if he recognized other people, it was still through the Sixteenth Princeâs introduction.\n
Before reaching the Qianqing Gate, Jin geâer caught sight of two figures, one large and one small, approaching from a distance.\n
The smaller figure was at the front, who was about the same height as him, dressed in everyday clothes expected of a prince. He had rosy red lips and pretty white teeth, delicate features, and a pair of clear black eyes. Apart from being slightly skinny, he had no other flaw.\n
It was the Sixteenth Prince.\n
Following at his side was his personal eunuch, Xiao Wang Zi.\n
âJin geâer, youâre finally here. I woke up early today to wait for you here.â\n
âSixteenth Uncle.â\n
âGo, go, go. Iâll lead you inside. Youâre the youngest there. You have my protection, so they wonât pick on you.â \n
âWho would dare bully me, Iâll beat him up,â said Jin geâer as he clenched his tiny fist.\n
This was also something Prince Wei and Feng Sheng couldnât understand the most. When Jin geâer was younger, he was extremely clever, but the older he grew, the more listless he appeared. This type of absent-mindedness wasnât out of stupidity, only that he resembled neither Feng Sheng nor Prince Wei. One had to know, both of them used their brains without moving their hands, yet this kid only liked to move his fists but not his brain.\n
But Jin geâer was still young, so they didnât take it to heart.\n
âHow can anyone be allowed to bully you with Sixteenth Uncle here? Come, follow me inside.â\n
Translatorâs Notes:\n
This chapter is long overdue. Apologies for the delay.\n
<figure class="aligncenter size-large is-resized"></figure>\n<hr class="wp-block-separator has-text-color has-vivid-red-color has-css-opacity has-vivid-red-background-color has-background is-style-wide">\n<sup>1</sup> ćŻæ¶ (mÇo shĂ): 5-7 am (in the system of two-hour subdivisions used in former times)\næȘæ¶ (wĂši shĂ): 1-3 pm (in the system of two-hour subdivisions used in former times)\n\n<sup>2</sup> They were being sarcastic. The emperor recently just conferred the First Prince with the title âPrince Huiâ even after all heâs done, indicating that he still favored the eldest son to a certain extent.\n
<sup>3</sup> Jin geâer addresses him as ç¶ç (fuwang) meaning âFather and Prince/Kingâ, which I translated to âRoyal Fatherâ.\n
<hr class="wp-block-separator has-text-color has-vivid-red-color has-css-opacity has-vivid-red-background-color has-background is-style-wide">\nă Previous | Table of Contents | Next ă
Bookmark Please login to bookmarkNo account yet? Register