Chapter 77
Teleportations — I Wanna Be An Online Celebrity
âIf you persist, Iâll send for a doctor to check it.â
Lengmei panicked for she didnât expect Chu Tiankuo to be so serious about it. She knew he was getting to the bottom of it for Tang Xiaâs sake. She hurriedly made up an excuse.
âYour Majesty, I might have caught a cold last night⦠I didnât feel like eating anything after I got up this morning, and I feel a dull ache in my head. Iâm not in good condition⦠I canât see other people for now.â She lifted her silk handkerchief to cover her lips and burst into a spasm of coughing. She frowned slightly, and her face turned pale, making her look more pitiable than Xi Shi.
âEven better. The doctor can also cure your cold. Donât worry. I wonât grudge drug expenses to you.â Chu Tiankuo was in a real fury and wasnât moved by Lengmeiâs pity at all. His face was covered in formidable air and his words were full of taunts.
âSend for the doctor!â
At once, a eunuch standing obscurely nearby bowed and replied with a soft âyesâ, and then walked outside the chamber and spoke loudly, âSend for the principal doctor of the Imperial Hospital!â
Shortly afterward, Doctor Hu arrived carrying a drug box. He noticed the stifling atmosphere and deathly silence in the chamber, and he knew it would be a sinister task that might even cost his life.
Chu Tiankuo had long lost his patience. If it were not for all sorts of worries, he should have executed this disgusting woman already. He didnât want to stay with her in the same chamber anymore. The doctorâs appearance was a sight for his sore eyes. The recent gossip slightly changed the queenâs attitude toward him, even if it was not in the most pleasing direction though. He waved the sleeve of his royal robe to spare the doctor the formalities and said sneeringly, âConcubine Lengmei alleged she was pregnant. You take a good look at her and see if she told the truth.â
Doctor Hu greeted Lengmei and then walked up to the glazed bead curtain of her bed. Lengmei poked out her hand covered in a handkerchief underneath the curtain, allowing Doctor Hu to rest several fingers on her wrist to feel her pulse. He closed his eyes and held breath to detect if there was any subtle difference from the ordinary pulse.
The pulse was as smooth as rolling beads. It was the pulse of pregnancy.
Even though Doctor Hu didnât have much experience with pregnancy pulse in the harem, he detected its mark in the blink of an eye. He was about to express congratulations when he recalled the stifling atmosphere upon his entrance into the chamber and the emperorâs somewhat meaningful words. He kept his composure, stood up and bowed, and then said courteously while holding back his sleeves.
âYour Majesty, Your Grace, it is pregnancy indeed.â
âEm⦠what?â Even Chu Tiankuo, acute as he was, didnât follow his words at first. After a pause, he realized what the doctor meant. He grabbed him at his collar, and snapped furiously, âDo you know how grave the guilt of deceiving the emperor is?â
Lengmei sobbed behind the curtain and said, âYour Majesty, I know you donât like me, but please donât dislike my innocent baby just because of meâ¦â
Doctor Hu was born in a family of doctors. He grew up in the Imperial Hospital since his childhood and received medical training from his father and his eldest brother. He served the imperial family for decades to finally reach the position of the principal imperial doctor. He couldnât be more familiar with the tricks in the harem. Those lovable concubines were willing to do anything to give birth to a prince to stabilize their positions. However, Chu Tiankuoâs attitude puzzled Doctor Hu. It was normally recognized as good news for a concubine to get pregnant. There were too many emperors in the history that died without a descendant, resulting in the inheritance of the throne by a brother. He wondered why His Majesty was angry at the news rather than being happy about it. Unless⦠He dared not think about it further. His conjecture was dangerous to the extent that it might incur the death penalty for all his families. Besides, he was still grabbed at his collar, his throat tightly squeezed. He tried to stand on tiptoe to reduce the pressure, but he was still unable to breathe properly. His face turned purplish red, and he struggled to utter, âYourâ¦Majestyâ¦Howâ¦dareâ¦Iâ¦lieâ¦toâ¦youâ¦Itâ¦isâ¦trueâ¦â
â¦
An emperorâs wrath could cause the death of millions. Doctor Hu couldnât believe he was still alive.
Just now, Chu Tiankuo firmly gripped his throat and kept questioning him. Doctor Hu insisted on his view, which infuriated Chu Tiankuo. He threw Doctor Hu to the wall. Doctor Hu flew over to the floor, smashing several rare vases from foreign lands in the way despite his effort to steady his body, which was in vain for he didnât have any martial arts training. Some of the fragments even pierced his flesh. Chu Tiankuo flung his sleeves back and left the chamber without saying another word.
Doctor Hu rested for a while and stood up quietly. The great pain on his neck and back told him what just happened was not his dream. None of the servants nearby dared give him a hand.
Lengmei reclined on an embroidered pillow, gave an elusive smile and put her hands on her belly. âDoctor Hu, please stay. Could you write a prescription to nourish my body?â
A clever maid walked up to grind ink and lay the paper. Doctor Hu held a brush and started to write. The prescription included regular healthy ingredients like fleece-flower root, angelica sinensis, white peony root, Chinese wolfberry, and medical dogwood. Lengmei thanked him and rewarded him some silver knobs wrapped in red paper.
Maids responsible for sweeping and watering were notorious for their enthusiasm for gossip behind their directors. The next morning, everyone knew the Imperial Hospital confirmed Concubine Lengmeiâs pregnancy. Concubines living near and far from Lengmeiâs chamber all went to visit her, bringing various gifts. Of course, Tang Xia wasnât among them.
âLengmei, my dear big sisterâ¦â
âLengmei, my dear little sisterâ¦â
Nobody was honest and sincere here. Everyone just took what they needed and did what was best for themselves. Lengmei received lots of attention and flattery these days. Even though Chu Tiankuo didnât enter her chamber since that day, she led a busy and happy life. Not every concubine could be that popular in the harem. She had the one thing desired by all other concubines, even those who were more charming, intelligent, or talented than her.
Sometimes she felt confused. What was the purpose of all her actions? The love from Chu Tiankuo? The future of her family? Or the envy of Tang Xia?
None of them. Or all of them perhaps.
The ordinary people envied the life behind the red palace walls. In their imagination, it was all about wealth, pleasure and extravagance. Even the animals â imported Western cats or Ferghana horses from the borderlands â were taken good care of by special staff and lived better than the ordinary people who earned a modest living with a few acres of farmland.
Lengmei never experienced hunger or coldness. She was the lady of the Leng family. Ladies from the noble families were usually bossy and cocky for they had their family power behind them. But she couldnât. She had to smile without baring teeth and walk while keeping the hemline on the ground. She had to learn musical instruments, chess, calligraphy, and painting. She had to study poems and proses. Only through such culture could she win the heart of the emperor, and her familyâs investment in her would be paid back.
She recalled something that happened shortly after she entered the harem. She met her mother and nanny at an imperial feast. She was so happy and was about to greet them when they bowed to her and said, âBlessings to you, Your Grace.â
She suddenly realized she was no longer a lady of the Leng family but one of the three thousand concubines of the emperor, which her family long expected her to become. She gave a gentle smile and said, âStand up.â
There were many girls like her in her family. âIâm the best among them.â Lengmei often thought proudly in her chamber after she qualified for entering the harem.
But the harem was far different from what she expected. It was full of schemes and betrayals. After she won attention by framing a teenage girl for the first time, she knew she mastered the rules of the harem and she would not stop there. She had forgotten the look of that girl long ago. She only remembered she was always wearing a cute smile.
She was buried in her memories with blurred eyes when a maid in green called her back to reality, âYour Grace, Zui Linglong is here to see you.â
âInvite her to join me in the backyard and make tea with Green Conch Spring leaves my family sent here last time.â Lengmei smiled at a small bronze mirror. It was the smile that aristocrats liked, a smile that was both tender and cute. âI can still do it. I used to practice for so long after all.â she thought.
Zui Linglong was wearing white clothes and no makeup, just as usual. It was quite at odds with Lengmeiâs gorgeous apparel. Lengmei sometimes felt she was looking at a wandering ghost walking off the ground.
A gust of wind blew in, rattling her clothes, making her look even thinner, like a lonely and soulless skeleton standing there.
Lengmei winked and rolled up sleeves to make tea for her visitor. She added some fresh tea leaves into the boiled water with her exquisite fingers. The water gradually turned green and the green grew darker, emitting a vapor in the air that moistened the chamber. âItâs like a dream when I talk with you. It wonât surprise me if you vanish all of a sudden.â
Zui Linglong remained silent. She didnât drink the tea but just sat still, gazing at Lengmei. Lengmei wasnât the least perturbed, and she kept talking on her own about the exotic gifts she received and interesting stories she heard about recently.
After she finished a story about two rich men smashing coral tree to show they had more wealth than each other, Zui Linglong finally said, âThe altar?â
Lengmei knew she was asking why she didnât use the altar. She replied casually that it was not damaging enough and might fail to exterminate her enemy.
Zui Linglong pointed out bluntly that Lengmeiâs pregnancy was not real.
Lengmei nodded for she didnât intend to hide the truth from Zui Linglong in the first place. It was a voodoo she obtained from a barbarian tribe, and she didnât expect it to be used on herself then.
It could be used to fake pregnancy on someone else. She could send the victim into the limelight and then push her into hell by exposing the fraud. What could be a better torment than that?
Zui Linglong asked, âHow are you going to handle it?â
Lengmei looked aside. The backyard was arranged as she dictated. There were some bare and peculiar rocks, and no flowers were planted intentionally. Sometimes a couple of wild flowers would appear in the corners, lonely and timid.
âI had Doctor Hu prescribe some tocolytic drugs for me.â They were both smart enough to understand the implication. The harem was never devoid of accidents. Suddenly, something occurred to Lengmei and she asked the question she had always been curious about.
âWhy did you help me?â
âI never helped you. You are helping yourself.â
With a sizzle, the tea water boiled again. A wild goose flapped wings and flew over the clear sky above their heads. Was it flying across the palace or out of it?
Lengmei didnât know, and she didnât need to know. All she needed to do was to bear the weight of the wronged souls and live in the dream woven by extravagance and tears.
It was her destiny and the duty her family gave her.