The door slides open. Jinshi stands there, arms crossed, expression unreadable. Behind him, Gaoshun holds a rope and a ledger of his own. Jinshi speaks softly, but each word is a blade: “You used palace property, endangered palace staff, and operated outside the law. But…” He glances at Maomao. “You did it for a reason I cannot entirely dismiss.”
Chapter 75.1 – The Whispers of the Western Wing Opening Scene: The chapter opens in the quiet, pre-dawn hours of the rear palace. Maomao is in her modest apothecary room, grinding dried licorice root and star anise. A single oil lamp flickers, casting long shadows. She pauses, noticing a faint, unusual scent drifting through the paper screens—not the usual incense from the consorts’ chambers, but something sharper, metallic. Blood.
Maomao spends pages cross-referencing shipments. She discovers a discrepancy: the palace has received three separate deliveries of aconite root over two months, but only one was officially requested by the medical office. The other two were signed for by a eunuch from the central administrative hall—a man named Rouen , known to be quiet, efficient, and utterly forgettable. The door slides open
Maomao follows the scent to the western wing of the palace, an area rarely visited since Consort Lihua’s recovery. There, she finds a young maid collapsed by the edge of an abandoned well. The girl’s hands are stained with soil and dried blood. She’s clutching a small, broken ceramic bottle. Maomao immediately recognizes the residue inside: Aconitum , also known as wolfsbane or monk’s hood—a potent poison, but also a medicinal analgesic if prepared correctly.
Back in her room, Maomao lays out three broken bottles—evidence from each incident. She notes the commonality: all are low-grade ceramic, cheap and easily replaceable, but each contained a different concentration of aconite. She realizes this isn’t an assassination attempt. It’s an experiment. Someone is trying to determine the exact dosage between pain relief and death, using servants as unwitting test subjects. Jinshi speaks softly, but each word is a
Jinshi offers Rouen a choice: execution for attempted poisoning, or banishment from the palace and a lifetime of service in the outer medical clinics under supervision—where his knowledge of aconite can be used properly, under the watch of licensed physicians. Rouen chooses the latter, weeping.
Jinshi arrives with Gaoshun, his expression unreadable but his eyes sharp. He notes Maomao’s early presence. “You smell the rain before it falls,” he says quietly. Maomao counters, “No, the poison before it’s swallowed.” The maid is taken away for questioning. Jinshi reveals that this is the third such incident this month—servants collapsing near abandoned structures, all showing signs of mild poisoning, but none fatal. Someone is testing something. Maomao is in her modest apothecary room, grinding
Rouen’s composure cracks. His hands tremble. He admits his wife, a former palace seamstress, died slowly from a bone disease, and no apothecary would help because she was “only a servant.” He wanted to create a cheap, potent painkiller for the poor.
A single small panel. A letter slips under Maomao’s door. She picks it up. No signature. One line: “The child from the western garden asks about you.” Maomao’s eyes widen. The chapter ends.
That night, Maomao sits by her mortar and pestle, not working, just thinking. She stares at a small jar labeled “Aconite – Lethal Dose.” She whispers: “Medicine is a knife. It can cut out a sickness or slit a throat. The hand holding it matters more than the herb itself.”