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Chapter 3 - Chapter 3: Jinshi

"They're at it again," Jinshi muttered glumly to himself. It was

unseemly, the way the blossoms of the palace carried on

sometimes. It fell to Jinshi—one among his many responsibilities

—to quiet things down.

As he waded into the crowd, Jinshi saw one person walking

along as if the uproar didn't concern her. She was a petite girl

with freckles peppering her nose and cheeks. There was nothing

else distinctive about her, except that she paid no heed at all to

Jinshi as she walked along muttering to herself.

And that could well have been the end of it.

It was not quite a month later that word spread the young

prince had died. Consort Lihua was consumed with weeping, and

was thinner now than ever; she no longer looked anything like the

woman who had once been considered the blooming rose of the

court. Perhaps she suffered from the same illness as her son, or

perhaps it was an affliction of the spirit that blighted her.

Regardless, she could hardly hope for another child in such

condition.

Princess Lingli, the half sister of the deceased prince, soon

recovered from her indisposition, and she and her mother became

a great comfort to the bereaved emperor. Indeed, it seemed likely

Consort Gyokuyou might soon bear another child, given how often

His Majesty visited.

The prince and princess had both suffered from the same

mysterious illness, yet one had recovered while the other had

succumbed. Could it be the age gap between them? It had been

just three months, but such a span could make a significant

diference in an infant's resilience. And what of Lihua? If the

princess had made a recovery, then there was every reason the

consort should be able to as well. Unless she was suffering chiefly

from the psychological shock of losing her son.Jinshi turned these thoughts over in his head as he reviewed

some paperwork and pressed his chop to it. If there was any

diference between the two children, perhaps it lay with Consort

Gyokuyou.

"I'm going out for a while," Jinshi said as he stamped the final

page with his chop, and promptly left the room.

The princess, cheeks as full and rosy as steamed buns, smiled

at him with all the innocence a child could muster. Her tiny hand

clasped into a fist around Jinshi's finger.

"No, child, let him go," her mother, a red-haired beauty,

scolded gently. She wrapped the infant in swaddling clothes and

put her down to sleep in her crib. The princess, apparently too

warm, kicked the coverings off and lay watching the visitor,

gurgling happily.

"I presume you wish to ask me something," said the consort,

always a perceptive woman.

Jinshi got right to the point. "Why did the princess recover her

health?"

Consort Gyokuyou allowed herself the smallest of smiles before

pulling a piece of cloth from a pouch. The cloth had been torn off

of something and was adorned with ungainly characters. Not only

was the handwriting uneven, but the message appeared to have

been written using grass stains, so in places it was faded and

difficult to read.

Your face powder is poison. Don't let it touch the baby.

Perhaps the faltering quality of the handwriting was deliberate.

Jinshi cocked his head. "Your face powder?"

"Yes," Gyokuyou said, entrusting the child in the crib to a wet

nurse and opening a drawer. She took out something wrapped in

cloth: a ceramic vessel. She opened the lid to a puff of white

powder.

"This?"

"The very same."

Perhaps, Jinshi conjectured, there was something in the

powder. He remembered that Gyokuyou, already possessing the

pale skin that was so prized at court, didn't need to use the

powder to try to make herself more beautiful. Consort Lihua, incontrast, looked so sallow that she used more of it every day to

conceal her condition.

"My little princess is quite a hungry girl," Gyokuyou said. "I

don't make enough milk for her, so I hired a nurse to help."

Sometimes mothers whose children had died shortly after birth

found work as wet nurses. "This face powder belonged to that

woman. She favored it because she felt it was whiter than other

powders."

"And where is this nurse now?"

"She took ill, so I dismissed her. With ample funds for her

livelihood, of course." Spoken like a woman who was both

intellectual and perhaps too kind for her own good.

So say there was some kind of poison in the face powder. If

the mother were to use it, it would impact the child; if whatever

was in the powder got into the mother's milk, it might even end

up in the child's body. Neither Jinshi nor Gyokuyou knew what

such a poison might be. But if the mysterious message was to be

believed, it was how the young prince had met his end. By simple

face powder, makeup used by any number of people in the rear

palace.

"Ignorance is a sin," Gyokuyou said. "I should have taken more

care with what was going into my child's mouth."

"I'm guilty of the same crime," Jinshi said. It was ultimately he

who had allowed the Emperor's son to be lost. And there may

have been others who had died in the womb.

"I told Consort Lihua about the face powder, but anything I say

only makes her dig in her heels," said Gyokuyou. Lihua had dark

bags under her eyes even now, and used ample helpings of the

white makeup to conceal the poor color of her face, never

believing it was poisonous.

Jinshi gazed at the simple cotton cloth. He thought it looked

strangely familiar. The hesitant quality of the characters appeared

to be a ruse, but the hand had an unmistakably feminine quality.

"Who gave this to you, and when?"

"It came the day I demanded the doctor examine my daughter.

I'm afraid I only succeeded in causing you trouble, but this was by

the window afterward. It was tied to a rhododendron branch."

Jinshi remembered the commotion that day. Had someone inthe crowd noticed something, realized something, left a word of

warning? But who? "No doctor in the palace would resort to such

circuitous methods," he said.

"I agree. And ours never did seem to know how to treat the

prince."

All that commotion. On reflection, Jinshi did remember a

serving girl who had seemed distanced from the other

rubbernecks. She had been talking to herself. What was it she had

been saying?

"I need something to write on."

Jinshi felt the pieces fall into place. He started to chuckle.

"Consort Gyokuyou, if I were to find the author of this message,

what would you do with her?"

"I would thank her profusely. I owe her my daughter's life," the

consort said, her eyes sparkling. Ah, so she was keen to discover

her benefactor.

"Very well. Perhaps you would allow me to keep these for a

short while."

"I eagerly await whatever you may discover." Gyokuyou looked

happily at Jinshi. He returned her smile, then collected the jar of

face powder and the cloth with the message on it. He searched

his memory for any cloth that felt quite like this.

"Far be it from me to disappoint His Majesty's favorite lady."

Jinshi's smile had all the innocence of a child on a treasure hunt.

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