Prologue

Jinshi stared at the crackling brazier. It was going to be another cold night. Basen put some more coals on the fire.

It got bitterly cold in the western capital after the sun went down. The whiplash change from the heat of the day might be enough to make some people take ill. Not Jinshi—he wasn't used to nights in this sandy region, exactly, but at the moment he preferred the chill.

Jinshi was resting on a couch, a melancholy expression on his face. On the table in front of him, a cup of citrus-and-honey cut with hot water sat untouched. He was thirsty, but he couldn't bring himself to drink it. He didn't want to relinquish the sensation that still lingered on his lips.

He let his fingers brush across his mouth, as if to confirm for himself what had touched them just an hour before. His body was possessed by a combination of heat and gloom that wouldn't seem to go away.

He could still see it when he closed his eyes: her face looking down at him, the stars above the only light. He hadn't been able to see her well, and yet it seemed to him he could remember her so clearly. Her eyes, usually languid, were dim, but her mouth glistened warm and moist. A thread dangled from the moistness, and then fell away. It was over, Jinshi saw with a combination of disappointment and relief.

And then the regret.

His partner was well within her comfort zone. She never blushed, nor looked away in embarrassment. Only stared calmly, coldly down at the man beneath her, then licked her lips, sucking in the thread of saliva. She wasn't savoring the afterglow, but simply eliminating all traces, as if it had never happened. Her small body bestrode Jinshi's, easily twice her size, her hand placed over his heart. She could feel his heartbeat, but he couldn't feel hers.

What did she think, feeling the way it raced and pounded?

It was obvious at a glance. The wind caught her hair, sending ripples through it. Her eyes narrowed, and she looked at him. Her alluring lips arched. "My, my. Done already?" she seemed to ask, although she said nothing. Her smile made clear how much she still had left in her.

It meant he had lost.

Jinshi's shoulders slumped at the memory. He had tried to make some riposte, but the apothecary girl had simply said "Pardon me" and left as if nothing had happened. She claimed she heard her cousin calling; it was like she had nothing more to do here. She would have been more emotional about a dog bite.

Or a mosquito bite.

Jinshi heaved a sigh as he returned to reality.

"I knew it, sir. You're not feeling well, are you?" said his attendant, Basen. If Jinshi said he was feeling fine, Basen would only press him about whether something had happened. And if he said he was indeed feeling unwell, Basen would probably take it upon himself to nurse Jinshi back to health and never leave the room.

There were moments when Jinshi wished to be alone—he always wondered why Basen hadn't inherited his father Gaoshun's intuition for that. The young man could be a bit dense.

Jinshi wasn't the only one who felt out of sorts that day, though. Basen seemed different from usual as well. His cheeks were redder than normal—not like he had suddenly gotten excellent circulation, but more like he was excited about something. Maybe it was fighting that lion. A bandage was wrapped around his right hand, the hand that had been holding the iron bar. It was swollen; when the apothecary girl had spotted the ugly appendage, she'd declared, "It's broken" and promptly begun to check him over, but inside she probably had questions about the obtuse young man.

"You look more tired than I do today, Basen. You ought to go get some rest."

"By no means, sir; not after what just happened. Who knows if they might try something else?" he said earnestly. Jinshi really, really wished he would take a hint.

Jinshi picked up the honey-water, but didn't drink it, just let it warm his hands. Even if he'd changed into his sleepwear and gone to bed, Basen probably still wouldn't have left. There was another couch in the room with a cushion that could double as a pillow if need be.

Jinshi couldn't sleep, and it seemed Basen couldn't either. Was it the adrenaline of fighting a large animal—or was it something else entirely? It was more than just the customary furrow in his brow; Basen's lips were twisted into a frown. Some memory seemed to flit into his mind, and each time, he would blink, then shake his head suddenly as if to get rid of it. It was very suspicious.

One of the strange things about humans is how they become calm when someone else is struggling worse than they are. Jinshi let out another deep sigh. He couldn't go on like this. The night's banquet might have been over, but there were still more meetings tomorrow. He resolved to find some equilibrium. He recognized, though, that being alone would not be the best way to get his thoughts together. Instead he said, "Basen."

"Yes, Master Jinshi?" Basen replied, using Jinshi's assumed name. That was easiest for Jinshi. If Basen wasn't going to call him by his true name, as he had when they were children, then this was the next best thing.

"Have you ever succeeded in bringing someone around?"

Frankly, Basen was not a very good choice to talk to about such matters, but Jinshi wasn't looking for a serious response. He could answer his own questions; he just wanted to talk out loud so he didn't sit there with his mind going in circles. Basen didn't need to understand exactly what Jinshi meant; he just needed to offer a yes or no or a grunt here or there.

"Er, how so, sir? You've spoken to so many people since we got here that I don't know whom you might be referring to..."

It was true: a great many women had spoken to Jinshi since his arrival in the western capital. How many? One wouldn't wish to say.

"You don't have to finish that thought," Jinshi said.

Basen's brow wrinkled. "I'm not in your position, sir, and I don't have much experience in such matters. Though in the future I may find I gain some, whether I want to or not."

He probably never had experienced such things, not yet. Even though they had only seen each other a few times a year since Jinshi had entered the rear palace, they were still milk brothers and trusted friends. Jinshi knew that Basen didn't always feel very confident around women—the more womanly, the less he liked to have anything to do with them. The fact that he was able to have a more or less normal conversation with the apothecary girl suggested he didn't see her in those terms, although Jinshi was conflicted as to whether that was a good thing or a bad one. It wasn't misogyny—rather a sign of how deeply Basen's early experiences had influenced him. A misfortune that had occurred because of his particular characteristics.

Basen responded to Jinshi's question by stroking his chin. "I can only say I suppose it would depend on the person. There are a lot of people I don't feel entirely comfortable around. But the situation has something to do with it too. How confident and competent the other person is can affect the flow, and vice versa.

And you have to deal with so many people at once, Master Jinshi —isn't it a strain?"

"'So many at once'? I think you're overestimating me." Jinshi hadn't expected quite such a direct answer. He smiled sardonically to hear himself described as if he were crazed with lust. Come to think of it, Basen had been going to the pleasure district in Gaoshun's place a lot lately. Had he managed to gain some experience? Jinshi knew what a cunning saleswoman the madam of that brothel could be. She might well have tried to give Basen the hard sell.

Jinshi looked at Basen, conflicted. The Verdigris House was a high-class brothel with excellent courtesans. And Basen idealized women, even if he wasn't very good at talking to them. The educated—and very firm-handed—ladies at the Verdigris House might be surprisingly congenial for him.

Jinshi swallowed heavily. "Basen... Did something happen? At the Verdigris House?"

"Wh-What's this all of a sudden?!" Basen asked, startled. The man was a bad liar—quite frankly, he was a less than ideal adjutant when it came to politics. But that aspect of his personality was exactly what allowed Jinshi to relax around him. "Nothing happened," Basen insisted. "And anyway, I can rise to the occasion when I need to!"

Rise to the occasion? A somewhat unsettling choice of words— but yes, Basen could indeed do what he had to do, when he had to do it. Jinshi was willing to acknowledge that much. He swallowed again, realizing he would have to rethink how he saw his milk brother once more.

"What brings this on, Master Jinshi? Did something happen with you?"

"No. It's simply that there's someone I would very much like to triumph over," Jinshi said, although he had to struggle to get the words out. He was nowhere near smooth enough to handle "so many" women at once, and he wanted to avoid inflating Basen's opinion of his abilities any further.

He went on: "I'd gotten the idea that I knew how to play this game. This someone can be rather elegant, but in practice I'm supposed to be the superior—and perhaps I trusted too much to that. That illusion was thoroughly shattered tonight, and it's left me feeling quite pathetic."

He might not always have a great deal of confidence, but he'd at least had some. He couldn't count how many women had come on to him in his six years at the rear palace, and it had given him the (more than a little conceited) belief that he could make them dance in his palm.

Basen was looking at him with a hint of amazement. "This person must be quite skilled, sir, to make you say that."

"Yes..." At least Basen didn't seem to realize whom Jinshi was talking about. Thankfully. "We fought over something minor," he said. "I started the fight...and I lost it."

Basen looked puzzled for a second, but then he said, "Ah!" as if it all made sense to him. "You lost, sir? Ahh, so that's what you mean... A sparring partner, sir? What a boor they must be!" He could be perceptive at the most surprising moments. Perhaps it would sound insulting to suggest Jinshi was startled to realize Basen even knew what it really meant to be rivals in love. But that Rikuson—that was his name, right?—he might look like just another pretty face, but he wasn't to be underestimated. He was a direct subordinate of the strategist, Lakan—but he wasn't the one Jinshi was worried about.

"So there was someone at that banquet who could make even you admit defeat, Master Jinshi," Basen said quietly, looking profoundly thoughtful.

"Don't flatter me, please. I'm aware that I'm still young. My opponent is like a willow tree, or...or like trying to shove a curtain.

No matter how much I push or strike, they simply roll with it."

The question was what his inexperienced self should do. The only thing that would help would be to gain some of that experience, he supposed—but how? He couldn't go about romancing another woman, but neither did it seem wise to head for a brothel simply because there supposedly wouldn't be any consequences.

It was then that Basen said something quite unexpected. "Can

I be of help in some way?"

"I'm sorry?" Jinshi said, nearly dropping his water. He knew for a fact Basen was straight—so how could he say that?

And yet Basen went on: "I must confess I'm not very capable. I'm all too aware that you're far more skilled than I am, Master Jinshi. But I venture this suggestion in the belief that it must be

better than simply moping around doing nothing."

"Basen..."

Yes, he was right. And if Jinshi did it with Basen, well, on some level, it didn't count, did it? That must be what the young man was thinking. Well, but—no, wait. Something was off here.

"Skill I may lack, but I'm confident in my stamina, how much I can endure," Basen said.

"St-Stamina? I really don't think..."

No, this wasn't a conversation Jinshi could continue. He quailed. Maybe Basen had been taught some twisted game at the Verdigris House, he fretted. Should he report this to Gaoshun?

Basen, though, was looking at Jinshi, completely serious. He seemed excited, but not in the overheated way he had earlier. "Just think of it as practice, sir. Nothing more. I may not be the person you have in mind, but just...pretend."

Jinshi lapsed into thought—and then jumped into action. He put the water on the table, rose from the couch, and slowly came and stood in front of Basen.

"Shall we move somewhere, sir? It's a bit cramped here."

"No, this is space enough."

It wasn't as if they needed to use the bed. And he absolutely didn't want anyone to see them, so he had to finish this while they were still in this room.

Basen was about two sun shorter than Jinshi—he wished Basen might shrink another seven.

Jinshi leaned in, and Basen backed away. What was this? He acted so much like the very person Jinshi was imagining!

"Master Jinshi?"

"It's all right. That's perfect."

"I'm, er, empty-handed..."

"So am I."

Yes... Now that he thought about it, he'd heard tell of employing all manner of tools and contraptions, but he had certainly never expected Basen to bring up such a thing. They had taught him perverse things in the pleasure district, Jinshi was sure of it now. But maybe he shouldn't mention it to Gaoshun.

All right. No more reason for Jinshi to hesitate, then. No reason to be inordinately restrained.

Each time Jinshi got closer, Basen opened up the space again, not with the slight stagger of the apothecary girl, but the agility of a trained soldier.

"Master Jinshi?"

"This person never initiates, but only responds to what is done."

"So, Master Jinshi, I should—?"

Basen looked at Jinshi, deeply concerned; his back was already against the wall. Jinshi had succeeded at that before; it could almost be called his specialty. With Basen all but cornered, Jinshi planted his hand firmly against the wall. Bam!

"M-Master Jinshi..."

"No. Be quiet."

Jinshi focused his imagination: he was picturing not his milk brother, but the person he wished to best. He had to strike before the mouth spoke, the mouth that was usually so inarticulate, but grew voluble and clever at the oddest times. He took Basen's chin with his free hand and pressed his thumb to his lips.

"M-M-M..." Basen had gone completely white, and from this distance, Jinshi could see he was covered in sweat. Why did he look so worried? This was his suggestion! Somehow, he almost looked as if he hadn't expected any of this to happen.

Could there be some mistake here? Some crucial, momentous misunderstanding?

Perhaps it was the tension both of them were feeling—neither noticed the sound of voices right outside. And just as Jinshi was about to put the pieces together, the door to the room flew open with a tremendous bang.

"It's been too long since we shared a drink! And I've caught a most fascinating quarry in my net!" announced a sprightly but gender-neutral voice.

"L-Lady Ah-Duo!" cried a guard outside, but the lovely person in men's garb was already pushing past him into the room. The odor of alcohol came with her; she seemed to have been sharing a drink with herself before she'd thought to invite Jinshi. She'd been like this ever since the rear palace, always trying to get him to drink with her. Maybe she was a little soused, because the way she entered the room was, well, forceful at best.

And the moment she had chosen was an awkward one.

Jinshi was almost on top of Basen, who was pinned against the wall with Jinshi's fingers brushing his lips in what was unmistakably a lover's caress. Basen was sweating and his face was completely bloodless.

The two guards who had come in trying to restrain Ah-Duo covered their eyes with their hands and peeked out between their fingers. As for Ah-Duo, her eyes went wide and her mouth dropped open.

"Ah!" she said. "That's right. You don't have to choose a flower.

I guess I was mistaken."

With that she backed out of the room and politely shut the door.

Neither Jinshi nor Basen said anything, but after a moment of silence, the darkened You manor was filled with the sounds of two men shouting at each other.

Chapter 1: The Western Capital— Day Four

The sunlight that got past the curtains pried open Maomao's heavy eyelids. The bed (complete with fancy canopy), the bright, clear air, and the elaborate furnishings reminded her once again that she was not in her house at the capital.

Want...more...sleep...

She sat up, rubbing her eyes. Nights were so cold that she slept under several heavy blankets and some sort of pelt, but once the sun rose, it got awfully hot. Already, one of the layers was on the ground, and Maomao's feet were kicked out from under the covers.

She thought she'd heard shouting in the middle of the night; it had woken her up, and she'd slept only lightly after that. Who would do that sort of thing? What obnoxious neighbors.

Breakfast should be arriving soon. Maomao was happy they didn't all have to get together to eat—probably a bit of courtesy toward hungover guests. Deciding to get changed before the serving girl arrived, Maomao slipped out of her sleepwear, putting on an outfit she picked at random from a clothing rack.

Today she was wearing an ordinary skirt and short-sleeved top over a cool-looking drape. The best thing about it was the way it breathed. Touches of embroidery on the collar and hem gave it a western look. The silver hair stick sat on the table.

Hm...

Maomao didn't put it on her head, but used a simple tie to hold back her hair. She did, though, place the hair stick in the folds of her clothes to make sure she wouldn't lose it. She always carried a small package containing medicine, bandages, and the like, so she simply added it to that.

The knock on the door came just as she finished changing. "Come in," she said, and a maid entered with a cart bearing breakfast. The menu was a little sparser than usual, perhaps taking into account the extensive banquet the night before.

Maomao had a couple mouthfuls of the plain congee, and was just thinking some black vinegar might improve the flavor when a very loud knock came on the door. Maomao poured some black vinegar into her congee, took a bite, and then, not hiding her annoyance, said, "Come in."

"I would swear it took you an extra moment to answer," Basen said as he entered. There was a man with him, but it wasn't Jinshi. Unsure how to feel about that, Maomao swallowed her food and pretended she didn't know what Basen was talking about.

"It was your imagination, I'm sure," she said.

"You're having breakfast?" Basen asked. Not that it seemed to motivate him to leave. Something, Maomao figured, must have happened.

She set down her chopsticks and looked at him. "What's going on?" His right hand was wrapped in a bandage, the one Maomao had put there the night before. He had been so full of adrenaline that even the swelling and the fact that the bone was broken hadn't seemed to bother him. There was dense, and then there was dense.

Basen took a breath, then produced a cloth package from the folds of his robe. He set it on the table and opened it to reveal another package, this one of oil paper. No sooner had he unwrapped it than Maomao's nose prickled and she started back.

The offensive odor came from a ceramic jar in the packet. "Is that perfume, by any chance?" she asked. She'd smelled it before —it was the stuff that had been spilled all over Consort Lishu at the banquet. "Where did you get this?"

"Funny you should ask," Basen said. His expression was conflicted; he was obviously suppressing a flash of anger. "Lady

Ah-Duo brought it to us."

"And where did she get it?"

"She said one of her bodyguards found it. Late last night—a serving woman of Consort Lishu's half-sister had it. She was out walking when for some reason a stray dog attacked her, and the guard happened to help her." Just happened to, eh?

What were the chances the guard's being there had really been coincidence? Even so far from the capital, why would a serving woman be out and about by herself? The logical inference would be that in fact the guard had been sent to tail her because AhDuo was suspicious of her. But there was no reason to specifically say that out loud.

"The mongrel seemed inordinately excited, and despite the presence of other people, it completely ignored them. It made a beeline for this serving woman."

"You're saying this perfume was the reason for that?" Maomao pressed a cloth over her nose and picked up the jar. Ceramic ware wasn't that unusual. No one made ceramic perfume jars purely for stylistic purposes, so it would be hard to trace the origin of the piece. "That would imply that the perfume Consort Lishu was doused with last night belonged to her half-sister, yes? And this smell evidently has the side effect of agitating wild animals." "I think that's almost certainly correct," Basen said.

Had the half-sister purchased the perfume purely as a prank? Maomao wouldn't have put it past her. But did she hate Lishu enough to want to get rid of her? And even if she had the motive, Maomao doubted she and the serving woman between them had the skills to rig the bars of the lion's cage.

She considered the possibility that Lishu's father Uryuu had helped them, but that theory left questions too. For one thing, if they had been trying to get rid of Lishu, it was an awfully roundabout way of doing it. There would have been so many simpler solutions. Above all, the risk was simply too great. Nonetheless, there was one thing Maomao wanted to be sure about.

"So you're taking the consort's half-sister to be the culprit?"

Basen paused. "We can't say for certain. But if nothing changes, I think that's where we would find ourselves." An artfully vague way of putting it. That was unusual for Basen. He was normally much more direct. Maomao might have expected him to exclaim, "Yes! She must be punished!"

Instead he went on, "The half-sister claims it was just supposed to be a prank. She says someone she met in town a few days ago gave her the perfume. They told her it would attract nasty insects, and wouldn't that be funny? The half-sister swears she didn't expect a lion to be involved..."

So she admitted her malice toward Lishu. She just hadn't planned on the lion. If that was all true, how did it change things?

"If she was also involved in booby-trapping the lion's cage, that would go beyond a prank," Maomao said. There had been many dignitaries at the banquet besides Lishu, and she would have been putting them in danger as well. If she really had only been going after the consort, she might still get away with it. Lishu was a relative, for one thing, and importantly, she would have some discretion in how hard to push for punishment. The half-sister might not get off scot-free, but maybe with just a slap on the wrist.

"You're right. And not only the half-sister, but Sir Uryuu as well as Consort Lishu herself might feel the heat from it," Basen said.

"You think a little heat is all they're going to feel?" Maomao asked. She expected them to be scorched. Many powerful people from another country had been at that banquet—this could be an international incident. She thought it was naive to imagine that only the culprit would be punished.

Basen gave her a sour look. "Why do these things always happen to Consort Lishu?" he said. It was hard to tell whether he was asking himself or Maomao, and she wasn't sure what to say, so she stayed silent. But she thought, Maybe she was just born

into it.

Maomao hated to wave everything away with words like "destiny," but it did seem to her that some people had better luck than others. This especially struck her when she considered her adoptive father Luomen. He was smarter and more capable than anybody, but he seemed to utterly lack good fortune. He was now back working at the palace, but it seemed this had only prompted the fox strategist to drop in on him with some regularity, interrupting his work. The situation must have been dire if it was bad enough for him to remark upon in his letters. He'd written that recently, one of his medicine cabinets had found itself turned inside out. Maomao couldn't imagine why.

"Isn't it all just too pitiful to bear?" Basen said.

He's really worried about her, Maomao thought, but she

decided not to say anything out loud. Commenting on that which would better go unnoticed was a sure route to more headaches.

Still, it was true that the consort, in her consort-ish way, had her problems. Fundamentally, she always simply allowed herself to be swept along. Maomao knew that was somewhat inevitable— it was how Lishu had been raised and it was how she had always lived. Yet Maomao couldn't help thinking of the young woman who had come to the pleasure district to sell herself as a courtesan. She'd done it in order to cut ties with her father, to help her sister eat, and to pull herself out of the muck. Maomao couldn't bring herself to hate a personality like that.

If the consort had half that much drive... Well, maybe she would have suffered a lot less bullying from her half-sister, and maybe she wouldn't be mocked so much at the rear palace. Anyway, that was enough preliminaries. It was time for Maomao to find out exactly why Basen had come to her. "Is there something you'd like me to do, sir?" she asked.

"Yes... There is," Basen said, and took out a piece of paper. It looked like a wanted poster, but something puzzled Maomao.

"What's this mean?"

"That's what I'd like to know. This is the woman she said gave her the perfume."

The sketch on the paper did indeed appear to depict a woman, but her face was veiled so that only her eyes were visible. To compensate, the sketch included her entire body, but although the details of her clothes were carefully drawn, she could obviously just change outfits.

"Is she a merchant?"

"No, apparently she just started talking to the half-sister while she was doing some shopping in town."

In town, huh? Maomao listened to Basen's story doubtfully.

"The woman claimed to deal in perfumes, and she recommended several different scents to the half-sister. This one was among them." Supposedly, the "merchant" had told her that the perfume could attract men, but to be careful how she used it. The smell would be too strong unless it were properly diluted, the half-sister was told—in fact, some people had even been known to use it in pranks. This, it seemed, was where the half-sister had gotten the idea for her little joke.

"That story's a little vague," Maomao said.

"Very true. It's not much to go on. And tracking down this perfume seller would be difficult at best."

Maomao squinted, studying the picture. The outfit, characteristic of the western capital, was designed to protect against sand and dust, so it left very little exposed—which is to say, it concealed any distinguishing bodily features. But Maomao's sharp eyes noticed one thing in particular. "For as simple as this drawing is, the accessories on the shoes have an awful lot of detail."

Basen took another look at the image. "Now that you mention it, that's true. In fact, the size of the feet seems off compared to the rest of the body." The person's body had been drawn to a more or less normal scale, but her feet appeared twisted, almost stylized.

"Do you think there's any chance she had bound feet?" Maomao asked.

"Bound feet?"

Foot-binding was a way of forcibly making the feet smaller than they would naturally be. A few of the women in the rear palace had had it done to them—it was a fairly common custom in the north, but what about here in the west? If the half-sister hadn't given it much thought, it suggested foot-binding wasn't unusual.

"Could you double-check this drawing for me?"

"I will," Basen said, collecting the picture. He was about to leave when he turned back as if he had just remembered something. "By the way..."

"Yes, sir?"

"Master Jinshi has looked...odd since last night. Do you happen to know anything about it? I think he would normally have come on an errand like this himself, but instead he chose to send me." Maomao didn't say anything.

"Have you heard anything about him...I don't know, being under pressure from anybody? Anything?"

Maomao averted her gaze. Basen was right—she knew he would never normally come to her unless Jinshi had specifically asked him to.

She decided to play dumb. "Who knows?" she said. "Perhaps he's tired. It has been a very long trip."

Basen's report came back in less than thirty minutes. The halfsister had evidently been insisting to her lady-in-waiting that she had "nothing to do with this" and "never meant for this to happen," but Maomao, frankly, didn't care. Basen came back in a huff, quite angry about all of it.

"It's just as you said," he told her. The woman had indeed had bound feet, and had been wearing special shoes because of it—a distinctive detail that stuck in the mind, and which the half-sister had subconsciously emphasized as she described the woman for the artist, even if she never specifically said that the woman had bound feet. "That narrows it down."

"To just a few people, I would say, sir," Maomao replied. "You think?"

In Li, the custom of foot-binding was found primarily in the north; here in the west, in fact, it hardly existed. Thus, if someone with bound feet were encountered in the western capital, it seemed safe to assume they had come from points north. Or at the very least, that their family had settled here sometime in the last couple of generations.

"The point is, their household must already have had the custom."

Basen looked dubious. "You don't think she might have been a traveler?"

Maomao shook her head at that idea. "If she was, she would have to be the daughter of a household that could afford to send her in style, like Consort Lishu."

It was a long way to the western capital, and binding twisted the feet into shapes that were, let it be said, not conducive to walking on sandy ground. The process of foot-binding involved forcibly preventing the growth of the feet from a young age, and leaving them bound throughout life so they wouldn't get any bigger. The feet had to be disinfected every few days, such that Maomao sold alcohol to the courtesans with bound feet.

All of which meant that if someone born in the western capital

had bound feet, she must have belonged to a family large or wealthy enough to continue the tradition.

"And you're sure about that?"

"I take no responsibility for anything. I've only offered what I think is the most likely possibility in light of the information I've been given."

She couldn't have them expecting perfection of her. If they were only going to permit correct answers, then Maomao would have no choice but to shut her mouth and swear she didn't know anything.

"All right," Basen said after a moment, resigned to her conditions. He finally left the room.

Maomao yawned and sat on her bed, thinking about getting settled again.

Perfection... Yeah, not likely. Maomao herself still had several questions. Would Lishu's high-handed half-sister deign to speak to someone she had only just met—let alone buy something from them? And how had this mysterious seller known about the halfsister? It was a little too neat for mere coincidence.

Hmm...

Whatever. Maomao decided to go ahead and get some sleep. She was so tired she could barely make her brain work. She lay down, but the hair stick at her chest nudged against her. She thought about pulling it out, but she didn't want it somewhere she could see it.

Without a word, Maomao flipped over and lay on her other side, and promptly closed her eyes.

Chapter 2: The Floating Bride (Part One)

It was already evening when Maomao opened her eyes again. She'd meant to go shopping in town today—they'd said it was acceptable to leave the compound as long as she went with a bodyguard—but after everything that had happened the night before, it was hard to feel like going to market. She slept as long as she was able, and when she woke she was left with a clinging lethargy.

Oh! She looked at her wrinkled clothes in mild dismay, wondering if she should have changed into her sleepwear. First things first, though: she drank some water to rejuvenate her dried-out body. The water in the carafe was lukewarm, but a dash of citrus in it made it refreshing.

I wonder what we're doing about dinner tonight, she thought. Thinking maybe she should go outside and see what was going on, she tried to brush the wrinkles out of her skirt. She got it to where it was just about presentable and stepped out of her room, only to find Jinshi and Basen coming down the hallway toward her.

Some considered Maomao capable of being quite brazen, but at that moment she felt distinctly awkward. The night before, having done what she'd done to Jinshi, she'd then excused herself on the pretext that she heard Lahan calling her. But that didn't mean she could try to hide back in her room now.

Jinshi's face as he approached was unusually haggard; he had a furrow in his brow worthy of Gaoshun, and his gaze was fixed— on Maomao, it seemed. The look lasted only for an instant before his usual calm expression returned. Basen, though, was looking at Jinshi with distress—so something was up.

Jinshi came toward her with footsteps that sounded inordinately loud.

What do I do here? Maomao wondered, but there was no time

to think about it. The most she could do was to treat him normally. She bobbed her head in a polite nod and said, "Is something the matter, sir?"

Typically, the appropriate thing for a serving woman would be to speak only after Jinshi had spoken to her—but Maomao judged that it might be best for her to talk first at this moment. Jinshi's mouth twisted, a conflicted look passing across his face, but it was hard to say if anyone else noticed it.

"I know it's sudden, but I want you to change and come with me," was all he said, and then he swept past her. Behind him came several serving women, holding up a box with a change of clothes and bowing their heads deeply.

"Yes, sir," Maomao replied. Under the circumstances, it was the only thing she could say.

After she'd changed, she was hustled into a carriage. Jinshi and Basen, also in fresh outfits, were already inside.

Maomao glanced around. She'd spent most of her time here in Lahan's company—was it all right for her to act on her own with Jinshi and Basen?

"It was I who called you here, you see," Jinshi said. "Considering that our schedules were aligned for this very purpose, we could hardly not go." However he might be feeling about her, he at least had the wherewithal to talk normally to her. She was glad he was adult enough for that, but she couldn't help feeling there was something lurking behind his "It was I."

"And where are we going, sir?"

"To a wedding banquet for a certain household." Another banquet. Well, apparently this was part of the job. "I had intended to refuse, but the host insisted, this being such a joyous occasion. And besides..."

"Yes, sir?"

Jinshi gave Basen a significant look, and he pulled out the wanted poster he'd shown Maomao earlier.

"I gather that the family of the young woman to be married originally came from the north. They were one of the houses charged with ruling this area after the destruction of the Yi clan."

The Yi clan had governed these lands once, until they were exterminated in the time of the empress regnant. That would mean this family had been transplanted here several decades before.

"The young lady's feet are bound," Jinshi informed her. As she'd suspected.

"Was there no one besides this...young lady?" That was something Maomao wanted to be particularly sure about—she couldn't go accusing people of being criminals on nothing more than an assumption.

"Several," Jinshi said. "One of the young woman's ladies-inwaiting, for example. The real issue is whom the woman is getting married to—they say he's from Shaoh."

"I see."

It was a delegation from Shaoh that had brought the lion—and perhaps who had rigged the cage to break.

"Most importantly of all, the young woman is to set out on a journey tomorrow." Today, they would hold the marriage feast— and then the next day, she would set out for her husband's country.

"That seems rather hasty."

"Or rather deliberate."

So apparently they wanted Maomao to find some kind of proof of wrongdoing. "And if I'm unable to find anything?"

"We'll have to come up with another way. My stay here may be extended." The desire to avoid that was written on Jinshi's face. He'd already been away from the capital for close to a month, and the work the Emperor's younger brother had to do would have been piling up all that time. Yet they had to find this culprit. "This could also adversely affect the U clan, and I'd like to avoid that."

"I'm not confident I'll find anything," Maomao said. She wanted to be clear about that much.

"I understand." Jinshi turned to gaze out the window, and didn't look at her again for the rest of the ride.

They arrived at another mansion built near an oasis. The style was rather different from that of Empress Gyokuyou's family home; this building looked more like something that might be found back east. The building itself, and the garden it boasted, wouldn't have looked out of place in the capital.

As they went to the gate and proceeded down a flagstone path, they found water flowing by on both sides. Willow trees swayed gently, making the place look refreshing, while open-air pavilions with vermilion posts and yellow roofs dotted the estate. There was a large pond in which lotus leaves floated. The surface of the water rippled occasionally, and each time a pebble fell into a canal, there was a splashing of fish.

Carp?

Carp were a hardy species, but Maomao was impressed the household was able to keep them in such a desiccated environment.

"Was this house left behind by the Yi clan?" Jinshi wondered aloud. If these people had been sent to replace an annihilated clan who'd lived in the lap of luxury, they might understandably have simply moved into the extant mansion. It was certainly an opulent place, but there was something sad about it too. Empress Gyokuyou's home—Gyokuen's mansion—was lively and bustling; this residence felt subdued.

As they crossed the bridge over the lake, they saw someone coming the other direction, bowing obsequiously. "My apologies for being so late in greeting you," the person said. He must have been the master of the house. He was plump, his hairline beginning to recede. Behind him was a woman they took to be his wife. Her feet were small, and her shoes strangely shaped.

"I'm sure my daughter will be overjoyed to receive the congratulations of the Night Prince."

The Night Prince? Maomao wondered. She surmised the term referred to Jinshi. Not many people in this land could refer to him by his actual name, but it seemed to involve the character for "moon"—hence, perhaps, this nickname.

"If I may welcome you in, then," the man continued, ushering them toward the building. A carpet had been laid out in the pavilion, and a small boat and lanterns floated on the lake. It was only dusk now, but when darkness fell it would look eerie.

"Hey. This way," Basen called to Maomao.

Jinshi was seated beside the master, while next in line sat Gyokuen, apparently also an invited guest of the wedding. "We pushed the matter a little to get you here," Basen explained, apropos of the seating. "That's really where Consort Lishu should have been. That's why you're a ways off. I'll have a lady-in-waiting assigned to you—use her if you need anything."

So that was why Maomao's seat appeared to have been prepared in haste. A woman who certainly did look like a lady-inwaiting appeared from behind Basen as if it were the most natural thing in the world.

There were several other women there besides Maomao, but all of them had large, healthy feet. One of the seats of honor was occupied by a middle-aged man with hair that almost shone and sharp, angular facial features. A foreigner. In the other seat was a young woman wearing a veil over her head. Dressed all in white, she sat as still and silent as a doll.

Is that her? Maomao thought. She looked pliant enough—but it could be an act.

Resisting the urge to go for the alcohol, Maomao drank some juice. It was somewhat unusual to hold a banquet like this outside, at night, but the food and the music all seemed basically familiar. Maomao was frankly tired of banquets, and she didn't feel the need to appraise this one very thoroughly. She was just going to enjoy some good food and keep an eye on the bride.

Ugh, what's going on here?

Since they'd brought Maomao along, she did feel she ought to find something for them—but so far she hadn't had a single chance to act. First one person had spoken to her a little while before, and then it was like the dam had burst; people wouldn't

stop talking to her. Why? Because she was Jinshi's companion,

she surmised. Everyone was smiling and sipping wine, but deep in their eyes the emotions burned—ambition in the eyes of the men, jealousy in those of the women.

It wasn't lost on Maomao that this could be why Jinshi had brought her along: to show her what it was like to attend a function with the Emperor's younger brother, and not as his serving lady, as she'd done before.

Ugh. No, no!

Was it selfish of her to wish he would just act normal, not let

the events of the previous night change how he treated her? She wanted her relationship with him to be professional, the way it had always been as each of them used and was used by the other. That was what would be best for Maomao at this moment.

"A most modest young lady you are," someone said.

Maomao didn't specifically respond. A veil covered most of her face—and she did a lot of her talking through the serving woman who had been assigned to her to help ensure she didn't say anything untoward. The nasty edge of pleasure-district talk had reentered her speech lately, after all.

If that's how it looks to you, fine, she thought. She let her gaze wander to the seats at the center of the banquet to discover that somewhere along the line, the bride had disappeared. Maomao's lady-in-waiting seemed to sense where her attention had gone, for she whispered in her ear, "I gather she's gone to freshen her makeup."

Maomao got up, thinking she might use the restroom herself, but she was trapped, surrounded by people who couldn't seem to take a hint. She glanced over at Jinshi and Basen, who appeared to be in the same situation. Basen was glumly receiving pours of alcohol from various women—perhaps it would have been ungenerous to press him about whether his face was red from the drinks or for some other reason.

As Maomao was busy trying to think of a suitable excuse to get out of there, there was a great boom. She turned to find everyone around her looking toward the source of the noise.

The lantern-laden boat on the lake was shining brighter than ever. Fireworks were flying across the water, obviously the source of the noise. So the evening had been set to include fireworks.

"Hah! Gorgeous! I love it!" a drunken man proclaimed, working his way unsteadily out of the pavilion. He waded into the pond (what was he thinking?) and grabbed one of the carp with both hands. "Gorgeous! I love it! I wish this were snapper, but I won't

carp about it!"

It was a terrible joke, but in any event he gave the fish to a friend and said, "Would you have this cooked up for me?"

The servant obviously wasn't sure how to respond to that particular request, but was rescued by the head of the house, the father of the bride. "Hey, you!" he said. "I know this is a joyous occasion for your niece, but that's no excuse to go making an ass of yourself. Everyone's looking."

"Ha ha ha! Hullo, Elder Brother! No, it's all good."

"The Night Prince must be appalled."

Jinshi, the one who had suddenly been invoked, was smiling. Merely a polite smile, no doubt, but it was enough to enrapture all those around him, who, despite his injury, still felt he reminded them of a celestial nymph.

"I do pity that poor fish. Why not put it back?" he said. The party had become a free-for-all, notwithstanding the presence of the Emperor's younger brother. Such a scene would have been unthinkable in the capital.

Everyone was smiling and laughing at the exchange. The carp was returned to the pond and somehow escaped without being cooked that evening. Still, it couldn't have been easy for the fish, first with fireworks going off right over their heads, then being grabbed by inebriated partygoers. Maomao looked at the dark water. She tried dropping some breadcrumbs in, but there was no sign of the fish coming to get them. All the commotion must have scared them away.

With the addition of more alcohol, the party became ever freer, yet still the bride hadn't returned. Jinshi had taken notice of that fact by now, and he and the bridegroom were both eyeing the vacant seat.

"Perhaps tonight's star has gone to make herself shine even brighter?" Jinshi ventured. Hadn't the girl's uncle said that the bride was going to fix her makeup? Most of the women in the crowd didn't seem to buy it; the ladies-in-waiting had largely left the banquet area.

Not long after, one of them returned in a panic. Her face was pale and she could hardly speak; she could only point toward the far side of the lake.

Well, now...

Maomao caught a burning smell, and then she heard shouting. She turned toward the yelling to see one of the guests, who was himself looking in the direction the lady-in-waiting was pointing. His mouth was flapping open and shut like one of the carp, and he was pointing to the sky with a trembling finger. No—not the sky, but a building in a corner of the estate, a four-tiered pagoda.

Something was faintly visible on the highest floor.

"The y-y-young mistress is...hanging..." the lady-in-waiting finally managed. All the guests who had been enjoying themselves at the banquet collectively turned pale.

The dim silhouette could be seen dangling from the roof of the pagoda, its feet swaying gently back and forth. The white bridal gown billowed like a cloud.

"To the tower!" Jinshi said; he and Basen were the first to act. The bridegroom, the bride's father, and her uncle followed him belatedly, and Maomao joined them in heading for the pagoda at a run. They crossed the verdant garden, the smoke from the fireworks obscuring and diffusing the light from the lanterns floating in the canal. They could hear the carp splashing.

The pagoda was clearly visible, but there was no straight path between them and it. Trees and other buildings stood in their way, obstacles they had to work their way around to reach their destination. With their way well lit by the lanterns, at least they wouldn't fall.

Maomao entered the pagoda a few steps behind the others and raced up the stairs. She reached the top floor panting, to find the men staring disbelievingly at the dangling rope: it had snapped.

"Find her! Check the ground around the pagoda!" Basen roared and set off back down the stairs. He might be a somewhat simple personality, but at least he was decisive at moments like this.

The others, taking their cue from him, headed back down, but Jinshi was still looking outside. They were perhaps four jo (twelve meters) off the ground. If the girl had been strangled by the rope but it had then snapped, what were the chances she'd survived?

Just about zero, I'd say, Maomao thought. Whether her neck had broken or whether she'd suffocated, no one could survive hanging there that long. On the floor by the swaying rope was a pair of small shoes worked with embroidery—they had belonged to the bride.

"What do you make of it?" Jinshi asked, looking from the rope to the ground and back. The rope was tied under the eaves, and the other end had snapped off. Looking down, they could see the roofs overlapping. Maybe the girl had tumbled over them on her way down.

"I don't know," Maomao said honestly, and Jinshi smiled.

"I wheedled the truth out of her," Jinshi murmured. "Is this what I've wrought?" He had been sitting at the central seat at the banquet and could have said something to the bride. He glanced down, and just for a second, he looked as if he were chewing sand. He turned his back on the little shoes, but he didn't look up.

"Do you think me a terrible person?"

After a second Maomao said, "I don't know, sir." Jinshi had only done his job. Somebody would have had to sooner or later, or the culprit would have fled to the west. And they had to avoid that.

Unable to think of anything else to say, Maomao remained silent.

Finally Jinshi said, "Let's go," and his voice was cold.

"Yes, sir." Maomao descended the steps slowly, nursing a question as she worked her way down the steep staircase.

It wasn't long before they found the bride, but she was in no shape to be seen. Her white robe was singed; her arms and legs, bent at unsettling angles, were likewise blackened; and her head had been broken open. But they found the rope around her neck, and recognized her small, misshapen feet. She had been soaked in lantern oil that had then been set alight. It was more than enough to make the intoxicated guests feel very sober indeed.

Chapter 3: The Floating Bride (Part Two)

"If it's not one problem it's another, isn't it?" Ah-Duo said darkly. Originally, she and Maomao had planned to go shopping today, but after the events of the previous night, this would be another day with no sightseeing. Maomao had been looking forward to discovering what unusual things were on offer in the western capital, but it was not to be; instead she was dressed in somber clothing. Of all the things she'd thought might happen on this trip, she had never imagined she would be attending a funeral.

"I have to admit, I'm not sorry that it means no banquet tonight, but I wish it were under other circumstances," Ah-Duo said, sipping her tea. So it wasn't just Maomao who'd been feeling the strain of the nightly parties. Only she, Ah-Duo, and Suirei were in the room at the moment, which was why Ah-Duo could make a somewhat indiscreet comment like that. Suirei was permitted to go without her minder while in Ah-Duo's company, but Maomao doubted the reserved young woman found it exactly relaxing. Ah-Duo for one loved amusements, entertainments, and interesting things, so she was probably forever teasing the eternally serious Suirei.

"Cornered until she felt the only way out was to kill herself...

It's a tragedy," Ah-Duo said.

Suicide: that had been the official conclusion. A note had been found in the young woman's personal chamber, stating that the reason for her death was distress at the idea of moving to a faraway foreign land. The boisterous mood at the banquet had chilled immediately, and the groom was beside himself when he saw the note. He began to tear into the bride's father; most of what he said was in a foreign language and incomprehensible to Maomao, although it was clear enough that it wouldn't have borne repeating if she could have understood it. The residents of the western capital seemed to know what the man was saying, but they only stared sadly at the ground.

Jinshi had shown her the note, and Maomao was convinced that it had indeed been written by the bride.

She didn't say anything about being cornered, though...

Ah-Duo came across as very much like Empress Gyokuyou; Maomao saw that this former consort was not to be underestimated—it was one of her subordinates who had found the perfume as well. But Maomao didn't know exactly how much Ah-Duo knew, so she had to be careful about what she said.

Here was how it looked: distraught by her marriage, the bride had killed herself, making certain everyone saw her hanging from the pagoda before the rope snapped and she fell to the ground. Not only that, but she happened to upset a lantern when she landed, causing her clothes to catch fire.

But was that the truth of the matter? Jinshi seemed to think it was something he had done that had caused the young woman's suicide, but there was no way for Maomao to know. There was a distinct possibility this was the woman who had given Consort Lishu's half-sister the perfume—but that was something else about which there was no certainty. Thus Maomao would attend the funeral with things still shrouded in ambiguity. True, she might have been able to refuse if she'd insisted, but there was something that nagged at her.

Jinshi was going too. He wouldn't normally have had any reason to attend the funeral of the daughter of a local official, but the bride's father had pleaded with him to come. It was Jinshi and Gyokuen whose presence had quelled the raging bridegroom. They learned later that what the groom had shouted was: "This is twice now! Can you get me a third bride?!"

Twice, huh? Maomao thought. It was fairly simple to deduce that behind this seemingly ordinary marriage, something was afoot.

"It's almost time, ma'am," Maomao said, rising from her chair.

"Ah, of course." Ah-Duo set down her tea and glanced at

Maomao. "Incidentally, if you'll forgive me..."

"Yes, ma'am?" Maomao looked back at her with curiosity. It was an unusually reserved way for Ah-Duo to speak.

"If the Night Prince is going, I suppose that attendant of his will be with him, yes?"

"I should think so."

They were referring to Jinshi's aide and bodyguard, Basen. He'd broken the fingers of his right hand when he struck the lion, but at the time he had been so totally worked up that even the fact that his fingers were pointing in unnatural directions couldn't overcome his frenzy.

"Are we sure about him? I've heard he's Gaoshun's son. What's your read on him?"

After a second Maomao said, "I believe that's for Master Jinshi to decide, and not my place to comment on."

Basen's physical prowess certainly left nothing to be desired, but personally he still had some growing to do. Though admittedly, Maomao's opinion of him in that respect might have been colored by having seen Gaoshun at work. Anyway, she tried to be optimistic: it wasn't like Basen was Jinshi's only bodyguard or personal aide. So it would be fine, right?

"You really don't feel you're in a position to say anything?" AhDuo looked grim. Suirei poured fresh hot water into Ah-Duo's empty cup.

"No, ma'am. It's not something I have any influence over."

"Understood."

Maomao left the room, casting a mystified glance at Ah-Duo as she went.

This was the sort of thing a family might usually have wished to handle quietly, but with the young lady's death having been such a public affair, the funeral could hardly be a private one.

As the family's estate came into view, they could see a river of white-clad women streaming into it. Wailing women, to judge by their veils. Quite a few of them, Maomao observed. There were wreaths of flowers all over, as well as servants coming out with heads bowed to meet the guests.

Maomao wasn't certain that the custom of wailing women existed here in the western reaches, but the family had bound the young woman's feet, so they might well observe funerary customs in the manner of the capital as well.

At the reception desk, the number of wailing women was confirmed, and they were given wooden tags that served as identification.

"Come on, this way. Let's go," a servant said, and the women followed him.

This time Lahan had joined Maomao and the others. Their baggage included money and household goods made of paper.

"Don't they use the real thing?" Maomao asked.

"Maybe if you're new money," Lahan sniffed. Well then. He hadn't prepared paper items simply because he was a skinflint. It was customary for attendees at a funeral to give money and daily sundries made of paper, which would be burned to ensure the deceased could lead a comfortable existence even in the next life. Even one's stay in hell, it was often said, could be shortened by an infusion of cash.

Lahan had grumbled about being left out of the banquet and only dragged to the funeral, but it was what it was. With him here, Maomao didn't have to stay in Jinshi's orbit. Rikuson wasn't present; he had stayed behind. He probably had his own job to do.

"Anyway, it's very good paper. No low-quality scrap."

True, the material for the paper money was excellent. It could have stood proudly alongside anything from the quack doctor's village, although Maomao didn't know if it came from them or not. When she'd seen the young woman's suicide note, though, she'd had the thought that the western capital seemed to have a lot of awfully good paper.

"That's because this place is a crossroads of trade," Lahan told her. "Nobody sends their worst goods out into the world."

Li had in fact once exported paper, at a time when its products were said to fetch a good price even in the west. When lowquality products began to proliferate, the export business all but died off, but apparently there was still good stuff to be had.

The day before, they had been at the mansion amidst the evening dim, and now, in the daylight, Maomao could see a few places where the estate was falling into disrepair. This had once been a lavish mansion, but its new owners lacked the ability to maintain it.

A marriage with someone from Shaoh, she reflected. That seemed odd too. Important for diplomacy, perhaps, but the balance of power struck her as skewed. For example, the banquet had been held here, but everything else about the marriage was to be handled in the groom's land. And the way the man had behaved after the death of his bride could only be called contemptuous.

Lahan, it seemed, was already privy to the story, which he shared with Maomao on the way.

"This family was brought here to replace the Yi clan, but also, so I gather, to get them out of the way."

The mother of the former emperor—that is to say, the empress regnant—had been a pragmatist. She regarded officials who couldn't do their job as a nuisance, even if they boasted good bloodlines from the central region of the nation. She'd lured several families to the western reaches with promises of a family name if they went to oversee the area. The bride's family had been one of them.

But incompetent people don't suddenly become competent thanks to a simple change of scenery. Some of the families were decimated by disease in the unfamiliar climate; others were reduced to ruin and disappeared.

Why would the empress regnant have done something that seemed so rash when the western lands were widely acknowledged to be crucial to national defense? Perhaps because at that time, she had been at the height of her powers, and if a few families fell, well, others were rising to take their place.

Empress Gyokuyou's family, for example.

The young woman at yesterday's marriage feast was supposed to strengthen her family by going to another country as a bride. This family preferred to do business where they had blood relations; creating those relations by marrying their daughters off was how the household had chosen to survive down the years.

"The groom was actually supposed to be married to the cousin of the girl who died. The daughter of the younger brother of the head of the household, I believe," Lahan said. Was the younger brother in question, then, the overwatered man from the carp pond? Maybe he'd been celebrating as if it were his own daughter's wedding. "She killed herself ten days before the ceremony."

"He didn't look like a man who had suffered that sort of tragedy..."

"There are many things in this world that demand us to put on our best face, whether we wish to or not," Lahan said.

So that was what had been behind the groom's remark about "twice now." And to think, he had lost both would-be wives in the exact same way. They must have thought that foreign land was truly terrible.

Lahan's and Maomao's footsteps sounded as they walked along the flagstones, their feet dampened by the spray from the carp splishing in the canal. The fish (who had a terrible diet, for fish) came and gathered when they heard visitors approach; the refreshing sound of splashing water increased.

There was already a crowd in front of the mansion, the troupe of wailing women keening loudly. Maomao recognized many of the attendees from the day before.

Look at them all, she thought. Partly she meant the attendees, but what really stood out were the women in white. There must have been more than fifty of them setting up a racket of grief and mourning. Maybe some of the guests had brought wailers along as a courtesy, but it still seemed like a lot. It was these women's job to lament for the dead, but Maomao had the sense they were holding back a little this time, perhaps because if all of them had wailed at the tops of their lungs, you wouldn't have been able to hear yourself think. It was an unwelcome reminder that they were, in fact, mourning as a job.

With so many women present, some of them were bound to be better at the job than others. A few of them sounded a little embarrassed—they must still be new at this. Another stumbled on the long hem of her outfit.

It had to be a challenge, keeping up with the crying all the way through the long, long funeral ceremony, and from time to time the front and back rows of women would switch places. They seemed to be switching off crying duties, conserving their stamina. It was hard to say whether such efficiency-minded wailers would really bring peace to the dead, but personally Maomao didn't believe there was anything after the point of death, anyway. And these women did have to eat.

Maomao looked up. Out beyond the garden, she could see the four-storied pagoda. She wondered if it might be possible to get a different perspective on it in the day than at night. She started walking forward and almost fell into a canal she'd failed to notice.

She grabbed onto Lahan, who was standing next to her.

"What are you doing?" he snapped.

"Sorry." Even if she had fallen in, the canal wasn't that deep, but the carp had already arrived, drawn by the noise. The night before, the floating lanterns had saved anyone from falling in, but it was a moderately dangerous terrain feature, she reflected.

It was quite a distance to the pagoda, and yesterday they'd not only run over there but run all the way up the steps as well. It had been rough.

Steps? The distance to the pagoda? Maomao remembered that something had felt off the night before. What was it? She almost had it...

"Hey, you! She's not food!" Lahan joked. The carp, paying him no mind, continued to bloop at her, hoping for crumbs. Just then there was a gust of wind, and some of the money for the dead fell into the canal. The carp were on it in an instant, and it was swiftly gone without a trace.

Maomao didn't say anything, just stared at the fish.

"What are you doing? They're not food either. You can't fish here."

He sounded like he was joking again, but she stuck out her hand toward him. "Paper."

"Paper?"

"I know you keep some scratch paper with you. Give me a sheet."

"What brings this on?" Lahan grumbled, but nonetheless he produced the paper from the folds of his robe. Maomao tore it up and dropped it into the canal, where the carpet greedily consumed it again.

Maomao's mouth hung open for a second, and then she said, "That's it!" She set out at a brisk trot toward the pagoda.

"H-Hey!" Lahan exclaimed.

The place where the bride had been hanging from the pagoda could be seen from the pavilion where the wedding feast had been held, but as you got closer, it dropped out of view.

Maomao picked up her pace, running until she could see the pond directly underneath the tower.

"Wh-What are you after? What's going on?" Lahan panted as he caught up to her. Maomao lifted up the hem of her dress and waded into the pond. There was a short distance between the pagoda and the water; that was where the bride's body had been found.

"When a person falls out of a window, Lahan, where do they drop?" she asked.

"Down, usually," he said.

Yes, and that was where they'd found the charred corpse.

However...

"What if it was something lighter than a person? Say the wind speed and direction were roughly like they are now."

"It would depend on the weight."

"Less than two kin, but about the size of a human."

"In that case..." Lahan adjusted his glasses, eyeballing the distance. He licked his finger and held it up to the wind. "Slightly farther out from the building than where you are, I would guess.

And if we take the position of the roof into account..."

Right, the roof. If you bring that into it, there's something that doesn't make sense. Now that she could see it in the light, she

was sure of it.

Lahan looked at the scorched patch of ground where the body had been discovered, then at the roof. Then he cocked his head. Of course—if Maomao could figure it out, this human abacus couldn't fail to notice it. If he'd been there the night before, he would have detected the inconsistency long before she had.

Maomao moved to the place Lahan had indicated, then rolled up her sleeves and plunged her hands into the water, digging around on the pond bottom. Lahan, meanwhile, had sat down, evidently intent on observing the situation. He had a little twig in hand to keep himself busy, with which he was writing on the ground. Calculating something, perhaps.

"What are you doing, ma'am?!" cried a servant who had

noticed the guest playing around in the pond. Reprehensible behavior at a home that was observing a funeral, surely. "Please, get out of there right now!"

"Don't mind me," Maomao said, ignoring the man and reaching into the pond again. The bottom was muddy; excellent fertilizer.

Lots of fish poop that had infused it with nutrients.

"You heard the lady," Lahan said diffidently, but the servant continued to try to stop Maomao. Maomao continued to ignore him, carrying on with her digging. If and when she found what she expected to find, all would be resolved.

Lahan wasn't getting in her way, but he wasn't exactly helping either, just glancing around now and then. Maomao could hear the servant splashing into the pond behind her. She felt him pull on her hand. She tried to run, but her feet caught in the mud and she went headfirst into the water. She ended up covered in filth, with the servant trying to get a hold of her.

At just that moment, however, a gorgeous, carrying voice said,

"Have you found anything?"

You'd think he was waiting for the perfect moment to make his entrance, Maomao thought. Jinshi had appeared. Basen stood behind him, looking aghast.

Maomao wiped the mud off her face and held up a piece of rope, the end of which had snapped. Which would mean the

bride...

In her head, Maomao went over what she knew. There was another mysterious thing about this mansion—and if she could reveal the truth of it, the mystery would be solved.

"The bride is still alive," she announced, and grinned.

Maomao asked for a room in which to clean herself off and change clothes. She would have loved a proper bath, but they didn't have the time. She hated the feeling of mud clinging to her scalp, but she was just going to have to grin and bear it.

Once she was changed, she was shown into the mansion's main room. The master of the estate and his family shot her dirty looks as she came in, clearly unhappy about a guest behaving so outrageously at a funeral. Jinshi and Basen were there, along with Lahan and the bodyguards, but she didn't see the bridegroom from yesterday. In fact, she didn't think she had seen him participating in the funeral at all.

Lying on the table was the piece of rope Maomao had discovered. She looked out the window and saw the women in white, still busy crying. The funeral rites would continue until tomorrow, so perhaps the ladies would stay here for the night. The other guests had gone home; only those women, the people who lived in this house, and Maomao's party remained.

"May I ask what in the world you think you're doing?" said the despondent master of the house. He seemed less angry than simply overwhelmed with grief.

"This young woman will explain everything," Jinshi said, ushering Maomao to the center of the room. The rope on the table was filthy, yet nonetheless obviously still new.

"I know she's supposed to be a lady of the La family, but we're grieving the death of our child," the master said. "Could you not leave us in peace? Surely even the Night Prince..." He was being circumspect, but he was unmistakably criticizing Jinshi. The way he trembled as he did so indicated how much courage it must have taken.

"Yes, and I must apologize for intruding on your sorrow. However, if we could ask for but a moment of your time," Jinshi said; he was gentle, but firm.

"The guests have gone home and we must clean up. Might I at least dismiss the wailing women?"

Jinshi glanced at Maomao, but she shook her head. Jinshi took a step back as if to say he was trusting her to handle things from here on.

Maomao said, "I would feel the same way you do—if the bride had really died." Then she picked up the rope and went outside.

"Come with me."

"What's this all about?" the host fumed, but Maomao ignored him and went and stood in front of the women in white. The others watched her, perplexed, as she crouched down.

With a "Hiyah!" she grabbed two of the wailing women's robes, flipping them up.

The spectators' jaws practically fell on the ground.

The sun was strong in these parts, and people kept their legs hidden, safe from its light, so the limbs Maomao revealed were suitably pale. Growing ever hungrier for daikon, she went along flipping up the ladies' skirts, the women shouting and shrieking.

This brings back memories, Maomao thought. There had once been a merchant with questionable tastes who had assembled ten or so courtesans and spent an entire night flipping their skirts up. The madam had clucked and complained that it was particularly lowbrow behavior—but the man paid three times the going rate, so she wasn't about to stop him.

In short, Maomao was essentially behaving just like a sexcrazed old man.

The women whose skirts had been flipped quickly crouched down, trying to hide themselves, while those Maomao hadn't gotten to yet panicked and tried to run.

Well, damn. This is more fun than I expected!

She hadn't understood what was so great about it until she'd done it for herself, chasing the crying women around pulling at the hems of their dresses. She finally started to understand what that lustful old man had been feeling. Well, that wasn't good.

One of the wailing women stood out as not very athletic. She tried to escape but couldn't run, instead tripping and stumbling. Maomao showed no mercy, standing in front of her and flexing her fingers. The woman's shouts echoed around the yard, but Maomao grabbed her skirt.

"You! Learn some blasted manners!" Jinshi exclaimed; he accompanied his injunction with a smack to the back of her head.

She turned and saw that he looked thoroughly exasperated.

"I'm very sorry," Maomao said, releasing the handful of skirt she'd gotten. "But I've found what I was looking for."

Peeking out from under the hem of the girl's skirt was a pair of shoes. She'd almost fallen out of them trying to run away, because the size was all wrong. Her feet were wrapped in bandages, and in fact they hardly looked like feet at all.

This wailing woman had bound feet.

Next Maomao took the mourner's veil and slowly pulled it off, revealing a pretty young woman with a tearstained face.

"I'm sorry!" the young woman said, crying. Whoever she was apologizing to, it certainly wasn't Maomao.

"H—" Maomao began, but before she could come out with Here's your missing bride, another woman with bound feet threw herself between them. One of the bride's ladies-in-waiting, perhaps?

"What is the meaning of this?! Can't you manage even the most basic decency?!" the second woman shouted at Maomao. Her eyes were open wide in an effort to forestall the tears that threatened to come pouring out of them. She was biting her lip and her shoulders were trembling. Then she straightened the other woman's skirt and put the veil back on her head. "Get going, quickly. We have work again tomorrow."

With the bound feet revealed, though, the woman wasn't going to get away—Maomao, and now Jinshi, wouldn't let her. They couldn't have her fleeing on them. It was that thought that inspired the cruel words Maomao spoke next.

"The body you burned. Was it your older sister's? After she killed herself?"

The wailing woman shuddered.

"The body already had marks on its neck. That's why you made such a show of 'hanging' yourself. And then you burned the body so no one could be sure what had happened to it."

The young woman could be heard to sniffle—not in a poor imitation of grief; it was an excellent job of crying, one that would certainly have passed muster during her work.

The bride's father, who'd watched silently until that moment, finally burst out: "Once again, I have no idea what in the world you're talking about! I must ask you not to desecrate my child's funeral any further. There's no way this wailing woman could be my daughter!" He joined the lady-in-waiting in standing in front of Maomao. "It's true, I spoke to you about my little girl, but quite frankly, I wasn't asking you to go poking your nose in every last place!" The man's anger was plain to see.

Then the bride's uncle intervened with much gesticulating, "If the girl is alive, then how do you explain what happened last night? We all saw the bride hang herself. And we found the body on the ground. Those are facts!"

Maomao, though, shook her head. "True enough, the bride hanged herself from the highest level of the pagoda and then fell down. But there's something interesting about that tower. It's four stories, yes? And at first, all of them appear to be the same size— but the lowest level flares out farther than the others. What would happen if something were to fall there?"

Lahan was better at explaining these kinds of things than Maomao was, so she handed him a branch off the ground. He began to sketch a diagram of the tower in the dust. It was the same picture he'd been drawing while Maomao was busy playing in the mud.

"The roof is on an angle, so something that fell on it would roll outward. The force would continue to carry it as it came off the roof," Lahan said, adding an arrow to his diagram by way of explanation. "In other words, if this object came down with undiminished momentum, it would land some distance from the pagoda."

However, the burned body had been directly under the eaves, in a place that was concealed if you were standing at the entrance to the tower. For if it had fallen into the pond, it would no longer have been possible to burn it to throw people off the trail.

"Based on basic principles of movement and the speed of the body, the corpse should not have fallen where we found it," Lahan said. At least he could be counted on at times like this. And the diagram made his explanation easier to understand.

"The burned body was there all along," Maomao concluded.

"We were distracted by the 'floating' bride and missed it." The path to the pagoda had been lit with small lanterns. Guests unfamiliar with the estate, trying to find their way on a dark night, would naturally follow it. And the smoke from the fireworks combined with the smell of the lantern oil was perfect for concealing the already burned body.

Finally Maomao added: "I suspect this was the true identity of the dangling bride." She took out some scrap paper and walked toward the pond, deliberately stomping her feet as she went. She tore up the paper and tossed it into the water, which promptly roiled with carp coming to eat it. "There's plenty of excellent paper around here. Stuff that could be made into something that might well pass for a bride's gown when seen from a distance."

What would the signal have been? The fireworks, they would be perfect. Perhaps a special color of smoke or a particular sound. When somebody spotted the hanging bride, the signal would be given. Working backward from the distance to the tower and how long it would take to reach the top floor, the rope would be cut to make it look as if it had snapped. Everyone would be so busy rushing to the pagoda that they wouldn't notice the fall.

"You went in and grabbed one of the carp yesterday," Maomao said to the uncle. "Was that in order to scare the fish away?" Perhaps he had been attempting to drive the paper-eating fish to the desired location. They'd probably been frightened by the fireworks, but why take any chances?

The paper doll would fall into the pond and be eaten by the carp, leaving only the rope Maomao had found in the water. As for the person who had cut the rope, she merely needed to wait for everyone else to arrive at the pagoda. No need to try to rush out and risk bumping into anyone who had come to investigate. Instead, she could simply hide somewhere inside, and once there was a suitable crowd, she could join the others, slipping in amongst them and looking as if she was as confused as everyone else. They now no longer needed to ask who had played that role.

"If there are any objections to my interpretation of events, perhaps we should check the rope that I found against the piece left over from the tower. Anyone?"

At that word, "anyone," the bride's father fell to his knees, while the others looked at each other with resignation. The ladyin-waiting who had put herself between Maomao and the wild wailing woman wore a pained expression. Yes, of course: the bride couldn't have pulled this off by herself. She must have had accomplices—perhaps her entire household.

The faces of the family members before them were written not with treachery, but with grief.

"You hoped to hide the bride among the ranks of the wailing women, and help her escape that way," Maomao said. It seemed she'd been under an enduring misimpression. Namely, she'd been wrong that the incident with the lion had been targeting Consort Lishu.

Sometimes, what another person was thinking didn't always line up with what you imagined.

"All this to help her get away from that foreign groom."

She'd heard it was the would-be groom who had brought the lion—and if the cage were to break and the lion were to get loose, the blame would fall on him. The family simply had to tamper with the bars of the cage and get the lion-agitating perfume among the attendees of the banquet. It must have been simple chance that one of the people they had chosen happened to be Lishu's half-sister.

Normally, blame for the incident with the lion would have been quickly assigned, and it would have fallen most heavily on the groom. But Jinshi and Gyokuen were more thoroughgoing than the family had expected; rather than immediately escalate things, they had focused on gathering evidence.

The groom, understandably concerned, had decided to leave the country posthaste, planning to depart after the banquet that had been planned for the next day. That was why he wasn't here now: he was already on his way home. If things had been allowed to go on unhampered, the young woman would now be on her way to live as the man's wife in a foreign country. The family, frantic, decided to stage the young woman's death. They were so set on protecting the young lady that they were even willing to use the corpse of her older sister, who had already died.

"Why did you feel it was necessary to go so far?" Jinshi asked.

"Hah! You have no idea how abominably my daughter was treated," replied the bride's uncle—the father of the dead woman. "Those people see our family's women as nothing but slaves. Do you know what they do on their first night together? They brand the bride. Like an animal!"

Marriages weren't always equal; in fact, more often than not the balance of power leaned in one direction or the other. If you didn't have the power, then the only thing you could do was bow and scrape. This family had already offered up one daughter as such a sacrifice.

"It was the same with these feet of mine," the bride dressed as a wailing woman said, brushing her hand along her own small feet. "This is what that man wanted. He said he wanted me to look like a girl from the east. I doubt he saw me as anything more than a commodity." The lady-in-waiting watched her with agony on her face. Perhaps the bride and even her lady-in-waiting had had their feet bound as potential backups in case the older sister didn't pan out.

The expression disappeared from Jinshi's face, but he seemed privately disturbed.

"I am incompetent. This was the only path open to me. Do you think perhaps, if I'd had more talent or skill, I might have been able to see my daughter become one of the roses in the garden?" the girl's father asked. Perhaps he was thinking of another family, also from the western capital, who had seen their own daughter rise to become Empress.

"If the empress regnant had been pleased with us," the father continued, "do you think we might have escaped being sent to these backwaters?"

Jinshi turned away from the tragic family. They had committed a serious crime. Their attempt to protect their own daughter could have sacrificed many more lives.

"Do you think we might have been able to save our household?"

It wouldn't be possible to let them off with a slap on the wrist.

The one thing Maomao didn't know was whether Jinshi had grown up enough to accept that.

That being said, she couldn't help thinking she saw things differently than they did. "Is a household something that must be saved?" she said quietly, approaching the two bound-footed women as they clung to each other. Despite all the claims of incompetence, something bothered her. "May I ask you something?" she said to the women.

They didn't say anything, and she took their silence as assent.

"I believe that among those to whom you gave the perfume, there was one woman with an arrogant attitude and a mouthful of bad teeth. How did you get to know her?"

The lady-in-waiting looked at the ground. She must have been the one who had made contact with Lishu's half-sister. It was strange: she hadn't seemed like the type to be that friendly with someone she'd just met.

"I don't remember exactly, but she was eighteen or nineteen years old with a somewhat plump behind."

"Her butt measures three shaku and one sun around," Lahan interjected. (Why?!) Maomao assumed the number was an educated guess, that he was just eyeballing it—but she silently crushed his toes nonetheless.

"I urge you to tell us," Maomao said. "It would be better for everyone."

After a moment, the lady-in-waiting said, "The fortune-teller told me."

"Fortune-teller?"

The other woman nodded, still looking at the ground. "She's been all the talk in the western capital. Everyone's been going to see her."

At first, the lady-in-waiting said, she'd thought it was all just talk. But the fortune-teller's words had shown an uncanny insight into the young woman and her friends, and she'd been drawn deeper and deeper in.

"The dearly departed young mistress used to go to her for advice."

"I'm impressed she was able," Maomao said. She wasn't trying to attack the young woman—it was just a simple doubt that emerged in her mind. The subject of the "advice" wasn't something you could talk about with just anyone.

The lady-in-waiting pointed toward town. "They would talk in the chapel."

It was a place much like the building on Gyokuen's premises dedicated to a foreign religion. There were places within where one could have a private conversation, and the fortune-teller used them to ply her trade. These nooks and crannies were originally, it seemed, for monks of the foreign faith to listen to people, but with the appropriate donation they might be available for private personal conversations as well.

The lady-in-waiting had tried not to be overly specific about her name and identity, but an industrious snoop could find out whom they were talking to. This fortune-teller appeared to have taken advantage of that.

"I was the one who accepted the perfume! And I accepted the advice to tamper with the cage! It was all me!" The lady-inwaiting let her head droop. She'd felt she couldn't let there be any more dead young women simply because they wouldn't listen to the fortune-teller. She looked up at Maomao pleadingly, but Maomao wasn't the one who would hand down judgment.

The fortune-teller had also told her whom to target. She was vague when it came to the names or characteristics of some of the marks, but there were others, like Lishu's half-sister, whom the lady-in-waiting was told about in detail. Ultimately, she sold perfume to around three people.

"The guilt doesn't fall on this young woman alone. It was I who tampered with the cage," said the bride's uncle, stepping forward. He had found the lady-in-waiting in a somber mood and questioned her. Indeed, it seemed like more than one young woman could have done on her own.

"It wasn't just them. The staged suicide was my idea. Even if it meant disturbing my niece's grave," the bride's father said.

"No! Brother, I begged you to do what you did!"

Witnessing this exchange, the women of the family began to set up a terrible cry.

"So all this came not from the fortune-teller, but was your own idea?" Jinshi asked.

"That's right. After what happened yesterday, we didn't have time to meet with the fortune-teller."

"And would this fortune-teller have been able to meet with you?" Jinshi was watching the pitiful family closely. He didn't seem to be thinking of how to punish them, but rather how to connect this to whatever came next.

As he watched the family, Maomao silently watched him.

They never did find the fortune-teller or whoever it was. A monk at the chapel, however, testified to where the diviner had been living. The proverb has it that money talks even in hell—a good donation made the man quite forthcoming.

The residence he pointed them to was totally empty. The only thing they could conclude from what they found there was that the fortune-teller didn't appear to live like someone from the west.

Chapter 4: Homeward Bound

Maomao didn't know how Jinshi would deal with the bride and her family. After everything was over, he spent some time in conversation with Gyokuen, but it was hardly a discussion Maomao could intrude upon. The only thing she could do was hope that worst wouldn't come to worst. Consort Lishu was no longer in confinement, but what to do about her half-sister was a separate matter entirely.

And so, on her sixth day in the western capital, with their departure looming the next day, all Maomao could think was: I

never did get to do any sightseeing.

That was it. It might sound cold, but it wasn't in Maomao's temperament to ruminate on negative thoughts. Instead she'd been hoping to get out and do something to refresh herself—only to be told it was time to get ready to go home. Thus she found herself in the cactus garden, the fatigue written on her face. She had no idea if the plants would survive in the capital's climate, but she wanted to at least ask for some seeds or a small clipping to take with her. Gyokuen went one step further, being kind enough to call the merchant for them, so she was grateful for that much. On that note, her stay in the western capital came to an end.

"What in the world is this?" Lahan asked. They were in the carriage on the way home, and he was indicating a bird feather, sharpened and blackened at one end. Supposedly, they didn't use brushes in the west; instead they used metal "pens" or feathers like this one.

Maomao cocked her head. "I think they found it in that fortune-teller's house." There hadn't been much in the way of possessions, but this had been among the limited evidence they'd uncovered. "The Emperor's honored younger brother seemed quite interested in what kind of feather it was. Would you happen to know?"

"Hmm... It's very small. I don't think it belongs to a water bird," Lahan said.

The feather was gray in color, and didn't actually look very suited to being a writing instrument. It was probably a random feather someone had grabbed for a backup in case it was needed.

At length Lahan said, "You don't think it might belong to a dove?"

"How prosaic."

Many people ate dove meat, and there was a custom of releasing the birds on celebratory occasions. Lahan looked a bit deflated; maybe he'd been hoping for something a little more exotic.

Maomao stared out the window. "They said we'd be taking a boat home, right?"

"That's right," Lahan replied. Beside him, Rikuson was smiling broadly. Not obliged to attend either the wedding or the funeral,

he at least had been able to tour around a little, and he gave Maomao a piece of silk cloth he'd gotten. She was happy enough to take whatever she was given, but something about it all felt a bit unfair to her, and she couldn't help giving him a modestly dirty look.

"Why couldn't you have attended instead?" she muttered.

"Oh, I would never have fit in at that household," he said. It sounded humble, at least, and he was smiling, but she had no idea whether he was telling the whole truth.

Ah-Duo and Consort Lishu were riding in a separate carriage and would make the journey home together. Certainly, there was no sense in them staying in the western capital any longer. Lishu's father Uryuu had apparently said he would bring Lishu home, but Ah-Duo had turned him down. To suddenly develop a soft spot for the daughter he'd ignored for the last fifteen years was, well, convenient to say the least.

"We'll have to change vessels a few times, but we should make it back in half the time it took to get here. And the wind should be with us at this time of year," Lahan said.

Ships had an advantage over carriages in that they didn't have to stop frequently to rest. Going west, however, they would have been traveling upriver and with the wind against them, a timeconsuming proposition. But now they would be traveling down one of the tributaries of the Great River, and a boat would easily get them to the capital.

Jinshi and Basen, meanwhile, were still in the western capital; they had been unavoidably detained to conclude the business they had put off. By all rights, Maomao should have stayed with

them, but Lahan had apparently asked Jinshi: "Might I borrow my little sister for a while?"

If she'd been present, she might have objected: "I'm not your sister" or "Don't drag me into your twisted plans," but she hadn't been there, and the matter had been decided without her input. From what she heard, Jinshi had been about to refuse, but then had changed his mind and agreed.

She hadn't had a proper opportunity to talk to him since the night of the banquet. Maomao admittedly felt awkward around him and, in her own way, was glad to be rescued from the situation.

As happy as I am to be going home early... She was also anxious. She mulled over whether she should go sleep with AhDuo rather than anywhere near Lahan as she packed her clothing into a wrapping to make a pillow. After all that work she'd done to make a cozy sleeping place in the carriage, now she had to start all over again.

"How about some modesty, little sister?" Lahan said.

"I don't know what you mean."

Lahan and Rikuson exchanged a look, but Maomao didn't care. She closed her eyes and went to sleep.

After two days in the carriage they arrived at the landing, where Maomao's slightly bad feeling became a very bad feeling. The river was narrow going upstream, and the vessel awaiting them was less of a ship and more of a dinghy. They couldn't even fit everything on one boat; there was a second one floating there to hold their luggage.

"Are we sure about this?" she asked.

"I trust the business," Lahan replied. "I don't expect any trouble with theft."

"Not what I was asking."

"I know. Don't say it." He wouldn't quite look at her. Evidently he'd been picturing a bigger boat too.

"Ah ha ha ha ha! This is fun!" The exclamation came from AhDuo, the only cheerful member of their party; the rest of them were too busy clinging to the dinghy to squeal or shout. The captain assured them that the rapids only covered the first li or so, but there seemed to be every chance they would capsize before they got that far.

Lishu was resting her head on Ah-Duo's knees. The relentless rolling and rocking of the boat during the first moments of the trip had been enough to make the timid young woman faint clean away. She was secured with a rope to keep her from falling overboard. But really, maybe she was the lucky one.

"I d-didn't think...it would sh-shake so much..." the tousledhaired man with the glasses said, his face pale as he deposited bile into the frothing water. And here he'd been gloating about how this would be the fastest way home. Apparently he'd quite forgotten about the differences between traveling by land and traveling by ship.

"Don't turn this way. You'll spit that stuff on me."

"Maomao, give me something to settle my stomach..." He reached toward her with a shivering hand, but she wasn't sure what to do. She'd already given him an antiemetic—and he'd promptly thrown it up. She could give him another, but he would only vomit that out too.

Rikuson wasn't as boisterous as Ah-Duo, but he seemed just as relaxed. He was watching the local fauna with a big smile on his face. "Look over there, Sir Lahan; you can see a little bird. Ah, I never get tired of the scenery here. It's always so lovely."

That's just another way of saying the scenery never changes, Maomao thought.

Suirei looked a little bit ill, but she wasn't setting up the racket that Lahan was. Not all of the bodyguards looked entirely comfortable either, but they weren't going to allow themselves to act pathetic while they were on the job.

Maomao was Maomao: a bottle of wine wouldn't leave her tipsy, and neither could a moving vehicle. Still, she wasn't a confident swimmer, so she sat quietly in the interests of not falling overboard.

"Look at all of you..." Lahan grumbled. Seeing him so out of sorts was, in its own way, a rare treat, and Maomao found herself quite amused.

Once the tributary joined the main river, the stream grew wider, and they changed to their next boat.

"Are you sure you don't have anything to stop me feeling so sick?" Lahan asked. He was clinging to a bucket, his face bloodless. It seemed he wasn't feeling much better despite the larger vessel, although he was actively throwing up less often. So there was that.

They were in a small cabin, of which the ship had just two; this room was for the women of the party. They couldn't, after all, have Ah-Duo or Consort Lishu sleeping side by side with everybody else. If Lahan had shown his face there, especially looking so bedraggled, it had to be a sign that he couldn't take the seasickness anymore.

Lishu had eventually come to, but she was still resting on AhDuo's lap. It was plain to see that she was pretending to be seasick in the name of a bit of coddling.

"The stuff you threw up earlier was all I had left," Maomao said. She'd finally given him the medicine, but it had come right back up. It hadn't even had time to take effect. She'd brought the antiemetics because she knew how shaky a carriage could be; she'd never expected to need them for this.

Ships indeed had the advantage of not having to stop, meaning you got to your destination sooner—but it also meant the shaking never ceased. Maomao was a little surprised to realize that Lahan was so sensitive to the boat when he hadn't had a problem with the carriage.

I mean, it's not like I don't understand. Maomao leaned along with a roll of the ship, but Lahan exclaimed "Yikes!" and grabbed on to a post, his other hand still clutching his bucket.

Next, Maomao leaned in the other direction.

"Why don't you get seasick?" Lahan asked resentfully.

"Maybe it's the same reason I don't get drunk very easily." Incidentally, Lahan was not a man who could hold his liquor. He continued to glare at Maomao, who hadn't so much as turned green.

"I'm not riding on any more boats!" he announced, looking haggard—but the middle of a river journey was hardly the ideal place to find a good carriage, and he ended up getting on the next ship as well. Besides, he had to accompany Ah-Duo and the consort back home. Ah-Duo seemed quite enamored of traveling by ship, while Lishu was quite enamored of being doted on by AhDuo. Neither of them could think of any compelling reason to switch to a carriage now.

By and by they arrived at the third boat landing. As Maomao was disembarking to switch to the next ship, she heard a loud thump. What could it be?

As it happened, it was someone collapsing right there on the dock. A sailor was trying to bring him around, although he looked cautious as he did so. The limp figure was a man in a thoroughly weathered cloak.

Is he sick? Maomao wondered, observing from a safe distance. She didn't want to get sucked into anything, but she wasn't so cold-blooded that she would leave a sick or injured person without help.

"Hey, mister, you all right?" the sailor said, giving the man a shake.

"I'm... I'm juuust fine," the man said, although he sounded pretty out of it.

The sailor got him face up, but then groaned. "Urgh..."

The man must have been quite handsome once; the high, firm bridge of his nose and his willow-branch eyebrows proved it. But half his face was covered in pockmarks; if his face had been a circle, the pockmarked skin and the clear skin would have roughly formed a yin-yang shape.

The sailor shoved the man away. The newcomer got unsteadily to his feet. "Excuse me, sir. Could I hitch a ride on your boat?" There was a smile on his hideous face, and Maomao could see a pouch of small coins in his outstretched hand. He was still young —maybe in his midtwenties.

"H-Hold on, you! You don't have some weird sickness, do

you?" cried the sailor who'd helped him up, brushing furiously at anything that had come into contact with the man.

Still smiling, the man touched his ravaged face. "Oops!" He nodded to himself as if it all made sense. A scarf lay on the ground at his feet; it must have fallen off when he collapsed. He picked it up and folded it in half, forming it into a triangle; he then used it to cover half his face. At a glance, it almost looked like a bandage.

"I know! It's smallpox! That's what that is, isn't it?!"

Smallpox was a terrible disease that covered the entire body in pustules. It was an extremely infectious illness that, it was said, could devastate an entire nation. Even the cough or sneeze of a sick person could be enough to pass it to someone else.

The man gave a dumb smile and scratched his cheek. "Hah, it's okay! These are just scars. I did have smallpox once, but now I'm fit as a fiddle! Just look!"

"Like hell! You collapsed not five minutes ago! Stay back— back, I say!"

"I only collapsed because I got a little hungry! You've got to believe me!"

The conversation inspired everyone else near the man to give him a little extra room. Maomao narrowed her eyes. If he wasn't sick, then she wasn't needed here.

"What seems to be the matter?" asked Rikuson, who had been transferring their luggage to the next boat. He seemed very fastidious. Maomao privately decided to dub him "Gaoshun 2."

"That man with the bandage on his face wants to board the ship, but the sailor won't let him," she explained briefly.

"Hmm," said Rikuson, studying the young man. With his pockmarks covered, he really was downright handsome. And he sounded rather lighthearted. "What's the problem? Is he trying to freeload?"

"No, he has the money, but he's got pockmarks on his face, and the sailor's worried he might be sick. But it's a moot point, since the ship is full anyway."

Consort Lishu was on board, which meant there would be bodyguards. They couldn't have some random stranger getting on board too.

Rikuson squinted at the man. "Is he really sick?"

"Good question." From this distance, it was hard to be sure, but from what Maomao could see, the man had pockmarks but no pustules. He was probably telling the truth—he'd been sick once, but it had been a long time ago. So why didn't Maomao simply say that to the sailor?

Because it's only going to be a headache for me getting involved.

It was just that simple.

The young man showed no sign of giving up on the boat, though; he practically clung to the sailor. "I'm begging you, let me

on board! How can you be so cruel?"

"Leggo of me! Stop! I'll catch your pox!"

Usually, handsome men with scars on their faces had a dark mood to match, but evidently not this guy. He clung to the sailor's bulky feet and wouldn't let go. The other sailors wished they could help their shipmate, but, frightened of possibly catching some awful disease, they stood helplessly at a distance.

Something had to be done about this man or the ship was never going to leave.

Rikuson must have guessed what Maomao was thinking from her expression, because he grinned. "I wish the ship would hurry up and go, don't you?"

She didn't say anything. What, was he trying to tell her to do something about it?

Looking thoroughly put-upon, Maomao got off the boat and went over to the sailor (who by now looked deeply troubled) and the young man (who by now had snot coming out of his nose).

"Pardon me," she said.

"Yes?" the young man replied. It wasn't exactly consent, but she grabbed the scarf off Snot Man's face anyway. One look at the ugly marks was enough for her to confirm that he'd gotten them years ago. She looked at the eye on the pockmarked side of his face; it appeared hazy and unfocused. His pupils were different sizes as well; chances were he was blind in the one.

"This person is not sick," she announced. "He has scars, but there's no chance of him spreading the disease to anybody else." Not smallpox, anyway. As to any other diseases he might have, she didn't know and disclaimed all responsibility.

With a look of total revulsion, the sailor gingerly picked up the coin purse the man had dropped. He turned it upside down, small change tumbling musically out of it. "And where are you going, sir?"

"To the capital! I want to go to the capital! The capital!" He clenched his hands into fists and shook them with excitement; he couldn't have seemed more like a country bumpkin headed for the big city if he'd tried. "And once I'm there, I'm gonna make so

many medicines!"

"Medicines?" Maomao's ears perked up.

"Yeah! I may not look like much, but I'm kind of a big deal!" The man pulled a large bag from somewhere under his cape, and when he opened it, a distinctive odor wafted out. Maomao took the clay pot from the bag and opened the lid to find it was full of ointment. She had no idea if it was effective, but it had been made very scrupulously, with thoroughly powdered medicinal herbs blended to the perfect consistency. Such care in preparation was even more vital to the quality of the final product than exactly which herbs were used.

Maomao looked at the man afresh. He was grinning widely and said to the sailor, "Want some? Works on seasickness!" But of course, no sailor was going to buy a medicine like that.

"Pff, tightwad. Why not just buy some? Oh! Actually, forget about buying anything. Can I get on the boat? Yes? The boat?"

"No. This ship is rented out. You'll have to wait for the next one."

"What? Seriously? I have to wait?!" The man looked less than thrilled, but seemed to accept it. Then he looked at Maomao and grinned again. "Thanks, you were a big help. To show my gratitude, let me give you some of this seasickness medicine!"

The way he talked made him sound very, well, young, but he seemed to be more grown-up than he acted. He at least appeared to be older than Maomao.

"No, thanks. I don't get seasick," Maomao said.

"No? Shame, that."

The man was just about to put the medicine away when from behind Maomao someone bellowed, "Hold it!" Lahan came veritably flying off the ship. "The m-medicine... G-Give it to me..." he said, breathing hard.

I'm impressed he was able to hear us, Maomao thought. He'd been quite a ways away, and not looking his best. Maomao entertained herself with such thoughts as she got on the boat.

"Phew, you really saved my neck! Not only did you explain about my illness, you even got me onto this boat!"

The man with the bandage turned out to be named Kokuyou. He was a traveler, as Maomao might have guessed from his grimy apparel. He was also a doctor, or at least so he claimed.

When Lahan heard that Kokuyou had all kinds of medicine with him, he became quite insistent that the traveler should join them on their ship. And since it was Lahan who had made the travel arrangements to begin with, that was his prerogative, so long as the newcomer didn't seem likely to do any harm to Consort Lishu or anyone else. However, Kokuyou wasn't guaranteed to get to the capital, but rather only to the next landing, where Lahan would be getting off.

Kokuyou was a bit of an odd character, and quite a talker too; he jabbered on about himself as he mixed up some medicine.

"Hrm. Long story short, they drove me out. 'You're cursed! Get out of here! Grah!' How cruel, am I right?" Kokuyou said, although he certainly didn't sound like he thought it was. There was no grim edge to his tone; he chatted away like an old lady gossiping at the village well.

Maomao watched him closely, understandably doubtful about whether a medicine concocted by a smallpox-stricken man of uncertain origin would really work. His antiemetic didn't seem to have anything special in it either. Lahan, in much better spirits, had called Kokuyou to his personal cabin, and Maomao had come along, thinking that, since he claimed to be a doctor, it might be worth hearing what Kokuyou had to say.

"I've actually been in the same place for the past several years. Last year, the village suffered from a plague of insects. Then, out of the blue, the village shaman started saying it was a curse!"

And that, Kokuyou claimed, was when he found himself chased out. Doctors and shamans tended not to get along very well. In Maomao's opinion, it was stupid and ridiculous to believe in baseless ideas like curses, but she was in the minority on that.

Frankly, it made her angry.

Notwithstanding Kokuyou's frivolous tone, his medicine proved quite effective. Lahan, who until that point hadn't been separated from his bucket for a moment, was able to join the conversation. It might have helped that the ship no longer rolled quite as violently as it had before, but in any case Lahan appeared very satisfied.

"Hmm. So you say you're going to the capital in search of work?" he asked.

"Yes, well... Yes. I suppose that's about the size of it."

Lahan hmmed again and stroked his chin. He appeared to be calculating something—but Maomao jabbed him with her elbow.

Don't drag us into anything...weird.

The man might seem a little odd, but if his medical chops were for real, then he would be able to make a living in the capital. If, that was, he hid his smallpox scars.

Insofar as they were still traveling with Ah-Duo and Consort Lishu, it wasn't ideal to have a strange man with them. Lahan knew that: he looked at Maomao and took a piece of paper from the folds of his robes. He dashed off a quick note and said, "If you ever need anything, come to this address. I might be able to lend you some help." Lahan had written down the address of his house in the capital.

Kokuyou took the paper and gave them a guileless smile. "Ha ha! Wow, I sure bumped into some nice people!"

He's not doing it out of the goodness of his heart, Maomao warned privately. Lahan was the scheming type. He'd only given Kokuyou his address because he'd thought there was some way he might be able to use the man.

"Incidentally, if I may ask, what happened with the plague of insects last year?" Maomao said. She would have loved to interrogate Kokuyou and find out how far his medical knowledge went, but this question took priority.

"Mm! It wasn't bad enough for them to eat through tree roots or make money so tight that people couldn't feed their children. The little kids did get weak from malnutrition, but it didn't get any worse than that." Kokuyou looked suitably sad as he made his report. Malnutrition made one more susceptible to illness—and who treated illness? Doctors. Maomao wondered about the current state of the village that had chased him out.

"If they had a fairly abundant harvest this year, I think they should be fine," Kokuyou said. Maomao didn't think that was very likely, and the man evidently agreed with her, for he said, "I hope the villagers can keep helpin' each other out until they get one..."

It was such a nice thought, "helping each other." But there were always ifs involved. You could help your neighbor if you had the resources to spare. If you had enough to eat, then you could give someone else some of the extra. That was what "helping" usually meant; supporting someone else while you yourself starved was pointless. Yes, there were some idiots out there who would share everything they had at their own expense—but most of them were holy men and women in stories.

If people were going to treat doctors and apothecaries as if they were sages like those, they should make their physicians' lives nice enough to put them in the mood. One's basic needs had to be met before one could practice medicine. What would be the point if, leading a deprived life, the doctor got sick themselves?

The village that had chased this man out might be finding themselves wanting a physician right about now, but it would be a little late. Spilled water didn't go back to the cup.

"All right, be seeing you, then!" Kokuyou delicately folded the piece of paper with the address on it and put it into his own robes. They'd paid his way only as far as he would be sailing with them. He would have a place in the bodyguards' cabin—it doubled as a way of keeping an eye on him.

Now that I think about it...

Kokuyou's mention of insect plague reminded her: one of the accumulated problems was the one Lahan had taken on.

"What are you planning to do about the plague of insects? I mean, the stuff the golden-haired lady was talking to you about?" Maomao asked, referring to something the emissary had said during the banquet at the western capital. She wanted grain exports to Shaoh, and if that wasn't possible, then she had requested political asylum. "What benefit does it hold for us?"

The export idea was very risky, and the asylum idea was downright dangerous.

Maomao and Lahan were the only ones in the room; that was why they could have this conversation. Even Rikuson hadn't heard about this.

"What do you think? That she had me wrapped around her little finger? That I would do whatever she asked, without thinking about it, just because she was pretty?"

"Wouldn't you?" She was joking, sort of; this was, after all, the guy who wouldn't shut up about Jinshi's looks. (Lahan was obviously unaware that Jinshi had something of a complex about his own appearance.)

"I have a few ideas of my own."

"Like what?"

"Our little sailing adventure is going to be over when we reach the next landing. I assume you don't mind me splitting off from

Lady Ah-Duo and the others?"

Maybe Lahan was finally tired of being seasick—or maybe this was why he'd brought Maomao all along.

"I'll continue to accompany them, then."

"Now, slow down," Lahan said, waving a hand to keep her from going any further. "I guarantee you'll be very interested in where

I'm going."

"How so?"

Lahan produced an abacus and started flicking the beads along it. "Well, we might turn out to be counting our chickens before they hatch." But, he seemed to be saying, it was worth a shot.

Then, however, he said: "We're going to go see my dad."

So that was what Lahan called him. Not something respectful like "Father." Just "Dad."

Chapter 5: Wrapping Up in the Western Capital

"Shall I take that to mean I should come to the capital sometime?" Gyokuen asked.

"Yes, that would be correct," Jinshi responded.

They were in Gyokuen's annex, a pleasant, cool place facing a pond. It was just the two of them; Basen and their various bodyguards were outside. Neither man had anything resembling a weapon—this was their chance to talk to each other in complete and full confidence.

Jinshi reflected on how difficult this was as he picked his words. He was the Emperor's younger brother, and though Gyokuen might be the Empress's father, Jinshi still outranked him. The problem was, he constantly felt like he was about to slip back into the more deferential tone of a eunuch.

Everyone else had gone, leaving Jinshi and Basen in the western capital, where Jinshi proceeded to take care of one thing and then another; diligent, methodical.

"Yes, it's just as you imagine. Especially considering the accession of Empress Gyokuyou, the feeling is that it would be best if you had a name as soon as possible."

The consort had become Empress, but her official presentation had been delayed on two grounds: one, that Empress Gyokuyou had thick western blood; and two, that Gyokuen still lacked a family name. There wasn't much to be done about the former, but as to the latter, the obvious solution was simply to hurry up and give him one. The subject ought to have been addressed sooner, but with so many guests, it ended up being put off until after everyone had gone home.

Gyokuen had probably known this was coming. The idea had been in the air, and the more perceptive might have guessed Jinshi would do something like this. Jinshi had wondered if Uryuu might try to object, but the incident with his own daughter had left him without a leg to stand on. Lishu might have been a family member, but she was also the Emperor's consort, and acting maliciously toward her would be neither permitted nor forgiven. Worse was his transparent attempt to destroy the evidence. And this when Consort Lishu's ladies-in-waiting at the rear palace still played pranks on her on a regular basis. And to top it all off, Uryuu himself seemed far more partial to Lishu's older sister.

Normally, this would have brought punishment down upon their heads, but Consort Lishu hadn't wanted that. So instead, the matter was dropped—and the U clan was left owing a favor.

Gyokuen looked briefly thrilled to know he would be granted a name, but then his eyebrows drooped. Jinshi couldn't be sure whether it was an act or a genuine reaction, but either way it meant he wasn't going to simply accept the offer wholeheartedly.

Jinshi understood perfectly well why that was, but he pretended not to. "Is something the matter?" he asked.

"No, it's simply... Again, this means I would have to go to the capital, does it not?"

"Yes, it does."

Even the most urgent trip from the western reaches to the capital and back would take at least a month, a difficult prospect for Gyokuen, who was supposed to be governing this area. Yet he also understood that he didn't have the option of turning this offer down.

Gyokuen had a son, a man substantially older than Empress Gyokuyou by another woman. Although unlike the U children, Gyokuyou and her brother seemed to get along.

"I do have a son, and if all seems quiet, he shouldn't have any trouble here in my stead..."

Yes, if all seemed quiet. There was the rub.

It was very clear why Gyokuyou had been made Empress: the Emperor wished to focus on what was happening in the west.

Beyond the western capital was the land of Shaoh.

Shaoh was not such an issue in and of itself; the real problem was the country that stretched above it: Hokuaren. The Emperor would bind himself to Gyokuen's clan in order to strengthen the western border, but if anything were to happen while the clan leader was away—well, the prospect was frightening. Neither could Gyokuen's son travel to the capital in his father's place; it was expected to be the head of the clan who appeared to receive the name.

Some argued for ignoring such moldy old customs, but it was Empress Gyokuyou who was likely to suffer if her father chose to break with precedent.

Gyokuen was and had always been a functionary from the western capital. He held a fair amount of territory, to be sure, but in the eyes of many officials in the royal capital, he still occupied a provincial post on the fringes of the country, no matter how much land it might come with. His swift rise to prominence after the destruction of the Yi clan couldn't be denied, but it was also the source of much resentment and resistance against him.

"I'm very sorry, but I must ask that you come regardless," Jinshi said. He did feel for the man, but it was the only way. Jinshi, as well as the Emperor, knew they were asking something almost impossible of Gyokuen, but the demand didn't come from them. It came from the high officials in the capital. Perhaps including several with relatives in the rear palace.

"This is only the first part of their plan to punish an upstart rube, I suppose," Gyokuen said, yet he looked more or less relaxed. Perhaps if you couldn't handle needling of this kind, you simply didn't have the disposition for politics. The word "upstart" might be taken to imply a weak position, but that didn't seem to be true of Gyokuen. "In any case, I understand," he said.

He'd known he'd get this answer eventually, but actually hearing the words gave Jinshi a rush of relief. However, Gyokuen wasn't finished.

"If I may, though, I'd like to stipulate a condition."

"A condition?"

"Yes. I'd like my son to have someone to help him. He's known only the western lands his whole life, and has little experience of the world. If possible, I'd like him to be attended by someone with knowledge of the central region."

In other words: I'm going to do this impossible thing you ask, so give me some decent personnel in exchange.

"Hmm. Yes, that seems reasonable. Did you have anyone particular in mind?"

It was, in fact, an understandable request. Gyokuen's son would one day succeed him, and he would need to know about life in the region around the capital, even if his knowledge thereof was only minimal.

"Yes. During the banquet, young Basen seemed like an entirely different person when he threw himself in front of that lion."

"Ah, him? He's..."

If Gyokuen had his eye on Basen, that could be a problem. He might not look like much, but he was very important to Jinshi, someone who could speak frankly to him and around whom Jinshi could relax.

"Please don't misunderstand me; that's not what I'm asking. I would never seek something so far beyond my station as to have a member of the Ma clan attend upon my son," Gyokuen said quickly, grasping the import of Jinshi's reaction.

The Ma were one of the named clans, and yet they never became ministers or occupied other high offices. Instead, they existed to serve the Imperial family. The matter might have been open had Basen come from a family with no name, but as a member of the Ma clan, he was assured that he would somehow be involved with the Imperial family—and not with anyone else. Gyokuen was quick to deny that he was asking for a member of Basen's clan to help him, because to do so would have been to claim that his family was coequal with the Emperor's—a claim that would have bordered on treasonous.

"I was merely impressed," Gyokuen continued. "I don't know how many men there are who could act so decisively when confronted with a wild animal instead of trembling in terror."

Gyokuen's remark was simple, earnest praise, it appeared. It felt somewhat strange to hear someone laud Basen so unreservedly, but Jinshi agreed with him: for as easily as he got out of sorts under most circumstances, when push came to shove Basen showed remarkable composure. He'd acted quickly, as well. The more dangerous a situation, the more one acted not on thought but on instinct, and Basen's instincts had not steered him wrong. He deserved a good word.

Truth be told, in martial training, Jinshi and Basen were roughly on equal footing. Jinshi had more refined technique, so in formal contests he was often the victor. If they were ever in an actual fight, though, he had no confidence he could best Basen. This also explained why Gaoshun had assigned Basen to Jinshi despite his inexperience.

"It would certainly put a person's mind at ease to have someone so capable guarding them." Gyokuen, who wasn't privy to Basen's idiosyncrasies, was full of praise.

"Oh? I'll have to be sure to let Basen know," was all Jinshi said, and then he began thinking about possible candidates. If Gyokuen had come to him personally, he must have at least had someone in mind. "Now then, what sort of person were you hoping to have attend your son?"

Openly and directly, that was the way to handle this situation. Gyokuen nodded slowly. "I was hoping I might ask for someone in the capital."

"Hoh. And who might that be?"

Did Gyokuen have some acquaintance in the capital city, or had Empress Gyokuyou put in a good word for somebody? The

Empress was a sharp-eyed woman, and it wouldn't have surprised Jinshi if she'd found some good help and was trying to send them back to her home.

Gyokuen smiled—and then said something unbelievable.

"Perhaps you could prevail upon Sir Lakan in this matter?" It was all Jinshi could do to keep the dismay off his face.

After he parted ways with Gyokuen, Jinshi returned to his guest room and slumped on the couch. "That should be the last of it," he said.

"Yes, sir."

If Gaoshun had been there, Jinshi might have taken the opportunity to get a wide variety of complaints off his chest, but no; only Basen was present. He, too, seemed on edge, sighing audibly.

The capital could be suffocating in its own way, but it was better than being stuck here. Jinshi at least felt a little easier having sent Consort Lishu and the others on ahead. His one miscalculation had been allowing the apothecary girl to be taken away just because someone had played the "older brother" card.

Admittedly, her absence was a relief in one way, but at the same time, it unsettled him. Yet he could practically see what the girl, almost a full shaku shorter than him, would do to him if he hurried now. He would have to make the most of this situation.

"Would you like some fruit juice, sir?" Basen asked.

"Yes, thank you."

Basen falteringly got the juice ready. While Jinshi was away, servants came in to make the bed and take care of other sundry tasks, but when he was in the room, Jinshi preferred servants not to enter unless absolutely necessary. It wasn't that he didn't trust the staff of Gyokuen's house; he'd simply had enough unpleasant experiences in the past that he preferred to avoid the presence of servants. Perhaps Gyokuen had found this out via Empress Gyokuyou, for no member of the household staff appeared at Jinshi's door unless he summoned them.

As far as testing his food for poison, the bodyguard outside would take a mouthful, and Basen would have another. It was largely for form's sake; against a slow-acting poison, the exercise would be pointless. As far as that went, he would just have to trust Gyokuen.

Jinshi let the sour juice sit on his tongue as he vacantly contemplated the next day. He would finally be able to return to the capital, and going back should be a much quicker trip than coming out here had been. Jinshi personally preferred traveling by land to going by ship, but if it could save that much time, then by ship it was.

He did want to hurry and get home, but people here kept drawing things out with him, hoping to get his attention. His return date had slipped in part because of the commotion at the banquet and later the matter of the funeral, but there was also just plain old politicking involved. Perhaps that was part of why Gyokuen had left his own business until now: in the western capital, his name made it easy to get away. One need only say,

"I'm afraid I have a meeting with Gyokuen after this."

Nonetheless, there was no end of people who brought their daughters or younger sisters to pour drinks for him, or who came accompanied by foreign-looking women oozing exotic beauty. Some of their perfumes must have contained aphrodisiac ingredients, because Basen, who was particularly sensitive to such things, didn't touch his drink; he simply sat there, red all over. He was convenient, in a way, as a sort of litmus test.

Even though Basen was Jinshi's milk brother and an old friend, there were still some criticisms of him Jinshi could have offered. The other day—during the incident that had invited such a terrific misunderstanding on Ah-Duo's part—Jinshi had thought that perhaps Basen had finally grown up a little, but he seemed to have been wrong about that. The young man remained a late bloomer when it came to women his own age. Only with Maomao did he seem completely at ease, and in a way, that might only have been a sign that he couldn't imagine himself breaking her.

Jinshi himself felt that, notwithstanding her imperviousness to poisons, she was still a small and delicate-looking girl who seemed as fragile as the next young woman—but strangely, he found he couldn't imagine her breaking like that. Maybe because he'd seen her laugh uproariously as she took poison, or come back from being kidnapped looking as calm as if she'd been away running errands, and on and on.

Simple enough: Basen didn't see the apothecary girl as a woman. But Jinshi was conflicted. By Basen's age, his father Gaoshun had already had three children. To think that a man so clearly, ahem, active among women should have a son like this... And Basen's older sister and older brother were already married.

Jinshi drained his cup and looked at Basen. "Aren't you being pestered about getting married yet?"

Basen frowned, caught off guard by Jinshi's question. It was plain to see. Basen's mother had been Jinshi's nursemaid, so he was well acquainted with the type of person she was—a woman forceful enough that Gaoshun sometimes described his own wife as a scary lady.

Basen paled and began sweating profusely, even trembling.

Jinshi seemed to have provoked some bad memories.

"I've been, w-well, encouraged to go to some arranged meetings."

"With upstanding young ladies, I'm sure," Jinshi said. His expression didn't change, but inwardly he grinned. The questions had all been coming his way lately; it was fun to be on the giving end for once. "You were at least shown portraits of them?"

"Yes... I was willing to look, if nothing more," Basen said.

Perhaps that was wise. A picture could easily "improve" upon reality. One could very well be talked into a meeting on false pretenses, after which the other side might try to claim Basen was committed. And Basen, being who he was, was so hardheaded that once a "relationship" like that had been established, he would probably feel responsible to the woman for the rest of his life.

Basen's brow furrowed and he looked conflicted. He cast his eyes down and stared at his bandaged right hand. After a long moment he said, "I'm still so inexperienced. I think it may be a little...soon for me to be thinking about women."

It was a truly pathetic pronouncement, but as Jinshi watched Basen, he regretted teasing his friend. "Is that still bothering you?" he asked.

Basen didn't say anything.

Jinshi knew: Basen's discomfort around women had something to do with his mother and his older sister. And, in a way, Jinshi as well.

Because Basen's own mother had spent all her time tending Jinshi, Basen had been looked after by his sister, two years older than him, and a serving woman. It's practically a child's job to beg and plead and indulge his own desires, but things were a little different with Basen.

Sometimes a warrior in battle would transcend mere training: in a moment of crisis, his enemy's movements might appear slow, or he might seem immune to pain. Typically, such powers were gained from endless honing of himself as a warrior, but Basen seemed to have been born with them. Was it just coincidence, or did it come of being the son of a household with a military tradition stretching back centuries? Whichever, Basen's abilities could only be called something instinctive.

Once, when Basen had been set on seeing his mother, those abilities had been turned upon his sister and the serving woman. Usually, they were able to talk him down from his tantrums, but not that time. With his child's hand, small and red like a maple leaf, Basen had grabbed his sister's arm—and broken it.

He had been just six at the time, and he broke one of his own fingers in the act. He was so strong, the kickback from his own action had been just that powerful.

On account of that incident, Basen began to live separately from his older sister and brother. Jinshi first met him shortly after that, and initially considered him a rather cold and distant person —but of course he was; Jinshi had all but stolen his mother from him. That they were then to be instructed in swordsmanship together was partly to foster closeness between them, and partly an act of mercy toward Basen.

Jinshi first heard this story when he was more than ten years old, after Gaoshun had seen him teasing Basen for trying to keep his distance from the ladies-in-waiting.

"Women are such fragile creatures," Basen said. "I think it's too soon for me."

What could Jinshi say to that? There was nothing. Instead, he held out his cup, silently asking for more juice.