The legend of the condor heroes Chapter Chapter 30 – Reverend Yideng
The legend of the condor heroes Chapter Chapter 30 – Reverend Yideng- Two people walked forward following the mountain pathway and before long the pathway had come to an end.
Chin Yung/Jin Yong
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Chapter 30 – Reverend Yideng
Two people walked forward
following the mountain pathway and before long the pathway had come to an end.
Ahead was a stone bridge about one foot wide, perched in between two mountain
peaks, covered with cloud that the other end was invisible. If this stone
bridge were laid on the ground, it would act just like a narrow alley, nothing
to be afraid of; but under the stone bridge was a deep canyon. Just looking at
it would cause the heart to tremble with fear, let alone walk across it.
Huang Rong sighed, “This
Emperor Duan hid himself really well. If an enemy came full of enmities arrived
to this place, half of his hatred would disappear first,” she said.
“Why did that fisherman say
Emperor Duan has left this mortal world?” Guo Jing asked, “He really caused my
heart unrest.”
“I really cannot guess what he
meant by that,” Huang Rong replied, “Looking at his face he didn’t seem to be
lying. He also said that our Shifu saw it with his own eyes when Emperor Duan
passed away.”
“Things have come this far, we
can only move forward and not go back,” Guo Jing said. He squatted to carry
Huang Rong on his back, and then with his lightness kungfu walked toward that
stone bridge.
The stone bridge’s surface was
bumpy, plus it was enveloped in thick cloud all year long, which made it
exceptionally slippery. The slower they walked the higher was the chance for
them to fall down. Hence Guo Jing dashed forward quickly. After about seven,
eight ‘zhang’s later suddenly Huang Rong called out, “Careful, the bridge’s
broken ahead.”
Guo Jing also saw that the
stone bridge was suddenly broken with about seven, eight feet gap in between.
Instead of slowing down he ran faster and borrowing the momentum he leaped
across the gap.
Huang Rong had already gone
through terrible danger; early on she had already disregarded life and death.
She laughed and said, “Jing Gege, your flying is not as steady as the white
eagles.”
Dashing through a section,
jumping over a gap, very soon they had crossed seven such gaps. Across the
mountain ahead they saw a stretch of flat land. Suddenly they heard someone was
reading aloud. Looked like they had arrived at the end of the stone bridge, but
at the end of the bridge there was actually a very long gap, almost a ‘zhang’
wide [about 10 feet or 3 meters]. On the other side of the gap a scholar was
sitting cross-legged, a book in his hand, from which he was reading aloud.
Behind the scholar there was another short gap.
Guo Jing halted, he stood firm
on the bridge, he was at a loss of what to do next, “Jumping over this gap is
not too difficult,” he thought, “But that scholar is sitting right in the
middle of the bridge; other than the place he occupies, there is no place I can
set my feet on.” Thereupon with a loud voice he called out, “Juniors are
seeking audience with your Honorable Master, we are asking Uncle to show us the way.”
The scholar’s head was swaying
while he read with rapt attention, as if he did not hear Guo Jing. Guo Jing
raised his voice and called out one more time, the scholar still turned a deaf
ear to him. “Rong’er, what do we do?” Guo Jing said in a low voice.
Huang Rong frowned without
saying anything, she looked at the place where that scholar was sitting and
realized this matter could be complicated. The stone bridge was so narrow that
fighting on it meant a life and death situation. Even if Guo Jing won, they
were coming to seek help, how could they harm anybody? She looked at the
scholar again, who still did not pay any attention, and could not help but
secretly feel worried. She tried to listen to what the scholar was reading, and
found out that it was the widely common book of ‘lun yu’ [Analects of
Confucius]. He was reading: “An evening in the spring time, the spring garments
were ready. Five, six people wearing hat, six, seven people were young. Taking
a bath by the river bank, the breeze made the fountain dance, and the song
carried back by the wind.”
He was reading with flourish
and ardent interest, sighing three times, resembling the spring breeze carrying
the song faraway, like he was enjoying the book immensely. Huang Rong thought,
“If I want him to open his mouth, I must provoke him.” Thereupon she sneered
and said, “It’s useless even if you read
the Confucian Analects a thousand times but do not understand the Master’s
sublime words with deep meaning.”
The scholar was startled and
stopped reading immediately. He raised his head and said, “What sublime words
with deep meaning? Please enlighten me.”
Huang Rong took a good look on
that scholar; he looked to be around forty years of age, ‘xiao yao jin’
[scholar hat] on his head, a folding fan in his hand, a long black beard under
his chin, truly he had a scholar’s appearance. She coldly laughed and asked,
“Sire, do you know how many disciples Confucius had?” The scholar smiled,
“What’s so difficult about that?” he said, “Confucius had 3000 disciples
altogether, among those, 72 were his best students.”
“From the 72 disciples, some
were old and some were young,” Huang Rong continued, “Do you know how many
disciples wore hat [meaning ‘older’] and how many were young?”
The scholar was startled and
said, “It was not recorded in the Confucian Analects; other classics and
commentaries also do not have that information recorded.”
“I said it’s useless if you do
not understand the Master’s sublime words with deep meaning, did I say anything
wrong?” Huang Rong asked. “I clearly heard you read just a moment ago, ‘Five,
six people wearing hat; six, seven people were young.’ Five times six is
thirty, there were 30 older disciples; six times seven is forty-two, there were
42 younger disciples. You add two numbers together and you will get exactly 72
people. I see you are reading without understanding. Hey! Dangerous! Really
dangerous!”
The scholar heard how she made
a strong argument on an obscure matter in the classic book, he could not stifle
his laugh, but in his heart he also admitted her intelligence and quick-wit. He
smiled and said, “Young Miss really has a mind filled with poetry books. My
utmost admiration. You want to see my Shifu, may I know for what business?”
Huang thought, “If I say we
are here to seek treatment, he will certainly do his utmost to make things
difficult for us. But his question cannot be left unanswered. Fine. He was
reading the ‘Confucian Analects’, I will also quote from Confucius to dodge his
question.” Thereupon she said, “A Sage I don’t have to see! A Gentleman, I may
see. A friend came from afar, isn’t that a delight to the heart?”
The scholar looked up to the
sky and laughed hard for half a day. “All right, all right,” he said, “I have
three subject tests for you. If you pass, I will take you to see my Shifu. But
if you fail even one, I will have to ask you two to go back to where you came
from.”
“Aiyo!” Huang Rong said, “I haven’t
read too many books, if it is too difficult I might not be able to answer.”
“Not difficult, not
difficult,” the scholar said, “I have a poem here, inside it hidden my origin
in four characters. Let’s see if you can guess it.”
“Good, a riddle!” Huang Rong
said, “It should be interesting. Please say it.”
The scholar twisted his beard
and started to recite, “Six scriptures have been in the chest for a long time,
one sword for ten years has been sharpened in the hand …”
Huang Rong stuck out her
tongue and said, “Skilled in both pen and sword [wen wu quan cai – lit.
literature and martial art complete skills], that’s terrific!”
The scholar smiled and
continued, “On top of an apricot flower a branch hung horizontally; if you are
afraid to divulge the heaven’s secret, don’t open the mouth. One dot escalated
as big fight, nevertheless cannot even cover half a bed. The name completed,
the hat hung, time to turn back home. My true identity, does Sir know?”
Huang Rong thought, “’The name
completed, the hat hung, time to turn back home. My true identity, does Sir know?’ Looking at your
appearance, you must be Emperor Duan’s minister of the days past; hanging your
hat following your master, returning to this hidden wooded mountain. What’s so
difficult to guess?” Thereupon she said, “When you add a character ‘one’ ( )
and ‘ten’ ( ) underneath the character ‘six’ ( ), it becomes the character
‘xin’ ( ). Add a horizontal line to the character ‘apricot’ ( ), and take away
the character ‘mouth’ ( ), it becomes the character ‘wei’ ( ). Add a character
‘big’ ( ) to half of a bed ( ) and put a dot on it, it becomes the character
‘zhuang’ (
). Take the hat off the
character ‘complete’ ( ), it becomes the character ‘yuan’ ( ). Xin Wei Zhuang
Yuan; please accept my respect. Turned out Sir was the Zhuang Yuan [number one
scholar, the title conferred to a person who came out first in the highest
imperial examination] of the Xin Wei year.”
The scholar was taken aback;
he thought his riddle was very difficult. Even if one could finally come out
with an answer, it should have taken at least half a day. These two youngsters’
martial art skill might be high, but they would not be able to stand on this
narrow stone bridge for too long. He thought he would advice them to give up and
nicely went back down the mountain. Who would have thought that almost without
thinking Huang Rong was able to give him the correct answer. He could not help
but feel utterly surprised. He now knew this girl was exceptionally smart; he
had to find a more difficult question for her. He swept his gaze around and saw
a row of palm trees by the hillside, the leaves swaying gently in the light breeze, resembling the movement of
a fan. He was a zhongyuan, naturally he was more gifted than an average
scholar. He waved the fan in his hand and said, “I have the top part of a
couplet, asking Miss to please complete it.”
“Completing a couplet is not
as interesting as a riddle,” Huang Rong said, “All right, looks like if I can’t
complete it, you won’t let us pass. Bring it on!”
The scholar waved his fan,
pointing to the row of palm trees and said, “The wind sways the palm trees,
like a thousand hands waving the folding fan.” This top part not only depicted
the scenery, but clearly lifted up his position as well.
Huang Rong thought, “If I only
mention any object without meaningful correlation, my victory won’t be
complete.” She also swept her gaze around and saw a tiny temple with a lotus
pond in front of it. It was the seventh month, the middle of summer, but on this
high mountain the mornings were cold; most part of the lotus leaf had already
withered by frost. Her heart was moved, she smiled and said, “I have the second
part of that couplet, but it will offend Uncle; it’s inconvenient for me to say
it.”
“You might as well say it,”
the scholar replied.
“You must promise you are not
going to get angry,” Huang Rong said. “I won’t,” the scholar promised.
Huang Rong pointed to the
‘xiao yao jin’ on his head and said, “Very well. My second line is: The frost
withers the lotus leaf, like a one-legged demon wearing a ‘xiao yao jin’.”
At this second line the
scholar burst out in laughter. “Wonderful! Wonderful!” he said, “Not only the
line is very appropriate, it came very quick too!”
Guo Jing saw the lotus stem
did indeed prop up a withered leaf, looking like a single-legged ghost wearing
a ‘xiao yao jin’; he could not help laughing too. Huang Rong smiled, “Don’t
laugh, don’t laugh!” she said, “Once we fall down we will become a pair of
ghosts without the ‘xiao yao jin’!”
The scholar thought, “Ordinary
couplet won’t baffle her; I will have to resort to the ultimate.” Suddenly he
remembered when he was a young student his teacher mentioned a couplet that for
dozens of years nobody could ever complete; he decided to make things difficult
for her; thereupon he said, “I have
another couplet, asking Miss to complete it: ‘qin se pi pa ( ) [qin, se and pi
pa are all stringed-instruments], all heads adorned by eight big kings’.”
Listening to this Huang Rong
was delighted, “Qin se pi pa four characters altogether have eight ‘king’ ( )
characters on them; originally it was a very difficult couplet. It’s a pity
this couplet is not your own creation. Father had solved this couplet many
years ago on the Peach Blossom Island when he had nothing else to do. I will
pretend to have difficulty completing it to tease him.”
She wrinkled her brow and made
her face looked distressed. The scholar was delighted she was finally baffled;
he felt very smug. But then he was afraid Huang Rong would ask him back, so he
said up front, “This is a very difficult couplet, I don’t have the answer
either. But we have agreed that if Miss cannot answer it then you must return.”
Huang Rong smiled, “What’s so
difficult to complete the couplet? Only I have just offended Uncle, now with my
answer I will offend all four of you, the fisherman, the woodcutter, the farmer
and the scholar; that’s why I was so hesitant to say it.”
The scholar did not believe
her, he thought, “Just completing the couplet is an extremely difficult task to
do; how can you offend us four martial brothers at the same time?” Hence he
said, “If you really can complete the couplet, what harm will a little joke
bring?”
Huang Rong smiled, “If that’s
the case, let me ask for your forgiveness first. The second line is, ‘chi mei wang liang ( ) [mountain elf, demon, elf, fairy – all
are fairy tales supernatural characters; all characters have ‘demon’ ( ) on
their sides], four little demons with their belly and intestines’.”
The scholar was astonished, he
sprang up to stand; with his long sleeve fluttered he dashed toward Huang Rong,
“I give up with full admiration,” he said.
Huang Rong returned his
obeisance and said with a smile, “If four honorable Uncles did not do your
utmost to hinder us going up the mountain, your couplets were really difficult
to complete.”
Turned out when Huang Yaoshi
solved this riddle, Chen Xuanfeng, Qu Lingfeng, Lu Chengfeng and Feng Mofeng,
four disciples were by his side; Huang Yaoshi meant this second line as a joke
to his four disciples. That time Huang Rong was not even born yet. Later she
heard her father recalling this story and today she managed to use the same
line to make fun of the fisherman, the woodcutter, the farmer and the scholar.
“Humph,” the scholar snorted.
He turned around to make a small gap and said, “Please.”
Guo Jing was standing quietly
listening to these two exchanging literary attacks to each other; he was afraid
Huang Rong would not be able reply and thus waste all previous efforts. Seeing
that the scholar moved aside to make a way for them, he was very delighted. He
exerted his strength and jumped over the gap; landed on the spot where the
scholar had previously sat. Finally he jumped over the last gap.
The scholar noticed how Guo Jing
leaped over the gaps with ease even while carrying Huang Rong on his back; he
sighed and said in his heart, “I pride myself as highly skilled in both
literary and martial art; actually in literature I am inferior to this young
girl, and in martial art I am not this youngster’s match. Ashamed, I am really
ashamed.” He glanced sideways to see Huang Rong’s delighted expression; he
thought this girl had just beat an honorable and highly educated ‘zhuang yuan’,
no wonder she could not hide her upbeat feeling. He thought, “Let me tease her,
teaching her not to be too self-complacent!” Thereupon he said, “Miss’ literary
talent is extraordinary, but your behavior is lacking.”
“I beg your explanation,”
Huang Rong said.
The scholar replied, “Mengzi
[Mencius] wrote in his book: ‘Men and women do not get intimate, that is only
proper.’ I see Miss is an unmarried woman, this ‘Xiao Ge’ [little elder
brother] is not your husband; how can he carried you on his back? Mengzi said a
brother can help a drowning sister-in-law, or an uncle helps his niece. Miss
has not fallen into the water, this ‘Xiao Ge’ is also not your brother-in-law.
This kind of carrying and hugging is truly violating religious teaching.”
“Humph,” Huang Rong thought,
“Brother Jing is good to me, yet other people always make a big deal of the
fact that he is not my husband. Shige [martial (older) brother] Lu Chengfeng
also said the same thing as this scholar.” Thereupon she said point-blankly,
“Mengzi loved to talk nonsense; how can you believe what he said?”
The scholar was offended,
“Mengzi was a great and worthy sage; why can’t we believe what he said?”
Huang Rong smiled and recited,
“How can a beggar have two wives? Where did the neighbor have so many chickens
from? The Zhou (dynasty) still had an emperor, why discuss many matters with
the Wei and Qi (dynasties)?”
The more the scholar thought,
the more he realized the truth in what she said. He stood there staring
blankly, unable to say a single word.
Actually it was Huang Yaoshi
who wrote that saying. He loathed the traditions and despised empty alms; he
loved to scrutinize, refute, ridicule and satirize the empty meanings of old
sayings handed down from great and worthy sages. Once he made many poems and
songs to satirize Confucius and Mencius.
Mencius told a story about a
man from the Qi dynasty who had a wife and a concubine and yet he begged for
cold rice and spoiled soup; also about another ma n who everyday stole a
chicken from his neighbor. Huang Yaoshi said that these two stories were used
to swindle others. About the later sayings the story went like this: During the
Warring States period (475 – 221 BC) the Zhou Emperor was still on his throne,
yet why did Mencius not support the royal family; but went to Prince Liang Hui and Prince Qi Xuan to whom he asked for a
governmental position? Huang Yaoshi thought this action greatly disobeyed the
way of the saints and sages.
The scholar thought, “The man
of Qi stealing chicken was a metaphor, unworthy of deeper study; but the last
sentence, I am afraid even Mengzi himself under the ground would have
difficulty refuting.” He looked at Huang Rong’s eyes and thought, “She is so
young, how can she possess such weird intelligence?” Without saying anything
else he led two people walked forward.
When passing the lotus pond
his gaze was caught by a lotus leaf on the pond; he could not help stealing a
glance toward Huang Rong. Huang Rong stifled her laugh and turned her head
another direction.
The scholar led the two people
entering the temple, asked them to sit in the east wing and had a young monk
serve tea. “Please wait for a moment here,” the scholar said, “I am going to
report to the Master.”
“Wait!” Guo Jing said, “That
Farmer Uncle is still holding up a big rock on the hillside; he can’t get away
by himself. Uncle please help him first.” The scholar was startled and dashed
out.
“Now we can open the yellow
pouch,” Huang Rong said.
“Ah, if you did not mention
it, I would have totally forgotten,” Guo Jing said. Hastily he took out the
yellow pouch and tore it open. Inside the pouch was a plain sheet of paper
without any characters written on it, only a drawing.
The drawing depicted a man
wearing royal attire of the India. The man was cutting his own flesh with a knife; his whole body was a mass of
cuts and bruises, dripping with blood. There was a scale in front of him; on
one end of the balance stood a white pigeon, on the other piled his cut flesh.
The pigeon looked small, but it was heavier than the pile of flesh on the other
end. A fierce looking hawk stood next to the scale.
The pen stroke of the drawing
was quite shoddy. Huang Rong thought, “Turned out that Ying Gu has not learned
how to draw; her handwriting is not bad, but this drawing is like a child’s
scribbling.” She looked at the drawing for half a day, but could not decipher
what it meant.
Seeing Huang Rong could not
guess what the drawing was about, Guo Jing thought it was useless for him to
try. He folded the drawing and held it in his hand.
Not too long after they heard
footsteps coming into the hall; the farmer walked in, ablaze in anger,
supported by the scholar. He was very weary supporting that big rock for a long
time.
About the time needed to drink
a cup of tea later a young monk walked in; clasping his hands in front of his
chest he said, “Gentleman and lady have come from a far; I wonder what your
noble concern was?”
“We are seeking an audience
with Emperor Duan,” Guo Jing replied, “We must inconvenient you to announce our
visit.”
“Emperor Duan is no longer in
this mortal world, your wearisome trip has been in vain,” the young monk
clasped his hands again, “Please have some vegetable dish, and then Little Monk
will see you down the mountain.”
Guo Jing was very
disappointed; he thought of their untold hardship to get to this place, and
now they have to go back down the
mountain, how could this thing be good? But when Huang Rong saw the temple she
was 30% sure, now seeing this young monk, she was 50, 60% sure. She took the
drawing from Guo Jing’s hand and said, “Disciples Guo Jing and Huang Rong are
here, hoping your respectable master would respect past relationship with the
Nine-fingered Divine Beggar and the Peach Blossom Island, and grant us
audience. We would appreciate it if you could give this sheet of paper to your
master.”
The young monk received the
drawing. He did not dare to open it up; he only clasped his hands and turned
around to go inside. Before long he came back, lowered his head and clasping
his hands he said, “Respectfully invite you to come.” Guo Jing was ecstatic, he
helped Huang Rong up and together they followed the young monk went inside.
Although the temple looked
small, it was very deep. Three people walked through a small alley covered with
green flagstones, passed through a dense and shady small bamboo grove. The
place was very quiet and serene, causing
whoever went inside to shed their impure thoughts.
There were three stone houses
hidden among the bamboo trees. The young monk lightly shoved the door open and
stepped aside, bowing his body to let the two to enter in.
Guo Jing had a very good
impression toward this polite and courteous monk; he smiled to express his
gratitude, then side by side with Huang Rong he walked in.
Inside the room he saw a small
table with a sandalwood incense burner on top of it; next to the table two
Buddhist monks sat on circular meditation mats. One monk had a dark complexion
with high nose and deep eyes; apparently he was an Indian monk. The other monk
was wearing a robe made of coarse cloth; his white eyebrows so long that they
drooped down from the corner of his
eyes. His face was gentle; although his eyes showed a trace of sadness,
at a glance his overall expression was that of a graceful and majestic person.
The scholar and the farmer were standing behind him. All of Huang Rong’s
suspicion vanished; she lightly pulled Guo Jing’s hand and walked to the monk
with long eyebrows; she knelt and bowed down to the ground and said, “Disciples
Guo Jing and Huang Rong greet Shibo.” [Translator’s note: Shibo – martial uncle,
the character ‘bo’ here denotes ‘older than one’s father’ or ‘father’s elder
brother’, but since English does not differentiate between ‘older’ and
‘younger’ uncles, the generic word of ‘Uncle’ will be used throughout the
chapter.]
Guo Jing was startled, but
without thinking he simply followed Huang Rong’s example and bowed to the
ground, kowtowing four times.
The monk with long-eyebrows
smiled slightly; he stood up and held out his hands to raise the two people up.
He said with a smile, “Qi Xiong [Brother Qi] had accepted a fine disciple, and
Yao Xiong [Brother Yao] had gotten a fine daughter. I heard them say,” he
pointed his finger to the farmer and the scholar, “Your martial arts are far
superior to my disciples’. Ha … ha … congratulations, congratulations!”
Listening to him speaking Guo
Jing thought, “This speech obviously belonged to Emperor Duan; fitting his
position as an emperor, but how come he turned into a monk? It’s very
confusing. Why did they say that he is no longer in this mortal world? How did
Rong’er know he is the Emperor Duan?”
He heard the monk said to
Huang Rong, “Are your father and Shifu well? When we met during the Sword Meet
of Mount Hua your father has not married yet. Unexpectedly it has been twenty
years and he got this beautiful
daughter. Do you have any brothers or sisters? Which Senior hero is your
mother’s father?”
Huang Rong’s eyes turned red,
she said, “My mother gave birth to me only; she passed away long time ago. I
don’t even know her family.”
“Ah!” the monk exclaimed,
lightly patting her shoulder consolingly. “I have been meditating for three
days and three nights, and ended just a moment ago,” he said, “Have you been
waiting long?”
Huang Rong pondered, “Looking
at his face, he is very happy to see us. If that’s the case, then stopping us
and not letting us go up the mountain was his disciples’ idea.” Hence, she
replied, “Disciples have just arrived. Fortunately these Uncles did their
utmost to make things difficult for us; otherwise we would have arrived much earlier,
Duan Shibo would still be in meditation and our visit would be in vain.”
The monk chuckled and said,
“They are afraid that I see too many outsiders. But actually how can we
consider you as outsiders? Young Miss’ sharp tongue must come from your family.
Emperor Duan has early on left this mortal world; I am now called Monk Yideng.
[‘yi deng he shang’ – (Buddhist) monk ‘one lamp’] Your Shifu was present when I
followed the three treasures; but I am afraid your father did not know.”
It was only then did Guo Jing
finally understood, “It turned out that Emperor Duan shaved his head and became
a monk. He left the life of common man; that’s why his disciples said Emperor
Duan has left this mortal world. Shifu
witnessed it when he became a monk; if it was him who told us to come here,
naturally he would not tell us to find Emperor Duan, but to see Reverend Yideng
[yi deng da shi – great master Yideng; ‘da shi’ was a common respectable term
to address a Buddhist monk]. Rong’er is really smart; just by looking at him
she understood everything.”
He heard Huang Rong say, “My
father did not know anything about it; my Shifu also did not tell disciples.”
Yideng smiled, “Certainly.
There are more things going into your Shifu’s mouth than things coming out of it. He eats a lot, he speaks a little.
He wouldn’t discuss the Old Monk’s business with others. You have been through a lot of hardships;
have you eaten yet? Ah!” Speaking to this point he suddenly startled. He pulled
Huang Rong’s hand and took her to the door to look at her face under the bright
sunlight. He carefully examined her with a puzzled look on his own face.
Although Guo Jing was slow, he
was aware that Reverend Yideng had discovered Huang Rong’s injury. His heart
was broken; abruptly he bent his knees and kowtowed several times. Yideng
held out his hands underneath Guo Jing’s
arms to raise him up. Guo Jing felt a burst of energy lifting his body up. He
did not dare to use his strength to resist; riding on the force he slowly stood
up and said, “I beg the Reverend to save her life!”
When Yideng raised Guo Jing
up, he was not only asking Guo Jing not to have too much ritual, but was also testing Guo Jing’s strength. Yideng
was only using 50% of his strength; if he felt that Guo Jing was not able to resist, he would have
retracted his force. He did not have any intention to use force against Guo
Jing, if Guo Jing stayed motionless he would not add any more strength.
However, in this one encounter he found out Guo Jing’s martial art to be deep.
He did not expect Guo Jing to be able to ride on his force and stand up,
automatically dispersing his energy. This surprised Yideng more than if Guo
Jing only resisted by staying motionless on the ground. Yideng secretly
thought, “Qi Xiong had really accepted a very fine disciple; no wonder my own
disciples candidly admitted their defeat.”
It was at this moment that Guo
Jing said, “I beg the Reverend to save her life!” He had just finished speaking
when suddenly he felt his legs wobble, his body involuntarily moved forward one
step. Quickly he exerted his strength to resist but his body refused to obey
his mind; his face turned red all over. He was shocked. “Reverend Yideng’s
force can continue for so long!” he thought, “I’ve already tried to disperse
it; unexpectedly it continued to lift me up. The incoming force has been
broken, but a short moment later my own opposing force uncontrollably propelled
myself forward. If it were a real fight wouldn’t my little life be gone?
Eastern Heretic, Western Poison, Southern Emperor and Northern Beggar truly
deserve their reputations.” This time he bowed and kowtowed with much more
admiration; what he felt in his heart showed on his face.
Yideng noticed Guo Jing’s
countenance showed a scared and admiring look, he stretched out his hand to
gently pat Guo Jing’s shoulder and said with a smile, “You have trained to this
level, it really is not easy.” Meanwhile
he had not released Huang Rong’s hand; he turned his head and smiled, “Child, don’t
be afraid, set your heart at peace,” he said with a gentle voice. Then he
helped her to sit on the meditation mat.
In all her life Huang Rong
never had anybody treated her with such compassion. Her father loved her very
much, but his manner was a little bit eccentric. Normally he would treat her as
a friend, without revealing the deep love a father had for his daughter. This
time listening to Yideng’s warm words all of a sudden Huang Rong was
overwhelmed as if she suddenly felt her mother’s tender love; the love she had
never experienced. All the pain and suffering she endured for quite some time
since she was injured suddenly burst out uncontrollably. “Wah!” she broke into
tears.
Reverend Yideng said with a
comforting voice, “Good child, don’t cry, don’t cry! Uncle will certainly fix all the pain you feel.” Who would have
thought that the gentler and more comforting his words were, the more Huang
Rong was overwhelmed and she cried even louder. It was not until much later did
her cry eventually became sobs as she tried to regain her composure.
Hearing his promise Guo Jing
was ecstatic, but upon turning his head around he saw the scholar and the
farmer’s stiff eyebrows and bulging eyes; they were staring at him with angry
looks on their faces. Guo Jing felt bad while thinking, “We can reach this
place entirely due to Rong’er’s craftiness, no wonder they are mad. Reverend
Yideng is this compassionate, yet his disciples were determined to hinder us. I
wonder why?”
He heard Reverend Yideng say,
“Child, how did you get injured? How did you get to this place? Why don’t you
tell your uncle everything?” And so Huang Rong wiped her tears and told him how
she mistook Qiu Qianren as Qiu Qianzhang, how she took his palms strike and
everything that happened.
When Yideng heard the name
Iron Palm Qiu Qianren, he frowned slightly, but immediately went back to
listening Huang Rong attentively. While speaking, Huang Rong kept her eyes open
to see Yideng’s face; even though his frown was very slight it did not escape
Huang Rong’s eyes. When she got to the point where they met Ying Gu at the
Black Marsh forest and how she gave them direction to find this place, Reverend
Yideng’s countenance once again momentarily changed; he lowered his head in
deep thought, seemingly he was reminiscing over past events, and was grieved
and pained over them.
A moment after Huang Rong shut
her mouth Reverend Yideng heaved a sigh and asked, “And then what happened?”
Huang Rong continued by
recounting how the fisherman, the woodcutter, the farmer and the scholar had
used all possible means to make things difficult for them. The woodcutter
easily let them go up the mountain, therefore, she said some praising words on
his behalf; but to the rest of them she added some spices to make their
offenses worse than they were. Deliberately she made the scholar and the farmer
mad.
Several times Guo Jing
interrupted her, saying, “Rong’er, don’t talk nonsense; these Uncles are not
that bad!” But Huang Rong kept talking like a spoiled child in front of
Reverend Yideng, telling him all kind of
things, making the faces of the two disciples standing behind Yideng turn red
and blue. They did not dare to open up their mouths in the presence of their
master. Reverend Yideng repeatedly nodded his head, “(Sigh), how can you treat
guests coming from afar like that? These
kids were really rude towards friends; I am going to tell them to apologize to
you two later.”
Huang Rong stared at the
scholar and the farmer with a smug expression; meanwhile her mouth did not
stop; she told everything until how they ended up at the temple’s gate.
“Afterwards I gave that drawing for you to see, and you asked me in; then they
did not dare to hinder us anymore,” she said.
“What drawing?” Yideng was
surprised.
“It’s about some eagle, some
pigeon, and someone cutting his own flesh,” Huang Rong replied. “Whom did you
give it to?” Yideng asked.
Before Huang Rong could answer
the scholar took the drawing from his pocket and presented it with both hands.
“Disciple has it,” he said, “Shifu has not finished meditation just now, I have
not presented it to Shifu yet.”
Yideng held out his hand to
take the drawing, he smiled to Huang Rong and said, “You see, if you did not
mention it, I wouldn’t know a thing.” Slowly he opened up the drawing and
looked at it; he knew what the drawing meant. He smiled and said, “Turned out
others were afraid I would not help you and sent this drawing to stir me up.
Don’t you think they underestimated the Old Monk too much?”
Huang Rong turned her head to
see anxiety and deep concern on the scholar and the farmer’s faces; she felt
strange. “Why is it that when they heard their Shifu promise to treat me they
looked like they are losing their lifeblood? Is the medicine the most precious
pill that they hate to give it up?” She
turned her head back to see Yideng was carefully examining the drawing. He
brought it under the sunlight to see the quality of the paper, he lightly
flicked it several times; his face showed suspicions.
“Did Ying Gu draw this
picture?” he asked Huang Rong. “Yes,” Huang Rong answered.
Yideng was silent for half a
day then asked again, “Did you see it with your own eyes when she did it?”
Huang Rong knew something was
amiss; she tried to recollect what happened that time and said, “When Ying Gu
wrote those, her back was toward us. I saw her pen moved, but I did not see
with my own eyes whether she was writing or drawing.”
“You said she gave you two
other pouches; let me see the contents of the other pouches,” Yideng said.
Guo Jing took the pouches from
his pocket and Yideng examined them; his face changed slightly. “Indeed that is
so,” he muttered softly. He gave the three sheets of paper to Huang Rong and
said, “Yao Xiong is an expert in calligraphy and paintings; your educational
background came from your family, certainly you understand connoisseurship. Why
don’t you take a look at these three sheets
and tell me what you think.”
Huang Rong took the papers to
take a look and immediately said, “These two sheets are ordinary ‘yu ban zhi’
[jade register paper], but the drawing was made on a ‘jiu jian zhi’ [old cocoon
paper], a rarely seen type of paper.”
Yideng nodded his head, “Hmm,
in calligraphy and painting I am a layman, what do you think about this
drawing?”
Huang Rong examined the
drawing carefully; she smiled and said, “Uncle is only pretending to be a
layman! You have known from the start that it was not Ying Gu who draw this
picture.”
Yideng’s countenance slightly
changed, “Then it is true it was not her painting? I am only guessing based on
logic, I really was not looking at the drawing.”
Huang Rong tugged his arm,
saying, “Uncle, look, the writing on these two sheets of paper are delicate and
elegant while the stroke on this drawing is very stiff. Hmm, this drawing is
made by a man. Yes, I am sure it is a man’s pen-stroke. This man did not know a
thing about calligraphy or painting, but his pen-stroke is powerful, it even
penetrated the paper to its back … This ink looked very old, I think it is even
older than my own age.” Reverend Yideng heaved a heavy sigh; he pointed his
finger to a book on top of a bamboo table, signaling the scholar to fetch it.
The scholar walked over and fetched it, and handed it over to his master. Huang
Rong saw on the yellowing page of the cover two rows of characters that read, ‘The
Great Buddist Scripture by Maming Bodhisattva. Translated by ‘san cang jiu mo
luo shen’ [name of a saint] of Guizi in the Western Region.’ She thought, “I am
not going to understand anything if he starts preaching to me.”
Yideng casually flipped open the
cover of the book, put the drawing next to it and said, “Take a look.”
“Ah!” Huang Rong softly
exclaimed, “The same paper quality.” Yideng nodded. Guo Jing did not
understand, he whispered, “What paper quality is the same?”
Huang Rong said, “Look carefully,
isn’t the paper quality of this book the same as that drawing?”
Guo Jing looked over
carefully; the paper of the book was coarse and thick, mixed with strands of
yellow silk threads, exactly the same as the paper of the drawing. “They are
the same,” he said, “So what?”
Huang Rong did not reply, she
looked at Reverend Yideng, waiting for an explanation. Reverend Yideng said,
“This book was brought by my martial brother from the western region.”
During the entire time Guo
Jing and Huang Rong talked to Yideng, they had not paid any attention to the
Indian monk; only now did they turn their gaze to him. He was sitting
cross-legged on the meditation mat, as if he was oblivious to the discussion of
these people.
“This book came from the
western region, this drawing also came from the western region,” Yideng
continued, “Have you ever heard of the western region’s White Camel Mountain?”
Huang Rong was startled,
“Western Poison Ouyang Feng?” she asked.
Yideng slowly nodded,
“Correct,” he said, “This picture was drawn by Ouyang Feng.” Hearing this Guo
Jing and Huang Rong were shocked and could not say anything for a while.
Yideng smiled and said, “This
Ouyang fellow had planned this for a long time; he truly anticipated far ahead.”
“Uncle,” Huang Rong said, “I
didn’t know this drawing came from the Old Poison; this man always harbors evil
intentions.”
Yideng smiled and said, “For a
Nine Yin Manual men can do great things.”
“This drawing has something to
do with the Nine Yin Manual?” Huang Rong asked.
Yideng saw her excitement and
surprise, he noticed her cheeks turned red; looked like she was straining and
was able to stay awake due to her strong internal energy. Thereupon Yideng held
out his hand to support her right arm
and said, “Let’s talk about this some other time, right now it is more important to treat your injury.”
Yideng helped her up and
walked slowly toward the building next door. When they arrived at the door
opening, the scholar and the farmer exchanged a glance and together they rushed
toward the door. They knelt down and said, “Shifu, let your disciples try to
treat this Miss’ injury.”
Yideng shook his head, “Do you
think your skill is sufficient? Can you treat her until she is completely
cured?”
The scholar and the farmer
said, “Disciples will try to do our best.”
Yideng’s face turned serious.
“Human life is an important matter, how can you easily try?”
The scholar said, “These two
came here by some evil people’s direction; definitely without any good
intention. Although Shifu’s mercy is abundant, you can’t fall into evil
people’s treacherous plan.”
Yideng heaved a sighed, “What
did I teach you day in and day out? Go and take a good look at this picture.”
While speaking he gave the drawing in his hand away.
The farmer knocked his head to
the ground and said, “This drawing was made by Ouyang Feng; Shifu, this is
Ouyang Feng’s evil plan.” While speaking thus his anxiety was obvious; tears
flowing down his cheeks.
Jing and Rong two people were
puzzled, “How does the evil plan relate to treating an injury?” they thought.
Reverend Yideng gently said,
“Get up, get up. Don’t make our guests’ hearts uneasy.” His voice was gentle,
but full of resolution. The two disciples knew it was useless to argue further;
they stood up with their heads hung low.
Reverend Yideng took Huang
Rong to the next door building. He beckoned Guo Jing and said, “You also come.” Guo Jing followed them entering
the room.
Yideng unrolled the bamboo
curtain hung above the door down. He took an incense stick and stuck it on the
burner on top of a small bamboo table.
The four walls of the room
were drab, other than the small bamboo table there were only three meditation
mats. Yideng ordered Huang Rong to sit on the middle mat while he himself sat
cross- legged on the mat next to her. He turned his gaze toward the bamboo
curtain and said to Guo Jing, “You stay and guard that door, don’t let anybody
come in, including my own disciples.” Guo Jing complied.
Yideng closed his eyes, but
suddenly he opened his eyes and added, “If they resort to violence you must
fight. Your martial sister’s life depends on it. Remember, it’s very
important.”
“Yes!” Guo Jing said, but
actually he was confused, “His disciples revere him, how can they dare to
disobey their master’s order and come barging in?” he thought.
Yideng turned toward Huang
Rong and said, “Relax your whole body; no matter how much you feel hurt or
itchy, you must not resist at all.”
Huang Rong smiled, “I consider
myself dead already.”
Yideng also smiled, “You are such
a smart doll.” He closed his eyes immediately, his eyebrows hung down, he
circulated his energy. When the incense was about an inch burnt suddenly he
leaped up, left palm on his chest, right index finger stretched out, slowly he
pointed his finger toward the ‘bai hui’ [hundred joins] acupoint on Huang
Rong’s head. Huang Rong’s body slightly jumped up involuntarily; she felt a
stream of heat flowing from the top of her head down.
Reverend Yideng retracted his
finger immediately, without moving his body his second finger hit the ‘hou
ding’ [rear peak] acupoint located about one ‘cun’ five ‘fen’ [1 cun is
approximately 1 inch, 1 fen is about 1 third of a centimeter (a little over 1/8
of an inch)] behind the ‘bai hui’ acupoint. Successively he hit the ‘qiang
jian’ [powerful space], ‘nao hu’ [brain door], ‘feng fu’ [wind manor], ‘da
zhui’ [big spine], ‘tao dao’ [pottery way], ‘shen zhu’ [life pillar], ‘shen
dao’ [divine way], along the ‘ling tai’ [soul platform] downward; so that when
the incense was halfway burnt he had already hit thirty consecutive main
acupoints of the ‘du mai’ [supervised arteries or channels] group on her body.
By this time Guo Jing’s
martial art knowledge and experience was already incomparable to the past. He
stood on the side watching Yideng’s finger move slowly, his arm floating in the
air. He hit these thirty acupoints with thirty different acupoint sealing
techniques. Each one was a mind opening technique; admittedly the Six Freaks of
Jiangnan had never taught him this kind of technique, the ‘sealing acupoint
section’ in the Nine Yin Manual also did not contain this technique. He had
never seen anything like this before, he had never even heard about it. He was
having a blurred vision just by watching; his tongue tied. He only knew that
Reverend Yideng was demonstrating an upper class martial art; it never crossed
Guo Jing’s mind that Yideng was using his lifetime cultivated energy to open up
Huang Rong’s eight main arteries.
After the ‘du mai’ group was
done, Yideng sat down to take a rest. After Guo Jing lighted up another incense
he leaped back up and started to hit Huang Rong’s ‘ren mai’ [assigned
arteries/channels] group consisting of twenty-five acupoints. This time his
hand movements were very swift; his arms vibrated, just like dragonflies
soaring above the water. Just in one breath he had finished hitting all ‘ren
mai’ acupoints. These twenty-five moves were lightning fast, but each finger
movement did not miss even a single hair width.
Guo Jing was frightened and
full of admiration at the same time; he thought, “(Sigh) There is such skill in
the world!”
Meanwhile Yideng had started
with the ‘yin wei mai’ [negative preserved arteries/channels] consisting of
fourteen acupoints. Once again he used different technique; this time he moved
powerfully like a flying dragon or striding tiger. Although Yideng was wearing
a kassaya [Buddhist robe], but in Guo Jing’s eyes he did not look like a monk
who followed the three-treasure way, but an emperor, ruler of tens of thousands
people.
The ‘yin wei mai’ group
finished, without taking a rest Reverend Yideng continued with the ‘yang wei
mai’ [positive preserved arteries/channels] consisting of thirty-two acupoints.
This time he did it long distance; for instance, he moved about a ‘zhang’ away
from Huang Rong, then suddenly pounced forward and hit the ‘feng chi’ [wind
reservoir] acupoint on Huang Rong’s neck, followed by leaping backward. He did
this in succession, without any perceivable pause.
Guo Jing thought, “Fighting
closely with an expert is dangerous; by using this technique not only I can
overcome the enemy, but putting up a strong defense as well. This is a very
wonderful technique.” With rapt attention he watched Yideng go back and forth;
the movements were truly marvelous. It was especially difficult to attack and
withdrew that fast, with matchless agility of a fish darting in the water or a
rabbit running away from the hunter. Suddenly a thought came into his mind,
“When I fought Ying Gu, her body was very slippery. For a third part her
technique resembled the Reverend’s attacking acupoint technique; seemed like
she got her inspiration from the Reverend, but her skill is fallen short, far
below his.”
Two incense sticks later
Reverend Yideng had finished with her ‘yin wei mai’ and the ‘yang wei mai’ two
arteries [or channels] groups. When he started the ‘ju gu’ [gigantic bone]
acupoint on her neck, suddenly Guo Jing’s heart stirred, “Ah! Doesn’t the Nine
Yin Manual contain this? I was so stupid not to understand this earlier.”
Silently he recited the Manual while watching Reverend Yideng’s movements and
compared them with the Manual; he found out that Reverend Yideng’s sealing
acupoint technique carried infinite variations. It was like Reverend Yideng was
acting out and opening out the secret of the marvelous martial arts in the Nine
Yin Manual. Guo Jing had not learned enough and he did not dare to learn
Yideng’s Solitary Yang Finger, but with his knowledge of the Manual he had
quite a comprehension of this unique skill.
At last the ‘dai mai’
[band/belt arteries/channels] group were opened successfully. The blood was
flowing unobstructed through all the seven groups of passageways contained in
the manual. ‘Dai mai’ was the passageway
looped around the waist like a belt. Presently Reverend Yideng was behind Huang
Rong’s back, walking backward with his finger pointed backward slowly hitting
her ‘zhang men’ [section gate] acupoint.
The ‘dai mai’ consisted of
eight acupoints. Yideng stretched out his hand slowly, as if with great
difficulty; his mouth gasping for breath, his body swaying, like he could not
even support his own weight.
Guo Jing was shocked; he saw
beads of perspirations trickling down Yideng’s forehead, sweat dripping down like
rain from the tip of his long eyebrows. Guo Jing wanted to step forward and
help, but he was afraid he might mess things up. He turned to look at Huang
Rong’s condition and saw her clothes were soaked with sweat. She was knitting
her brows and biting her lips; like she was trying to resist unbearable pain
with all her might.
Suddenly Guo Jing heard a
‘shua’ sound, the bamboo curtain behind him was opened and somebody shouted
loudly, “Shifu!” and somebody barged in through the door.
Almost without thinking Guo
Jing launched the ‘divine dragon swings its tail’; his right palm swung
backward and with a slapping sound it hit that person’s shoulder. Guo Jing
turned around to see somebody was staggering two steps backward; it was the
fisherman.
Because his iron boat and iron
oars were stolen he was unable to go upstream the creek to the mountain peak;
he had to take a long walk more than 20 ‘li’s around the back of the mountain.
Upon arriving he heard his Shifu has already started treating that young miss’ injury;
he was very anxious and rushed toward the room with the intention of imploring
his master not to do that. Unexpectedly he was pushed back by Guo Jing’s
attack. He stood back up to try again. In the meantime the woodcutter, the
farmer, and the scholar three people had also arrived outside the door.
“It’s over; what else can we
stop?” the scholar angrily said.
Guo Jing turned around to see
Reverend Yideng sit cross-legged on the meditation mat, his face deathly pale,
his monk robe completely soaked in sweats. Huang Rong was lying down on the
floor, unmoving; it was not clear whether she was dead or alive. Guo Jing was
very shocked; he rushed forward to prop her up. First thing he noticed was a
fishy stench coming out of her nose. He looked at her face and found it was
bloodless bluish pale, but the faint black shadow on her face had actually
gone. He held out his hand to feel her breathing and was greatly relieved to
find a steady albeit weak breathing.
The fisherman, the woodcutter,
the farmer and the scholar were sitting around their master in silence, with
apprehensive looks on their faces. Guo Jing kept his eyes on Huang Rong. He saw
her face gradually turn pink, he was
ecstatic; who would have thought that the pink turned to red and very soon her cheeks
were fiery hot. A short moment later beads of perspiration started to form on
her forehead while her countenance was gradually turning back to white. This
cycle happened three times, every time she was sweating profusely.
“Mmm,” Huang Rong moaned softly
then she opened her eyes. “Jing Gege, where is the stove, uh, the ice?” she
asked.
Hearing her voice Guo Jing’s
delight was unspeakable, with a trembling voice he said, “What stove? What
ice?”
Huang Rong looked around,
shook her head and smiled, “Ah, I was having a nightmare,” she said, “I saw
Ouyang Feng, Ouyang Ke and Qiu Qianren. They put me inside the stove to be
roasted; and when I was hot, they put ice to cool me down. Once I cool down
they put me back into the stove. (Sigh), it was really scary. Uh, how is
Uncle?”
Yideng slowly opened up his
eyes and smiled, “Your injury is healed, all you need is a day or two of total
rest – you can’t move unnecessarily; and you will be all right.”
“I don’t have any strength
left in my entire body,” Huang Rong said, “I can’t even lift up a finger.” The
farmer was looking at her angrily. Huang Rong ignored him, she turned to Yideng
and said, “Uncle, you have spent so much energy to treat me, you must be very
tired. I have some Nine Flowered Jade Dew Pills, made according to my father’s
recipe. How about you take some?”
Yideng happily said, “Good, I
did not think you would bring these energy-booster miracle pills. That year
when we had the Sword Meet of Mount Hua each one of us was dead tired after the
competition; your father gave us some of these pills and the effectiveness was
marvelous.”
Guo Jing quickly took the
small bag of pills from Huang Rong’s backpack and handed it over to Yideng. The
woodcutter went to the kitchen to fetch a bowl of clear water, while the
scholar poured the pills on his palm and presented them to his master.
Yideng laughed, “Why so many?
These pills are not easy to make, we’ll just take half.” The scholar anxiously
replied, “Shifu, all the miracle pills in the world won’t be enough.”
Yideng conceded since he felt
extremely exhausted; he took several dozens of Nine Flowered Jade Dew Pills
from his disciple’s hand and swallowed them all, washed by a bowl of clear
water. He turned to Guo Jing and said, “Take your Shimei [Martial (younger)
Sister] to have a couple of days’ rest and then you can go down the mountain.
You don’t need to see me again. Hmm, I have something I want you to promise
me.”
Guo Jing bowed to the ground
and ‘bonk, bonk, bonk, bonk’, knocked his head to the floor. Huang Rong
ordinarily loved to joke around and be casual with everybody. Even in the
presence of her father and her master she still did not follow proper
junior-senior relationship; yet this time she actually bowed down reverently
and said with a low voice, “Uncle has saved my life, I will not dare to forget
even for a moment.”
Yideng smiled and said, “It’s
better if you forget about it; don’t let it hang in your mind.” Turning his
head to Guo Jing he said, “Don’t tell anybody that you have come up this mountain;
don’t ever tell it, even to your Shifu.”
Guo Jing was just thinking
about taking Hong Qigong up the mountain to ask Yideng to treat his injury;
hearing this he could not help but was taken aback and did not know what to
say.
Yideng smiled and continued,
“Later on don’t even bother to come back here, since very soon we are going to
move away.”
“Where are you moving to?” Guo
Jing hastily asked. Yideng smiled without say anything.
Huang Rong said in her heart,
“Silly Brother, because their whereabouts has been discovered by us they will
have to move away; how can he tell you?” She thought about how Yideng, master
and disciples, had spent a lot of effort laboriously developing this place and
now because of her they would have to abandon everything; she felt sorry and
thought it would be difficult for her to pay
back this kindness. No wonder the fisherman, the woodcutter, the farmer
and the scholar did everything they could to prevent them from going up the mountain.
Thinking of this she turned her gaze toward the four disciples, wanted to say
something to express her apology and gratefulness but she could not find any
appropriate words.
Suddenly Reverend Yideng’s
countenance changed, his body swayed and he fell to the ground. The four
disciples, along with Guo Jing and Huang Rong were extremely shocked; they
rushed forward trying to help. They saw his face twitching like he was trying
to suppress a great pain. The six of
them were very anxious, they stood around with their hands hanging down,
nobody dared to make any noise.
About the time needed to drink
a cup of tea later Yideng’s face showed a faint smile, he said to Huang Rong,
“Child, did your father personally make these Nine Flowered Jade Dew Pills?”
“He did not,” Huang Rong
replied, “It was my martial brother Lu Chengfeng who made them according to my
father’s secret recipe.”
“Have you ever heard your
father said that these pills would be harmful if taken excessively?” Yideng
asked further.
Huang Rong was stunned, she
thought, “Is there something wrong with these Nine Flowered Jade Dew Pills?”
She hastily said, “Father said the more the better; only because these pills
were not easy to make, he did not want to take too much.”
Yideng lowered his head and
knitted his brows for half a day; finally he shook his head and said, “Your
father can be considered a genius, but his actions are unpredictable; how can I
guess what he is up to? Could it be that he was punishing your Martial Brother
Lu by giving him a fake recipe? Or could it be that your Martial Brother Lu had
a grudge against you and mixed some poison into the pills?”
Hearing the word ‘poison’
everybody called in alarm in one voice. “Shifu, are you poisoned?” the scholar
asked.
Yideng smiled and said, “It’s
a good thing your Shishu [Martial (younger) Uncle] is here; even a more lethal
poison won’t kill anybody.”
The four disciples could not
hold their anger anymore, they cursed Huang Rong, “Our Shifu was so kind to
save your life, but you have the guts to actually harm other with poison?” They
surrounded Guo Jing and Huang Rong, ready to strike.
This turn of events happened
so abruptly that Guo Jing was at a loss; he did not know the best action to
take. Ever since Yideng’s first question Huang Rong had correctly guessed that
the Nine Flowered Jade Dew Pills had caused a disaster. Her mind quickly
recalled the succession of events concerning these pills since she received
them at the Cloud Manor [gui yun zhuang]; when she arrived at the thatched hut
in the Black Marsh forest she remembered how Ying Gu brought the pills to the
other room and examined them for quite some time before she re-appeared.
Suddenly a thought came into her mind like bright light. “Uncle, I know it!”
she called out, “It was Ying Gu.”
“It was Ying Gu?” Yideng
asked.
Immediately Huang Rong told
him everything that happened inside the thatched hut in the Black Marsh forest.
She furthermore said, “She repeatedly warned me not to take any of these pills;
apparently it was because she had already mixed some poison in them.”
“Hmm,” the farmer sneered
angrily, “She was really good to you; she was afraid you might die.”
Ever since she learned that
Yideng was poisoned Huang Rong’s heart was full of regrets; she did not feel
like arguing. She lowered her head and said, “She was not afraid to kill me,
but she was afraid that if I take the pill then Uncle would not be poisoned.”
Yideng could only sigh,
“Karma, karma,” he said. His face turned gentle. He turned toward Guo Jing and
Huang Rong and said, “This is the result of my own sin; it has nothing to do
with you. It was that Ying Gu; and I am reaping what I sow. You go ahead and
take some rest, then you can go down the mountain, there is no need to worry
over me. Although I am poisoned, my martial brother is here and he is an expert
in healing poison related sickness.” He finished speaking; he closed his eyes
and did not say another word.
Jing and Rong two people
bowed. They saw Yideng’s face showed a smile, he waved his hand lightly. Two
people did not dare to tarry much longer, they slowly turned around and went
out. The young monk was waiting outside, he led two people to rest at a small
building in the rear courtyard. The little building was also empty except for a
couple of bamboo couches and a small bamboo table. Not too long afterwards two
older monks came in with some vegetarian dishes; “Please eat,” they said.
Huang Rong was still concerned
over Yideng’s condition. “Is Reverend well?” she asked.
“Xiao Seng [lowly monk] does
not know,” the old monk replied with a sharp voice. He bowed and went out the
door.
“Listening to their voice I
thought they were women,” Guo Jing said.
“They are eunuchs,” Huang Rong
said, “They must be Emperor Duan’s former attendants.” “Oh,” Guo Jing muttered.
Their minds were filled with concern, how could they eat?
The courtyard was secluded and
very quiet, with light breeze occasionally stirred the bamboo leaves. After a
long time Guo Jing broke the silence, “Rong’er, Reverend Yideng’s martial art
skill is very high.
“Hmm,” Huang Rong mumbled. Guo
Jing continued, “Our Shifu, your father, Zhou Dage [Big Brother Zhou], Ouyang
Feng and Qiu Qianren, these five people’s martial art is also high, but they
won’t necessarily superior to Reverend Yideng.”
“In your opinion, which one
among these six is the Number One in the world?” Huang Rong asked.
Guo Jing hesitated for half a
day before answering, “I think each one of them has their strengths and
weaknesses, it’s really difficult to judge. This one is stronger than that one,
yet that one is fiercer than this one.”
“What about ‘wen wu quan cai’
[well versed in both literature and martial art]? Who’s the best?” Huang Rong
asked.
“Without question your father
is the best,” Guo Jing replied.
Huang Rong was very proud; she
smiled showing her dimples, beautiful as flowers. But then suddenly she sighed
and said, “That’s why it’s very strange.”
“What do you mean ‘strange’?”
Guo Jing hastily asked.
“Just think about it,” Huang
Rong replied, “Reverend Yideng has such high skill; the fisherman, the woodcutter,
the farmer and the scholar, his four disciples’ skills are not superficial
either. Why would they hide themselves in fear in this remote mountain? Why is
it that every time they hear somebody’s coming they shiver in fear? Among those
six experts, perhaps only Ouyang Feng and
Qiu Iron Palm are their enemies; but they are people of high reputation.
Could it be that they will disregard their ranks and join hands in making
things difficult for him?”
“Rong’er,” Guo Jing said,
“Even if Ouyang Feng and Qiu Qianren join hands to seek enmity, we don’t need
to be scared.”
“How come?” Huang Rong asked
in surprise. Guo Jing’s face showed embarrassment, he looked bashful. Huang
Rong laughed, “Ah! Why are you embarrassed all of a sudden?”
Guo Jing answered, “Reverend
Yideng’s martial art is not inferior to the Western Poison. To say the least
they are even. I think his backhand acupoint sealing technique is the Toad
Stance’s black star.”
“What about Qiu Qianren?”
Huang Rong asked, “The fisherman, the woodcutter, the farmer and the scholar
are certainly not his match.”
“That’s right,” Guo Jing said,
“I have exchanged a palm with him at Dongting Lake, Mount Jun and the Iron Palm
Peak. If it is fifty stances or less, I think I can fight him evenly; but after
a hundred stances I don’t think I can block his attack. Today I saw the way
Reverend Yideng’ acupoint sealing method to treat your injury …”
Huang Rong was delighted, “You
learned his skill? Now you can defeat that scoundrel Qiu the Iron Palm?” she
interrupted.
“You know I am dim-witted,”
Guo Jing said, “This acupoint sealing technique is so deep, how can I learn it?
Moreover, Reverend did not pass the theory to me, naturally I can’t learn his
skill. But looking at his technique, some things from the Nine Yin Manual that
I did not understand before become clearer. Defeating him, I can’t do; but I
believe I can hold against him for a moment longer.” Huang Rong sighed, “Too
bad you have forgotten one thing,” she said. “What is it?” Guo Jing asked.
“That the Reverend is poisoned
and we don’t know when he is going to be well,” Huang Rong replied.
Guo Jing was silent. After a
while he hatefully said, “That Ying Gu is so evil.” Suddenly he called out,
“Ah, this is bad!”
Huang Rong jumped up in
surprise. “What is it?” she asked.
“You have promised Ying Gu
that after your recovery you will accompany her for a year. Shall we fulfill
this promise or not?” Guo Jing said.
“What do you say?” Huang Rong
asked.
Guo Jing replied, “If she did
not give us direction then we would not be able to find Reverend Yideng. It
would be difficult to say what your injury’s condition will be …”
“What would be difficult to
say?” Huang Rong cut him off, “Just say it plainly that my little life could
not be preserved. You are a gentleman whose words are as a mountain; you
certainly want me to abide by mine.” She was thinking about how Guo Jing was
not willing to cancel his engagement with Huazheng; she could not help
dejectedly hang down her head.
Guo Jing did not have the
slightest idea his girl was pouring out her heart’s contents; Huang Rong was on
the verge of tears, but he was oblivious. He said, “Ying Gu said your father
possesses divine mathematical skill and he is a hundred times superior to her.
Let’s just say you are willing to teach
her some mathematical skill, in the end it will still be difficult to
her to even scratch your father’s skin; then why would she still want you to
accompany her for a year?”
Huang Rong covered her face
and did not answer. Guo Jing was indifferent, he repeated his question. Huang
Rong was angry, “You are so dumb that you don’t know anything!” she scolded
him.
Guo Jing did not understand
why she suddenly lost her patience and scolded him; he could only scratch his
head and said, “Rong’er! I am dumb, that’s why I am asking you to explain it to
me.”
Huang Rong had already
regretted her words as soon as they left her mouth, now listening to him meekly
admitting his stupidity she could not hold herself any longer; she threw
herself to his bosom and cried. Guo Jing became more confused than ever, he
gently patted her back trying to console her. Huang Rong pulled Guo Jing’s
sleeve and used it to wipe her tears. She smiled and said, “Jing Gege, I am the bad one; next time I certainly
won’t scold you anymore.”
“I am dumb, so what’s wrong
with you saying it out loud?” Guo Jing said.
“Ay, you are a good man, I am
a bad girl,” Huang Rong said, “All right, let me tell you. That Ying Gu has an
animosity against my father. She wants to learn mathematic so she can go to the
Peach Blossom Island to seek revenge. Afterwards she found out that in
mathematics she is inferior to me, in
martial art she is inferior to you; she knew it was hopeless for her to seek
revenge. Therefore, she wants to keep me as a hostage and tell my father to
rescue me. This way from a guest she becomes
the host and she can build a treacherous plan to harm him.”
Suddenly Guo Jing understood;
he slapped his thigh and said, “Ah, that’s totally right! Then you don’t have
to fulfill your promise.”
“What do you mean not
fulfilling my promise? I have to fulfill my promise,” Huang Rong said. “Huh?”
Guo Jing was puzzled.
Huang Rong said, “That Ying Gu
is very crafty; just look at how she managed to mix some poison in the Nine Flowered Jade Dew Pills to harm
Reverend Yideng. She could do the same again. If we don’t get rid of her, this
woman will become a thorn to my father in the future. She wants me to accompany
her, I have to accompany her. Now that I know, I can guard against her
craftiness. No matter what kind of treacherous plan she has, I am confident I
can see through them one by one.”
“Ay! But that is like you are
living with a tiger,” Guo Jing said.
Huang Rong was about to reply
when suddenly they heard commotion from the direction of the house where
Reverend Yideng was. Guo Jing and Huang Rong looked at each other. They
strained their ears to listen closely, but it seemed like the commotion had
ceased.
“I wonder how the Reverend
is,” Guo Jing said. Huang Rong shook her head. Guo Jing continued, “Eat
something, and then you take a rest.” Huang Rong shook her head again.
Suddenly, “Somebody’s coming!” she called out. And sure enough, they heard
footsteps coming closer from the front courtyard.
“That little girl is so sly,
we’ll kill her first,” an angry voice was heard; it was the farmer’s voice.
Guo Jing and Huang Rong were
startled. They also heard the woodcutter said, “Don’t be rash, we need to ask them clearly first.”
“What is there to ask?” the
farmer said, “These two little thieves must be sent by Shifu’s enemy. We kill
one and let the other live. If we must ask, it’s enough to ask that dumb kid.”
While talking, the fisherman, the woodcutter, the farmer and the scholar had
arrived and stopped at the door. It looked like they were not afraid Jing and
Rong two people would hear them.
Without hesitation Guo Jing
launched the Proud Dragon Repents; his palm struck the wall behind them. With a
loud rumbling noise a hole appeared on the earthen wall. He bent down to let
Huang Rong climb on his back and swiftly jumped out the wall. While they were
still airborne the farmer stretched out his hand, quick as the wind, trying to
grab Guo Jing’s leg.
Huang Rong’s left hand swept
lightly, brushing the ‘yang chi’ [positive pond] acupoint on the back of the
farmer’s palm. It was her family’s ‘lan hua fu xue shou’ [brushing orchid
acupoint sealing technique]. Although she was weakened from the injury her
light and quick stroke floated with elegance, attacking the acupoint in a
strange way; truly it was not a simple matter to parry.
The farmer was no stranger to
sealing acupoint techniques; he saw her finger was lightning fast, he was
shocked and hastily withdrew his hand to parry her attack. His acupoint was
saved, but this attack had slowed his grab so that Guo Jing managed to jump out
of the wall carrying Huang Rong on his back.
Guo Jing darted forward a few
steps. Suddenly he called out in alarm, it turned out behind the buildings
there were thorn bushes as tall as a person, dense and numerous, full of thorns
covering quite a distance away; there was no way out through the bushes. He was
forced to turn around and saw the fisherman, the woodcutter, the farmer and the
scholar four people had arrived, blocking their way.
Guo Jing said with a clear voice,
“The honorable master has given us permission to go down the mountain. You have
heard it with your own ears. Why do you disobey his order and detain us here?”
The fisherman stared at them
and with a thunderous voice said, “My master has shown you great mercy, willing
to sacrifice his life to help you, but you …”
Guo Jing and Huang Rong were
shocked, “What do you mean sacrificing his life to help us?” they asked.
“Pei!” the fisherman and the
farmer spat. The scholar sneered and said, “Our Shifu sacrificed his life to
save Miss’ life; do you really not know it?”
“We really don’t know. We beg
for your explanation,” Guo Jing and Huang Rong asked in surprise.
The scholar saw their sincere
faces; they did not seem to be pretending. He looked at the woodcutter and the
woodcutter nodded. The scholar said, “Miss had suffered a very serious internal
injury. It was necessary for Shifu to use both ‘yi yang zhi’ [Solitary Yang
Finger] and ‘xian tian gong’ [inborn/innate strength/energy] to open up the
eight main arteries’ acupoints and cure the injury. Ever since the death of the
Quanzhen Sect’s founder Chongyang Zhenren [lit. true/real man, a respectful
term to address a Taoist priest], only my Shifu knows the ‘yi yang zhi’ and
‘xian tian gong’, these two marvelous skills. But by treating injury in this
manner, his own body will suffer a serious injury; he will lose all his martial
arts for the next five years.”
“Ah!” Huang Rong exclaimed,
she felt more ashamed.
The scholar continued,
“Hereafter for the next five years he will have to diligently and painstakingly
re-cultivate his energy every day and night. If he makes the slightest mistake,
not only his martial art will not recover, but he will at the least be
paralyzed, at the most lose his life. My Shifu has shown such kindness to you;
how could you be so heartless and repaid kindness with enmity?” Huang Rong
wriggled down and knelt on the ground, facing the house where Reverend Yideng
was she kowtowed four times and sobbed, “Uncle has graciously saved my life; I
didn’t know your sacrifice was this deep.”
The fisherman, the woodcutter,
the farmer and the scholar saw her bowing down, their faces turned slightly
softer. The fisherman asked, “Your father sent you over to harm our Shifu; and
you really did not know it?”
Huang Rong was indignant, “How
could my father send me to harm Uncle? My father, the Master of the Peach Blossom Island, is what kind of
person? How could he commit such a despicable act?”
The fisherman cupped his fists
and said, “If Miss was not sent by your father, then please forgive my
offending words.”
“Humph,” Huang Rong snorted,
“If my father heard you, even though you are Reverend Yideng’s outstanding
disciple, he would still make you eat a little bit of suffering.”
The fisherman smiled and said,
“He is known as the Eastern Heretic, his action … his action … hey, hey … We
thought what the Western Poison is able to do, your father can also do. Now it
looks like we have thought erroneously.”
Huang Rong said, “How can you
compare my father with the Western Poison? What has that old thief Ouyang Feng
done anyway?”
The scholar said, “All right,
now everything is clear; let’s go back to the house and talk some more.”
Immediately six people
returned to the meditation room and sat down. The fisherman, the woodcutter,
the farmer and the scholar sat in such a way that they blocked the doors and
windows. Huang Rong knew they were guarding against them escaping; she smiled
slightly but did not expose her awareness.
“Do you know anything about the
Nine Yin Manual?” the scholar asked.
“We do,” Huang Rong replied,
“But what does this Nine Yin Manual have to do with this matter? Ay, this book
is really dangerous.” She could not help but recall how her mother had died due
to over- exertion in re-writing the manual from memory.
The scholar said, “In the
first Sword Meet of Mount Hua the Quanzhen Sect’s founder was crowned the Number One Martial Artist of The World
[wu gong tian xia di yi]; therefore, the manual fell into his hand. It went without saying that the
other four experts felt a heartfelt admiration to him. In that Sword Meet of
Mount Hua everybody demonstrated his marvelous strength; Chongyang Zhenren was
impressed with my Shifu’s Solitary Yang Finger. The following year he came to
Dali accompanied by his Shidi [younger martial brother] to pay a visit and
discuss martial art skills.”
“His Shidi?” Huang Rong
interrupted, “Isn’t that the Old Urchin Zhou Botong?”
“That’s correct,” the scholar
replied, “Miss is young, yet actually knows a lot of people.” “No need to
praise me,” Huang Rong said.
The scholar continued, “Zhou
Shishu [Martial Uncle Zhou] was a very funny man, but I did not know he was
called the Old Urchin. That time my Shifu had not become a monk.”
“Ah,” Huang Rong said, “He was
still an emperor.”
“Exactly,” the scholar said,
“The Quanzhen Sect’s founder and his martial brother stayed for a dozen of days in the imperial palace, we four
people were always by their side to accompany them. Our Shifu explained the
essence of the Solitary Yang Finger and everything there is to know to
Chongyang Zhenren. Chongyang Zhenren was completely delighted; in turn he
bequeathed the fiercest ‘xian tian gong’ to our Shifu. We were at their sides
when they were discussing these marvelous skills, but because our experience
and knowledge were shallow, we heard but did not comprehend anything.”
“What about the Old Urchin?”
Huang Rong asked, “His martial art skill is not low.”
The scholar replied, “Zhou
Shishu liked to move around and did not like to stay still. Several days in the
Dali palace he wandered to the east and strolled to the west, he played around
everywhere; even the empress and the concubines’ palaces did not escape his
visits. The court eunuchs were aware he was the emperor’s honorable guest, so
they did not do anything to stop him.” Huang Rong and Guo Jing were smiling.
The scholar continued, “Just
before Chongyang Zhenren left he said to our Shifu, ‘Lately my chronic illness
has come back to me; I don’t think I am going to live much longer. Fortunately
I have found an heir to my ‘xian tian gong’; it will strengthen the Emperor’s
Solitary Yang Finger. There will be somebody in this world who can control him.
I won’t be afraid he would run amuck with unseemly behavior anymore.’ It was then
that my Shifu understood that Chongyang Zhenren had traveled thousands of ‘li’s
to the Dali with the sole purpose of bequeathing the ‘xian tian gong’ to Shifu
so that after his death there would be somebody who can control the Western
Poison Ouyang Feng. But because the Eastern Heretic, the Western Poison, the
Southern Emperor, the Northern Beggar and
the Central Divinity shared the honor of the present age, if he said he
came to impart a skill, it would be disrespectful to my Shifu; therefore, he
first asked my Shifu to teach him the Solitary Yang Finger, then in exchange he
taught the ‘xian tian gong’. As Shifu understood his intention he was very
grateful and straightaway he diligently trained the ‘xian tian gong’. Chongyang
Zhenren did not live long after he learned the Solitary Yang Finger; he did not
have time to study thoroughly, and I heard he had not bequeathed it to any of
his disciples. Later on there were some unfortunate events in our Dali kingdom;
my Shifu’s heart was broken. He shaved his head and became a monk.”
Huang Rong thought, “Emperor
Duan did not want to be an emperor anymore, but became a monk; this must be
because of an enormously grieving matter. Others did not tell, it would be
inconvenient to ask.” Glancing sideways she saw Guo Jing was about to open his
mouth to ask; hastily she signaled him with her eyes. “Oh!” Guo Jing muttered
and closed his mouth.
The scholar’s face turned
dark; he was reminiscing over past events. After a while he opened his mouth
and continued, “Somehow the news that Shifu was training the ‘xian tian gong’
leaked out. One day, my martial
brother,” he pointed toward the farmer, “received an order to go gather some
medicinal herbs. He went to the ‘ta xue shan’ [Big Snow Mountain] at the
western border of Yunnan; where somebody injured him using the Toad Stance.”
“It must be the Old Poison,”
Huang Rong said.
“Who else but him?” the farmer
angrily said, “First a young man unreasonably picked a fight with me; he said
this Big Snow Mountain belonged to his family. He wouldn’t let anybody trespass
and gather herbs without authorization. The Big Snow Mountain spans thousands
of ‘li’s; how could it belong to his family? Without a doubt this person was
intentionally provoking me. I remembered Shifu’s teaching to endure patiently;
I was yielding to him over and over. Who would have thought that this young man
got an inch and wanted a foot! He said he wanted me to kowtow to him 300 times
before he let me go down the mountain. Finally I couldn’t hold myself much longer
and we fought. This young man’s martial art was not bad, we fought for half a
day without anybody gaining an upper
hand. Unexpectedly the Old Poison suddenly appeared from a valley and without
saying anything struck out a palm and severely injured me. That young man then
carried me on has back and brought me
over to ‘tian long si’ [sky/heaven dragon temple] where Shifu stayed.”
“Somebody had already avenged
you,” Huang Rong said, “This young master Ouyang was killed.” The farmer was
angry, “Ah, he’s dead. Who killed him?”
“Hey, somebody avenged you;
why are you angry?” Huang Rong asked.
“I want to seek revenge
myself, I want to kill him with my own hand,” the farmer replied. Huang Rong
sighed, “Too bad you can’t do that anymore.”
“Who killed him?” the farmer
asked.
“It was another bad person,”
Huang Rong replied, “His martial art was below young master Ouyang; but he used
craftiness to kill him.”
“Good riddance!” the scholar
said, “Miss, do you know why Ouyang Feng injured my martial brother?”
“What’s so difficult to
guess?” Huang Rong said, “Based on Ouyang Feng’s martial art, he could kill
your martial brother with only one strike; but he only injured him severely and
sent him to your Shifu’s door. Undoubtedly he wanted the Reverend to waste his
energy by treating his disciple’s injury. You told me that this type of
treatment would require a lot of internal strength; he would need five years to recover his energy. Then
on the next Sword Meet of Mount Hua the Reverend would definitely not able to
compete.” “Miss is really smart,” the scholar sighed, “But your guess is only
half-correct. That Ouyang Feng’s evil heart was difficult to fathom. After
Shifu treated my martial brother’s injury, before Shifu recovered, he launched
a secret attack with the intention of killing Shifu …”
Guo Jing interrupted,
“Reverend Yideng is so compassionate and kind, how could he have any enmity
with Ouyang Feng?”
“Xiao Ge [little elder
brother],” the scholar replied, “What you said is not right. First, merciful
and compassionate good people do not coexist with sinister and ruthless evil
people. Second, whenever Ouyang Feng wants to harm anybody, it really doesn’t
matter whether that person has any enmity with him or not. Just because he knew
that the ‘xian tian gong’ is the black star of his Toad Stance he must kill my
Shifu with all possible means.”
Guo Jing nodded his head
repeatedly; “Did the Reverend receive any harm from him?” he asked again.
The scholar replied, “Shifu
saw through Ouyang Feng’s evil scheme as soon as he saw my martial brother’s
injury; that very night we moved away and the Western Poison lost our track. We
know he has failed once, he would not give up that easily. He has looked for us
everywhere until finally he found this secret place of ours. After Shifu
recovered his strength we martial brothers proposed to go to the White Camel
Mountain and settled this account with the Western Poison, but Shifu prohibits
us to take any revenge; we must not allow ourselves to create any trouble. With
great difficulty we managed to live peacefully all these years, who would have
thought that with your craftiness you managed to go up the mountain. We only
know you are the Nine-fingered Divine Beggar’s disciples; we did not know you
meant to do our Shifu harm, hence we did not stop you with all of our
strengths. Otherwise we would put our four lives at stake and in no way would
allow you to enter the temple. Who would have thought that the man did not have
any intention to harm the tiger, but the
tiger is harming the man. Ay! In the end my Shifu still fall under your evil
hands.” Speaking thus his face turned fierce, with a tiger like power he slowly
stood up. With a ‘shua’ sound the sword on his waist went out its sheath,
glimmering cold, dazzling the eye.
The fisherman, the woodcutter
and the farmer also stood up unsheathing their weapons, surrounding them from
four directions. Huang Rong said, “I came to ask the Reverend to treat my
injury, not knowing it would require all of the Reverend’s strength that he would
lose his internal energy for five years. There is poison in those pills; I was
framed by somebody else. The Reverend
has shown me this kind of mercy; even if I don’t have a heart, I still
will not repay kindness with evil.”
With a stern voice the fisherman
said, “Then why do you take advantage while Shifu’s strength is gone and he is
poisoned you lead the enemy going up the mountain?”
Jing and Rong two people were
stunned, “We did not!” they said with a confused voice.
“You still deny it?” the fisherman
said, “As soon as my Shifu is poisoned, the enemy delivered a jade bracelet on
the foot of the mountain. If you did not scheme it ahead, how can there be such
coincidence?”
“What jade bracelet?” Huang
Rong asked.
The fisherman was angry, “You
still act stupid!” The iron oars in his hands moved; the left oar swept
horizontally, the right oar went down vertically, attacking both Guo Jing and
Huang Rong.
Guo Jing was sitting side by
side with Huang Rong on meditation mats on the floor. As he saw the oars arrive
he leaped up with his right hand forming a hook brushing away the horizontally
sweeping oar, while his left hand caught the flat of the oar and jerked it
hard. This jerking action carried a very strong force; the fisherman felt pain
and tingling sensation which forced him to let the oar go. Guo Jing pushed the
oar forward. ‘Bang!’ it hit the farmer’s iron rake; sparks flew everywhere.
Immediately Guo Jing shoved the iron oar back into the fisherman’s hand. The
fisherman was surprised; he took the oar back. Exerting his strength to his
right arm he struck down together with the woodcutter’s axe.
Guo Jing’s palm came one after
another, carrying strong gusts of wind, coming fast toward the two men’s torso.
The scholar knew the fierceness of the ’18-Dragon Subduing Palms’, “Back off
quickly!” he anxiously shouted.
Both the fisherman and the
woodcutter were disciples of a well-known expert; their martial arts were
anything but ordinary. Before Guo Jing’s stance arrived they had hastily
withdrew their weapons and leaped back. Suddenly they felt a jerk dampening
their backward movement; turned out their weapons were pulled forward by Guo
Jing’s palm strength. They had no choice but let their weapons go; saving their
own lives was more important.
Guo Jing caught the iron oar
and the steel axe, he lightly tossed them back and called out, “Catch these!”
“Good martial art!” the
scholar praised; his long sword threatening Guo Jing’s right side.
Seeing this attack Guo Jing
was startled; among Yideng’s four disciples this scholar looked the most
refined, but actually his martial art surpassed those of his colleagues; hence
Guo Jing did not dare to underestimate him. His palms fluttered in the air,
enveloping Huang Rong and his own body with tremendous force. This defense was
truly stable, like an abyss stopping a mountain peak; there was not a single
hole in it. His palms were like rainbow, continuously circling around bigger
and bigger that the fisherman, the woodcutter, the farmer and the scholar were
gradually pushed back till their backs were against the wall. Never mind
counterattacking, merely defending themselves was not easy.
By this time if Guo Jing added
more force to his palms these four people would inevitably suffer injury.
Fighting a moment longer Guo Jing held back his strength, he attacked hard then
backed off hard, struck light then fended off light, it seemed like his force
was there and then disappeared; throughout the battle he steadily held the
power balance so they were on the level ground, nobody won and nobody lost.
The scholar’s sword technique
suddenly changed; his long sword vibrated, creating a continuously buzzing
noise. His sword turned into six swords on the top, six swords on the bottom,
six swords on the front, six swords on the back, six swords on the left and six
swords on the right, successively stabbing like six by six, thirty six swords
altogether. It was the Yunnan’s ‘ai lao shan’ [Mount Ailao] thirty-six sword;
considered one of the best offensive sword techniques in the world.
Guo Jing’s left palm parried
the fisherman, the woodcutter and the farmer three people’s weapons; his right palm followed the movements of the
scholar’s sword: up and down, front to back, left to right. Although the sword
underwent countless changes, Guo Jing had always succeeded in diverting the
sword stab by the power of his palm. Each sword stab passed very close to his
clothes, but never once did it manage to even make a scratch on Guo Jing’s
skin.
Blocking to the thirty-sixth
stab, Guo Jing bent his right middle finger under his thumb; he waited for the
incoming sword to lose its momentum before he suddenly flicked the body of the
sword. It was the ‘tan zhi shen tong’
[Divine Flicking Finger], Huang Yaoshi’s special skill which was considered unparalleled
in the present age. Huang Yaoshi used this special skill when he played
shooting marbles with Zhou Botong; and again in the Cloud Village, when he was
giving direction to Mei Chaofeng. Guo Jing watched him fighting the Quanzhen’s
Seven Masters at the Ox Village near Lin’an using this special skill. Having
learned a certain amount of the martial art secrets from the Manual he managed
to imitate the flicking finger technique. Although it was inferior to Huang
Yaoshi’s subtle and elegant flicking finger, but it still carried a tremendous
force.
With a metallic clank the long
sword was shaken; the scholar’s arm was numb, the sword almost fell from his
hand. The scholar was shocked; he leaped backward and called out, “Hold it!”
The fisherman, the woodcutter
and the farmer three people leaped backward at once. Only their backs were very
close to the wall to begin with, so there was no place they could withdraw to.
The fisherman leaped out of the door, the farmer jumped out over the hole in
the wall Guo Jing made earlier. The woodcutter inserted his axe back into his
waist. He smiled and said, “I told you these two did not have any evil
intentions, but you did not believe me.”
The scholar put his sword back
into its sheath; he cupped his fists toward Guo Jing and said, “Xiao Ge [little
elder brother] has held back your palms, we are feeling grateful.”
Guo Jing busily bowed down to
return the gesture, but his heart was full of questions, “From the start we did
not have any ill-intention; why didn’t they believe us? Why is it after we
fought they changed their minds and believed us?”
Huang Rong noticed his
confused expression, she knew what he was thinking; she whispered to his ear,
“If you harbor ill intentions, then you would have injured these four people.
How can even Reverend Yideng be your match right now?” Guo Jing thought it was
true, he nodded his head repeatedly.
The farmer and the fisherman
walked back into the room. Huang Rong asked, “I wonder who the Reverend’s enemy
is? What is this jade bracelet that was delivered earlier?” The scholar
replied, “It’s not that we don’t want to tell you, but frankly speaking we
don’t even know the truth surrounding this matter. All I know is that the
reason my Shifu became a monk is closely related to this matter.”
Huang Rong was about to
inquire further when suddenly the farmer jumped up and shouted, “Aiyo! It’s
dangerous!”
“What is it?” the fisherman
asked.
The farmer pointed his finger
to the scholar and said, “Shifu has lost all his strength, he is telling
everything, concealing nothing; if these two harbor any ill intention while the
four of us are powerless to hold them up, will Shifu be still alive?”
The woodcutter said, “The
Honorable Zhuangyuan can predict with divine accuracy. If he could not predict
the outcome of this small matter, how could he become the Dali’s Prime
Minister? He had known from the start that these two are friends and not foes;
but he deliberately proceeded with fighting them. First, to test these two
friends’ martial art; second, to convince the two of you.”
The scholar showed a faint
smile. The farmer and the fisherman looked at each other; they were partly
admiring the scholar, partly blaming their own rashness.
At that moment they heard
footsteps coming in from outside the door. A young monk came in. He clasped his
hands and said, “Shifu orders four martial brothers to send the guests off.”
Everybody stood up immediately.
Guo Jing said, “The Reverend
is expecting an enemy; how can we walk away just like that? Forgetting my own
inability Xiao Di [little/lowly younger brother] wants to collaborate with the
four martial brothers to face the visitor.”
The fisherman, the woodcutter,
the farmer and the scholar looked at each other with delighted expressions.
“Let me ask Shifu,” the scholar said.
Four people went in together.
They stayed inside for quite a long time. When they came back out Guo Jing and Huang Rong saw their crestfallen
expression and knew that Reverend Yideng did not allow them to help. And sure
enough; the scholar said, “Shifu thanks the two of you very much; but he said
that everybody reaps what he sows, other people must not interfere.”
“Jing Gege,” Huang Rong said,
“Let us talk to the Reverend.” They went to the building where Reverend
Yideng’s meditation house is. Guo Jing knocked the door for half a day but
nobody answered. He could have shoved the door open, but how could he dare to
play rough?
The woodcutter low-spiritedly
said, “Shifu cannot receive the two of you. The mountain is high and the river is
long, we will meet again some other time.”
Guo Jing felt deeply grateful
toward Reverend Yideng, his warm blood bubbling up his chest; he was unable to
restrain himself, with a loud voice he said, “Rong’er, whether the Reverend
allows us or not, let us go down the mountain. If we see anybody messing
around, we’ll beat the hell out of him first, then we’ll talk.”
“That is a wonderful idea,”
Huang Rong replied. “If the Reverend’s enemy is so fierce that we die in his
hands, consider that we are repaying the Reverend’s kindness.”
Guo Jing spoke with power,
Huang Rong also intentionally raised her voice, of course Reverend Yideng heard
them. They were just about to turn around when the wooden door suddenly opened.
An old monk with a sharp voice said, “The Reverend invites you to come in.”
Guo Jing was pleasantly
surprised; alongside Huang Rong he walked into the room. Reverend Yideng and
that Indian monk were still sitting cross-legged on the meditation mats just as
before. Two people bowed down to the ground. They raised their heads and saw
that Yideng’s complexion was yellow and sickly; totally different from the
first time they saw him. Two people’s hearts were overwhelmed with gratitude
and regret at the same time; they did not know what to say.
Yideng turned toward his four
disciples on the door, “Everybody come in, I want to say something.”
The fisherman, the woodcutter,
the farmer and the scholar went inside the meditation room and paid their respects to their master and
martial uncle. The Indian monk nodded his head to acknowledge, then he went
back into his meditation, did not pay more attention to anybody. Reverend
Yideng gazed at the rising incense smoke, he seemed to be lost in thought; his
hand played with a sheep-white colored jade bracelet. Huang Rong thought, “It
is obviously a woman’s bracelet. I wonder what is Reverend’s enemy’s intention
in sending it over?”
A moment later Yideng heaved a
sigh and turned to Guo Jing and Huang Rong, “The Old Monk gratefully accepts
your kind intention. This matter relates to a complicated cause and effect; if
I did not talk, I am afraid there will be casualties on both sides, and that is
not the Old Monk’s original intention. Do you know what kind of man I was?”
“Uncle was the Emperor of the
Dali country of Yunnan,” Huang Rong replied, “The only emperor of the southern
sky, with awe-inspiring power and prestige; who in this world has never heard
about you?”
Yideng showed a faint smile.
“Emperor is superficial, Old Monk is also superficial, awe-inspiring power and
prestige is fake. You, a young miss, are also a fake.”
Huang Rong did not understand
his allegorical words; she stared at him with her bright, crystal clear
beautiful eyes.
Yideng slowly continued, “My
Dali kingdom was founded by the Emperor Shen Sheng Wen Wu Tai Zu [lit.
divine/holy literature and martial art (or civil and military) great ancestor]
in the year of Ding You. It was twenty-three years before the Great Song’s
founder, Zhao Kuangyin, Emperor Zhou staged a rebellion and assumed the throne
of the Song Dynasty. Seven generation from the Emperor Shen Sheng Wen Wu, the
throne was passed on to Emperor Bing Yi. He became an emperor for only four
years before he became a monk, bequeathing the throne to his nephew, Emperor
Sheng De. Following Emperor Sheng De were Emperor Xing Zong Xiao De, Emperor
Bao Ding, Emperor Xian Zong Xuan Ren, and then my father, Emperor Jing Zong
Zheng Kang; all had become monks. From Tai Zu [great ancestor/founder] to me,
there are eighteen emperors, among which seven had left their home [meaning:
became monks].”
The fisherman, the woodcutter,
the farmer and the scholar were people of Dali; naturally they knew their
country’s history. But Guo Jing and Huang Rong felt strange, they thought,
“Reverend Yideng did not want to become an emperor but became a monk instead
was already surprising; turned out many of his ancestors had taken the same
path. Could it be that being a monk is better than being an emperor?”
Reverend Yideng continued, “By
divine providence our Duan family has been ruling with a great power over a
small area ever since. Each generation realizes his own virtue and ability. In
reality we all are insufficient to bear this heavy responsibility; hence all
along we fulfill our duty with fear and trepidation, did not dare to overstep
our boundary. Didn’t the emperors eat without plowing? Wearing clothes without
weaving? Going out and coming in to the palace in a carriage? Are these not the
common people’s blood and sweat? When the emperors reached their advance years
their own hearts convicted them of all their merit and guilt; always enjoying
the toil of the people while contributing only a few, how they have committed a
multitude of sin while performing their office duty. Therefore, oftentimes they
decided to abdicate their thrones and became monks.”
Speaking to this point he
raised his head looking outside, the corners of his mouth revealed a smile,
while his eyebrows showed a grieving heart. Six people listening silently,
nobody dared to make any noise. Reverend Yideng raised up his left index finger
with the jade bracelet on it. He spinned it around several times and said, “As
for me, I did not become a monk for the same reason. Actually, it has something
to do with the Sword Meet of Mount Hua, where we compete over the Manual. That
year the Quanzhen Sect’s founder, Chongyang Zhenren won the Manual. The
following year he paid a visit to Dali, passing along the ‘xian tian gong’ to
me. He stayed in my palace for about half a month. We were having the time of our
lives discussing martial art. But his martial brother Zhou Botong was fidgety
after about ten days of doing nothing; he roamed to the east and strolled to
the west inside the palace, and had caused an incident.”
Huang Rong said in her heart,
“It would be strange indeed if the Old Urchin Zhou Botong did not create any
trouble.”