Catching sight of the things, Zhang Xiaobao was rea.s.sured. Otherwise, heâd have to make a little less money. 2,000 dan [stone] of carrots, even if there was a bit of extra water,1 that would still be 200,000 catties.
Zhang Xiaobao was a bit impressed by that Song Jing-gong. Whereâd he go to get 200,000 catties of carrots, ~ne? For what purpose? Just what was he thinking when he was getting the carrots?
Could it be that he really wanted to do normal business? Not right, ~ya. If it really was like that, then he shouldâve found people to have that store of his directly mortgaged. With a store worth 300 silver taels, mortgaging it for 200 taels would still be no problem.
Just when Zhang Xiaobao and w.a.n.g Juan were unsure, that person who came as a messenger gave the both of them the answer.
âLittle Mister Zhang, Little Miss, can this stuff be eaten? Itâs still not as big as our white radishes2Â here. Itâs being sold so expensively, tooâpeople wonât die from eating it, right?â
With this mention of his, Zhang Xiaobao understood. After all, carrots had never been seen by the people here. The price that he, Song Jing-gong, imported it in at should be cheap with nothing more than a bit more in shipping costs. In the end, discovering that no one would buy it, he had prepared to get rid of the stuff or use it to swindle some money.
Usually, people didnât have that much spare money on their hands as the large majority was still trying to use the bartering method to settle accounts. Who would be willing to spend 2 wen [cash] in money to buy 1catty of small white radishes? 2 catties of large white radishes are so heavy that for 1 wen [cash] money, people would rush to buy it.
âHeâs preparing to make a huge sum here, ~ah. His ambition really isnât little at all.â w.a.n.g Juan had also thought of this point as she spoke up.
âHeâs only thinking of swindling but canât do management. Wait until weâve taken in this 2,000 dan [stone] of carrots, Iâll sell it at 3 wen [cash] money for 1 catty for you to seeâand no need to swindle, either.â Zhang Xiaobao smiled, revealing two dimples once again.
âDonât need you to; I can sell it, too. With just those methods, by switching their use, at least one of them would succeed. Next step is to see if heâll fall for it or not.â w.a.n.g Juan also had plans this time, happily raising her head.
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âStop for a bit. Iâll arrange the eggs and light the brazier. Itâll get cold in a while.â
On the road from Tuqiao Village to Xinping City, Yingtao instructed the person driving the carriage to first stop for a bit. After the carriage had stopped, she then adjusted the positions of those 200 chicken eggs in front of her a little and used the brazier to heat up the quilt to place on top.
Following her call, the carriage once again started leisurely moving forward. The coachman3Â who had driven carriages for 30 years had brought out all of his expertise for these two days. Using the dim illumination of that lantern hanging in front of the carriage, the coachman could avoid any one of the small potholes.
Only until the horse could no longer walk did they stop, unhitching the horse to tether to a tree on the side to let the horse itself rest and graze for gra.s.s.
âUncle4Â w.a.n.g, the carriage driving you [honorific] have done here is really great. The chicken eggs werenât rocked too much.â Yingtao reached out a hand under the quilt to feel the temperature. Releasing a breath, she took out water to drink a few sips and praised the coachman leaning against the tree.
âItâs nothing. Drove carriages for 30 something years so was already used to it. Itâs not me just blindly telling you this but even without this lantern, I would still know where a pothole is in front.â The coachman opened a water bag as he spoke. Then, taking out from his person a small bag with some fried rice inside, he prepared to start eating.
Yingtao seeing this, hurriedly accepted the item handed over from the two people who had been following after the carriage and placed it in front of the coachman as she said: âUncle w.a.n.g, eat this. It was already prepared when coming here.â
With that light from the lantern, the coachman saw that in front of him was some well-sliced pigâs head meat5Â as well as two fried cakes.6Â His mouth splitting into a grin, he wasnât polite, either. After accepting it, he wrapped the meat inside the cake and enthusiastically took a big bite. Squinting his eyes, he slowly swallowed it and then, drank another sip of water. His face writ full of life experience wrinkled together as he said:
âSavory, real savory. That manor of yours is better, ~ah. The w.a.n.g Familyâs manor has to give quite a few taxes every year so itâs not as wealthy as yours there.â
âUncle w.a.n.g, the aged7Â you [honorific] shouldnât speak in this way. Little Miss Juan-Juan is there. Just wait. It wonât even need two years before the people of our two manors can eat meat for every meal. Other meat, I donât dare speak of but chicken meatâthatâs however much you wish to eat, however much there will be.â
Yingtao gazed at the carriage compartment as she thought of those chicks about to hatch inside, her mood lightening a lot.
âGood, Iâll heed you. This old man,8Â I will wait two years and will definitely eat that chicken meat for every meal. Chicks can be hatched out of those eggs of yours in the carriage?â The coachman was also full of hope as he spoke, then pointing at those chicken eggs in the carriage, asking with some misgiving.
âOf course they can. Iâve seen the appearance of the chicks inside. Wait after a few days, the whole manor will be full of chicks running about.â Yingtao confidently said.
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It was night, the dark clouds had still not dispersed, blanketing over the brilliance of the moon and stars.
Song Jing-gong lay down on the bed as he thought of his concerns. As he thought, he suddenly laughed and began to talk to himself as he said: âWatching me has what use? Could they a.s.sume that I will go get the stuff in these two days? Want to stake their claim midway through?9Â Iâm in no hurry. Just wait for a few days and get that money lent into my hands, Iâll let you all know the stuff on that boat.
Actually dare to raise the prices on meâa nightâs sleep and eating a meal for one day asks for 50 wen [cash] of money out of me. Give itâIâve given it all. By that time, letâs see who will cry. That stuff clearly can be eaten, why canât it be sold?â
âMister Song, Mister Song is awake, ~ne? The food and wine you [honorific] wanted has arrived.â Just as Song Jing-gong was plotting the course of the swindle this time, a door knocking sound and a voice raised in inquiry came from outside.
Song Jing-gong flipped over and lit the oil lamp. Opening the door, he saw that old man standing outside and some discomfort rose within his heart. For each meal, eating chicken eggs and stir-fried garlic chives, garlic chives and stir-fried chicken eggsâif it were not for the shredded white radishes, he would have been a bit fed up with it.
Here, heâd had them prepare some good wine and good food for him today. But the result was 6 qian [mace] of silver was taken away. Just this little place was enough to go to a little shop and order a table of food. Seeing the three small plates on that sieving pan10Â the old man was carrying as well as a jug of wine, however it was calculated, it wasnât worth 6 qian [mace] of silver.
âIâve troubled Old Father. Bring it inside.â Song Jing-gong admonished himself not to be angry and that later on, he would get revenge before he could eke out a strained smile in greeting.
âNo trouble, Mister Song. You [honorific] spent the money, this old man, I, went to buy it. Whereâs the bother? Tonight, I canât get to sleep, either.â
The old man entered the room while carrying the sieving pan and placed the three dishes and jug of wine on the small table. Then, giving Song Jing-gong a friendly smile, he turned around and left.
Song Jing-gong was also really hungry. Seeing that there were three dishes and not discovering whatever chicken eggs or whatever stir-fried things, he exhaled a long breath. He could actually eat meat.
Picking up the chopsticks, he found the largest chunk of the thing that should meat and picked it up to put in his mouth. Chewing twice, his face instantly changed in expression. It was meat. Alas, it wasnât the lamb meat that he had imagined but fish meat. There were even bones, ~ne.
The meat chunks werenât that small. That was to say then that the fish was a large fish. But fish meat was inexpensive and it actually required 6 qian [mace] of silver from him?
The furiously mad Song Jing-gong reached toward the other dish with his chopsticks. Here, the meat was a bit smaller. When he had eaten it into his mouth, Song Jing-gong wasnât angered again but nodded his head as he murmured:
âImpressive. Before was the meat of a big fish; now, here is the meat of a small fish. Zhang Manor, Iâll remember this.â
Finished muttering, Song Jing-gong then turned his gaze towards that dish with the meat that was not too small and not too large. He didnât need a taste and knew that this was a medium fishâs meat. These not even completely three whole fishes, added up altogether wasnât even 10 wen [cash] in money. Calculating for labor, 20 wen [cash] was enough.
Appearing resigned, Song Jing-gong picked up that jar of wine and not even caring what taste it had, guzzled it down. Then, throwing away the chopsticks, he lay down on the bed, covered his head, and fell asleep.
It was like this for several days. Just as Song Jing-gong thought that he would still need to endure two more days, Steward Zhang came by personally.
âMister Song, the money has already been prepared satisfactorily. I donât know if Mister still needs it or not?â Steward Zhang seemed to have arrived with some urgency. Entering the room, he hadnât even caught his breath, ~ne, and was already speaking up in inquiry.
âReally? That really is great. Steward Zhang, you [honorific] here are helping me a lot. You [honorific], rest a.s.sured. After the matter is done with, I, Song Jing-gong, will definitely not forget you [honorific].â
Upon hearing the matter of the silver was possible, that despondent mood of Song Jing-gongâs immediately dispersed and scattered like the clouds and fog. Not waiting for Steward Zhang to speak, he said: âIf so, then Iâll hand over my storeâs property deed to you [honorific]?â
âNo hurry, there are still some things in Mister Songâs store. It behooves us to go over and carefully look it over. The silver, Iâve ordered people to bring along. I donât know if we can go today?â
Steward Zhang a.s.suredly knew that saying all the words that should be said was necessary. Otherwise, it would be too easy to raise a personâs suspicions.
Song Jing-gong smiled as he nodded. This type of matter, he had already considered. At once, he went with Steward Zhang and the person holding the silver to Sanshui County.
It had reached the monkey hour [3~5PM]11Â in the afternoon before they had arrived outside the store. Looking inside and seeing that the person who normally kept watch out in back was actually standing at the counter there, Song Jing-gongâs expression instantly became overcast as he walked up front to ask: âStorekeeper Zhao and Liu w.a.n.g, ~ne?â
âIn reply to [Store] Ownerâs words, today at noon, there was someone who came into the store and took a fancy to a jar. They actually spent 30 silver taels to purchase it and even said it was inexpensive so insisted on inviting Storekeeper Zhao and Liu w.a.n.g to go have wine. So they went. How about I go and call them back? They just left.â This person replied.
âNo need. If theyâre eating, theyâre eating. You can go back, thereâs me to keep watch here. Steward Zhang, this business is busy, ~ah. Once Iâve gotten the borrowed money, Iâll close the store. You [honorific] sent a person to watch it and wait till Iâve finished the turnover before talking.
In a while, deduct the money for that jar, I can directly compensate for it. Donât just look at how dearly it was sold for, that jar was actually only worth 160 wen [cash] and it was turned over like this?â
Song Jing-gong swept over the position where that jar was placed and discovering that it was less 100 something wen [cash] but did not heed it at all.
âFine, then letâs invite the brokerage people to come over. Iâve prepared the silver already here.â Steward Zhang forthrightly a.s.sented. Behind him, the person carrying the silver put the money down and turned around to leave to go find the brokerageâs guarantor. Returning after not long, four people came this time. After all, there were a lot of items.
Checking the detailed records originally produced by the broker, all of the things were not wrong. Just as Song Jing-gong was about to sign the contract with Steward Zhang, Steward Zhang abruptly pointed at a painting and said:
âItâs better to record it with a bit more detail. That painting has a defect. If itâs wrong, it would be good to verify. Mister Song, let us first be petty men and later be gentlemen.12Â If itâs off, that would require paying threefold the money as we originally so agreed.â
Finished speaking and not even waiting for Song Jing-gong to have any response, he ordered people to record the defect on that painting, especially getting that burned area written down and having the brokerage people insure it.
Song Jing-gong felt like it was nothing. It was just a painting. When it was time, heâd just leave it to them. Smiling, he stood to the side as he watched. After the people who had come here had carefully given certificates for all of the other worthless items, with one hand handing over the money and one hand receiving the store was this completed.
When Steward Zhang and company had left, Song Jing-gong curled his lips and turned around to walk toward that Luo River. He knew that there would definitely be someone following him.
The Chinese used here is 'shui fenâ (ć°´ĺ), which literally means âwater amount.â Shui/ć°´ tends to be used as an euphemism for excess in metaphor for overestimation or dilution like saying an author blathers too much in order to pad out the word count, the forum thread has too much water as in off-topic talk, or their numbers have too much water, etc.
âLuo buoâ (čżč) means radish in Chinese. The full name is actually âbai luo buoâ (ç˝čżč) or âwhite radishesâ and is the winter version of the radish that would normally come to mind for most Westerners. The reason I have to footnote this to explain something that should be a straightforward translation is because white radishes are actually more better known in the West by the j.a.panese name, the daikon. Though daikon is likely the name that is most closely a.s.sociated with this vegetable, it isnât completely identical to the Chinese variant so I chose to simply translate it as âwhite radish.â
âBa shiâ (ćĺ˘) translates to mean âexpert, professionalâ in Chinese. So a âche ba shiâ (čťćĺ˘) would be the equivalent of a professional driver of carriages or coaches.
âBoâ (䟯) is a paternal uncle who is the speakerâs fatherâs older brother in Chinese. The formal term is âbo fuâ (䟯çś) while the more casual form that is usually used by children is âbo boâ (䟯䟯). Obviously, if the speaker is calling an unrelated person this, then it is because the person is of the speakerâs fatherâs generation and not of the speakerâs grandfatherâs generation while being older than the speakerâs father. Bo/䟯 is also the traditional name for the second son of a n.o.ble family before Chinese naming conventions loosened up. The character bo/䟯 can come up as well when used in the context of Chinese peerage t.i.tles and has a n.o.ble rank roughly equivalent to that of a count.
âZhutou rouâ (蹏é č) is the meat that is sliced from a pigâs head, which was considered a delicacy to eat, similar to bacon in the West.
The Chinese used is âyou bingâ (ć˛šé¤ ), which is a Beijing food that is made in the exact same way that âyou tiaoâ (沚ć˘) are madeâit is just that âyou bingâ (ć˛šé¤ ) are made in the form of cakes while âyou tiaoâ (沚ć˘) are in the form of sticks. They are both dough fried in oil and are popular breakfast foods to eat with soy milk in Chinese cuisine. I didnât translate âyou bingâ (ć˛šé¤ ) literally since âoil cakeâ can refer to the caked remains of what is left behind after oil is pressed from an oil-producing material. Thus, I translated âyou bingâ (ć˛šé¤ ) as âfried cakes.â Just as a reference point that might be more familiar to readers, scallion pancakes are essentially a type of these but with scallions added into the dough. Lao/č simply means âold, agedâ in Chinese but it can pop up in honorific speech because of the Confucian ideal of etiquette that respecting your elders as well as due to the conventional thinking that the elderly should be venerated for their wisdom and experience. Thus, sometimes to convey even more respect to a listener, a speaker will say that they are old or elderly even when theyâre not. It is not meant literally in these cases since at this point, itâs almost become a compliment by rote. Sometimes though, a person being called old or elderly who actually isnât might jokingly reply that theyâre not that old in a wordplay on the literal meaning.
âLao Hanâ (č柢) basically just means âold manâ in Chinese. Han/柢 became the ethnic label for the Chinese majority after the Han dynasty (柢ć) so calling an old man an âold Hanâ is similar to calling an elderly white man an âold Caucasian.â
âHeng cha yi gang ziâ (横ćä¸ć§ĺ) literally translates to âhorizontally plug in a thick stickâ and is used to describe someone interrupting or cutting into something in an attempt to claim ownership or partic.i.p.ation in something that they didnât initiate or join in on from the start and are now attempting to do so midway through. In this case, Song Jing-gong is labeling the Zhang Family as trying to shove their way into the middle of a business deal that he started with the barbarians. I chose to translate for the meaning though I retained the image used in the original Chinese of a stake being stuck in the middle.
A âbojiâ (ç°¸çŽ) can actually translate to dustpan. However these dustpans were also multi-purpose tools since they were baskets woven from reeds and depending on their design, could be used to sift or sieve stuff as well as to act as baskets or pans for temporary storage. Obviously, in this case, it is being used as a makeshift tray. This Baidu entry has pictures of boji/ç°¸çŽ for those who are curious. To try to avoid reader confusion, I opted to translate it alternatively as 'sieving panâ in text.
Iâve translated 'shen shiâ (çłć) as the monkey hour since it is the Earthly Branch a.s.signed to the Monkey from the Chinese zodiac. The ancient Chinese divided the day into 12 2-hour segments or Earthly Branches with each named after an animal of the Chinese zodiac as a mnemonic device. The monkey rules over the time span from 3:00~5:00 PM.
Steward Zhangâs turn of phrase depends on understanding a key Confucian concept of Junzi(ĺĺ), which I have translated as âgentleman.â Like âgongziâ (ĺ Źĺ), the term that I have opted to translate as âMister,â junzi/ĺĺ initially had a literal meaning of âlordâs sonâ before it became a generic term that applied to all n.o.ble scions and then was co-opted by Confucianism to be more applicable universally. Similar to its Western counterpart, junzi/ĺĺ is a moral archetype that Chinese men of good birth, background, or education tried to aspire to and some of the qualities a.s.sociated with a junzi/ĺ was being gracious, humble, compa.s.sionate, and loyal. A junzi/ĺĺ would be careful with their words and would accordingly, keep their promises when given. The opposite of a junzi/ĺĺ was thus a xiaoren/ĺ°äşş or a âpetty manâ who was the complete opposite. Thus, Steward Zhang saying âxian xiaoren hou junziâ (ĺ ĺ°äşşĺžĺĺ), which I have translated literally, is essentially asking for some precautionary measures. The request is practical but might come off as an insult to the honor of the person if they have pride in being a junzi/ĺ. So Steward Zhang is asking for forgiveness and leeway for his caution while promising Song Jing-gong treatment as a junzi/ĺ or gentleman later on.