Zhou Qi was furious at his manner, but remembered that
she was appealing for help. "I've come to ask Doctor
Cao to visit a patient," she said, controlling
herself.
"He's not in," said the man. Without another word, he
turned and began to close the door.
Panic-striken, Zhou Qi pulled him out of the doorway
and drew her sword. "Where's he gone to? Quickly!"
"He's gone to Little Rose's," the man replied in a
quavering voice.
Zhou Qi brushed the blade over his face. "What is
Little Rose's?"
The man was
frantic with fright. "Your
Excellency...Miss, Little Rose is a prostitute," he
said.
"Prostitutes are bad people. What's he gone to her
place for?" Zhou Qi asked.
The man wanted to laugh at the sight of this girl who
was so
ferocious and yet so ignorant of worldly
matters, but he did not dare. "She is a good friend of
our master," he said.
"Lead me there quickly."
With the sword resting on his neck, he dared not
disobey and led her off down the street.
"This is it," he said, pointing to a small house.
"Knock on the door. Tell the doctor to come out."
The man did as she said, and the door was opened by
the Madame of the house.
"This lady wants my master to go to visit a patient,"
the man said. "I told her the master was busy, but she
wouldn't believe me and forced me to come here."
The Madame gave him a look of
contempt and slammed the
door.
Zhou Qi rushed forward to stop her, but was too late.
She beat thunderously on the door for a while, but not
a sound came from inside. Absolutely furious, she
kicked the man to the ground.
"Get lost!" she shouted.
The man picked himself up and ran off.
Zhou Qi waited until he had disappeared then leapt
over the wall into the
courtyard of the house. She saw
light coming from a room nearby, and
stealthily made
her way over towards it. Crouching down, she heard two
men talking. She licked the tip of her finger, then
wet a small part of the window paper and made a hole
in it. Putting her eye to the hole, she saw two men
lying on a couch, talking. One was stout, and the
other thin and tall. A tartishly seductive girl was
pummelling the thin man's thighs. The stout man give a
wave of his hand and the girl stood up.
"I can see you two want to discuss more ways of
creating mischief," she said with a smile. "You ought
to accumulate some good deeds, otherwise you may give
birth to sons without arseholes."
"Damned nonsense," the stout man shouted back with a
laugh. The girl smiled and walked out, locked the
door, then turned and went into an inner hall.
"That must be Little Rose," Zhou Qi thought. "She's
really shameless, but there's some truth in what she
said."
She watched as the stout man pulled out four silver
ingots and placed them on the table.
"Brother Cao," he said. "There's two hundred taels of
silver. We are old business partners, and that's the
old price."
"Master Tang," the thin man replied: "Take these two
packets of medicine, and have a good time. The red
packet you give to the girl, and in less time than it
takes to eat a meal, she will be
unconscious to the
world and you can do whatever you like with her. You
don't need me to teach you anything about that, do
you?"
The two men laughed together.
"This black
packet you give to the man," Cao
continued. "Tell him it will speed his
recovery. Soon
after he takes it, his wounds will begin discharging
blood and he will die. It will appear that his wounds
have simply re-opened and no-one will suspect you.
What do you think of such a ruse?"
"Excellent, excellent," Tang replied.
"So, Master Tang, you have gained both the girl and
the money. Doesn't two hundred taels seem like rather
a small reward for such a service?"
"We are brothers, and I wouldn't try to deceive you,"
the other said. "The girl certainly has a pretty face.
I could hardly
restrain myself even when I thought she
was a boy because of the way she was dressed. But
there is nothing much special about the man, except
that he's with the girl, so I cannot allow him to
live."
"Didn't you say he had a flute made out of gold?" Cao
asked. "That flute must weigh several catties alone."
"All right, all right, I'll add another fifty taels,"
Tang said, and pulled out another ingot.
Zhou Qi became angrier and angrier as she listened,
and ran to the door, kicked it open and charged
straight inside. Tang gave a shout and aimed a flying
kick at Zhou Qi's sword wrist. Zhou Qi flipped the
sword over and
smoothly cut off his right foot then
thrust the blade into his heart.
The thin man stood to one side, struck dumb with
fright. His whole body shook and his teeth chattered.
Zhou Qi pulled her sword out of Tang's
corpse and
wiped the blood off the blade onto his clothes, then
grabbed the thin man.
"Are you Doctor Cao?" she shouted. The man's legs
folded and he fell to his knees.
"Please...miss...spare my life..."
"Who wants your life? Get up."
Cao shakily stood up, but his knees were still
rubbery, and he had to kneel down again. Zhou Qi put
the five silver ingots and two
packets of medicine on
the table into her pocket.
"Out," she ordered.
She told him to fetch his horse, and the two mounted
up and galloped out of the town. In less than two
hours, they arrived at the old woman's hut. Zhou Qi
ran to Xu and found him still
unconscious. In the
candlelight, she could see his whole face was bright
red and knew he had a terrible fever. She dragged Cao
over.
"My, er, brother here has been wounded. Cure him
quickly," she ordered.
Hearing that he was expected to give medical
treatment, Cao's fears eased slightly. He looked at
Xu's
complexion and took his pulse, then undid the
bandage round his shoulder and looked at the wound. He
shook his head.
"The master is deficient in both blood and breath," he
said. "His body heat is rising..."
"Who wants to hear all that?" Zhou Qi interrupted him.
"You just cure him quickly. If you don't, you can
forget about ever leaving here."
"I'll go to the town to get some medicine," Cao said.
"Without medicine I cannot do anything."
Xu awoke and he lay listening to the two talking.
"Huh, do you think I'm a three-year-old child?" Zhou
Qi demanded. "You make out the prescription and I'll
go and buy the medicine."
Cao had no
alternative. "Well, please bring me a pen
and paper, Miss," he said.
But where was pen and paper to be found in such a poor
hut in such a
desolate place? Zhou Qi frowned, at a
loss for what to do.
"The master's condition will not allow delay," said
Cao with an air of complacency. "It would be best if
you let me return to the town to get the medicine."
"Sister," Xu said, "Take a small piece of
firewood and
burn it to
charcoal, then let him write on a piece of
rough paper. If that can't be done, you could write on
a piece of wood."
"What a good idea!" Zhou Qi exclaimed happily, and
burnt up a piece of
firewood as he had said. The old
woman searched out a piece of yellow paper originally
meant to be burnt in worship of Buddha, and Cao made
out the prescription. When he had finished, Zhou Qi
found a length of grass rope and tied his hands behind
his back, bound his legs together and put him on the
floor next to Xu.
"I'm going to the town to buy medicine," she told the
old woman as she placed Xu's sword beside his pillow.
If this dog doctor tries to escape, wake up my brother
and he can kill him."
Zhou Qi rode back to the town and found a medicine
shop. She shouted for the shop-keeper to open up and
got him to fill the prescription, which was for more
that ten different types of medicine.
The sky was growing light. She saw village militiamen
patrolling the streets and guessed that the murder at
Little Rose's had been discovered. She
shrank into a
corner and waited until they had passed before
galloping off.
As soon as she had returned to the old woman's hut,
she hastily brewed up the medicine then poured it into
a rough bowl and took it over to Xu. She shook him
awake and told him to drink the medicine.
Xu was extremely moved at the sight of her face
covered with sweat and ash and her hair filled with
twigs and grass. He knew she was the daughter of a
rich family and would never before have had to do this
sort of work. He sat up and took the bowl from her and
passed it over to Cao.
"You drink two mouthfuls," he said. Cao hesitated
slightly and Zhou Qi realised Xu's meaning.
"Yes, yes," she said. "He must drink some first. You
don't know how evil this man is," she added to Xu.
Cao opened his mouth and drank two mouthfuls.
"Rest for a while, sister," said Xu. "I'll wait a
while before drinking the medicine."
"Yes," said Zhou Qi. "Let's see if he dies first. If
he dies, you mustn't drink the medicine."
She moved the oil lamp next to Cao's face and watched
him with her big, black, unblinking eyes to see
whether he would die or not.
"We doctors have the best interest of our patients at
heart. Why would I want to harm him?" Cao said,
smiling bitterly.
"That secret discussion you had with that man Tang
about harming some girl and getting hold of someone
else's golden flute, I heard it all," Zhou Qi said
angrily. "Do you deny it?"
Xu's ears pricked up at the mention of a golden flute
and he quickly asked her about it. Zhou Qi
related the
conversation she had heard, and how she had killed a
man at Little Rose's.
Xu asked Cao: "Who is the person with the Golden
flute? And who is the girl who was dressed as a boy?"
Zhou Qi drew her sword and stood by him threateningly.
"If you don't tell us everything you know, I'll run
you through with my sword immediately," she told him.
"I...I'll tell you," said Cao, absolutely terrified.
"Yesterday Master Tang came to see me and said that
two people had asked to take lodgings at his home. He
said one was very badly wounded and the other was a
pretty youngster. At first he was
unwilling to take
them in, but
seeing how
extraordinarily beautiful the
youngster was, he let them stay for one night. He
noticed the youngster's voice and manner were just
like a girl's. Also, the youngster wasn't willing to
share a room with the other, so he concluded it must
be a girl dressed in boy's clothes."
"So you sold him some poison," Zhou Qi said.
"I deserve to die," replied Cao.
"What was the man like?" Xu asked.
"Master Tang asked me to examine him. He was about
twenty-three or four, dressed as a scholar, and had
sword and club wounds in seven or eight places."
"Were the wounds serious?" asked Xu.
"Very serious. But they were all
external wounds. He
wasn't wounded on any fatal points."
Xu saw he would not gain much by continuing the
questioning and gingerly raised the bowl of medicine.
But his hands shook and some of the medicine slopped
out. Zhou Qi took the bowl from him and raised it to
his mouth. He drank the brew down as she held the
bowl, then thanked her.
"These two bandits are not brother and sister," Cao
thought as he watched. "Whoever heard of a brother
saying thank you to his sister?"
After drinking the medicine, Xu slept for a while, his
whole body sweating profusely, and towards evening,
the sickness began to
recede. The next day, Xu was
more than half recovered and he was able to get up.
After another day, he
decided he could just about
manage to ride a horse.
"That man with the golden flute is Fourteenth
Brother," he said to Zhou Qi. "I wonder why he should
seek lodgings with such a man? But
seeing as you've
already killed Tang, they shouldn't have had too much
trouble. But I'm still a little worried. Let's go
tonight and see what the situation is."
"Fourteenth Brother?" Zhou Qi asked.
"'Scholar' Yu. He was also at Iron Gall Manor. You've
seen him before."
"Oh, if I had known it was him I would have brought
him along with me, then the two of you could have
convalesced together."
Xu smiled. "But who could this girl dressed in boy's
clothing be?" he wondered, mystified.
That evening, Zhou Qi gave the old woman two of the
silver ingots and she accepted them with effusive
blessings and thanks. Zhou Qi then pulled Cao up, and
with a swish of her blade, cut off his right ear.
"I'm only sparing your
worthless life because you
cured my brother," she shouted. "If I ever catch you
doing evil again,I'll stick my sword straight into
your heart."
"We'll visit you again in three months time, to check
up," Xu warned.
"You ride his horse and we'll leave," Zhou Qi said to
Xu. The two mounted up and galloped off towards
Wenguang town.
"Why did you say we would be coming back in three
months' time?" Zhou Qi asked.
"I was just deceiving the doctor so that he wouldn't
give the old woman any trouble," Xu replied.
Zhou Qi nodded and they continued on for a while.
"Why are you always so
crafty with people?" she
suddenly asked. "I don't like it."
"You don't realise how many evil people there are in
the world," he said after a long silence. "When
dealing with friends, love and justice should always
come first, of course. But when
dealing with bad
people, you must be very careful otherwise you will be
tricked and will suffer."
"My father say it's better to suffer yourself than to
cheat other people," Zhou Qi said.
"That is what makes your father the great man that he
is," replied Xu.
"Well, why don't you
imitate my father?"
"Lord Zhou is
benevolent and generous by nature. I am
afraid that such a perverse person as myself would
never be able to emulate him."
"That's what I dislike most about you: your perverse
temper. My father says that if you treat others well,
they will also naturally treat you well in return."
Xu didn't reply.
The two waited until it was dark before entering the
town. They found Tang's residence and climbed over the
wall toinvestigate. Xu caught a
watchman and,
threatening him with a knife, asked him about
'Scholar' Yu's
whereabouts. The
watchman said the two
lodgers had left during the confusion after Doctor Cao
had killed Master Tang at Little Rose's.
"We'll chase after them," Zhou Qi said.
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