He asked the guard if, the reception and all the guests aside, there had been anything, anything at all, during last night’s watch that had struck him as out of the ordinary.
Just as Cí expected, the man said no.
It didn’t matter. Cí had made a discovery that definitely constituted an advance.
Back in his quarters, Cí compared soil samples from the palace gardens with the soil he’d removed from under the bronze maker’s fingernails. The soil from beside the pond was moist, compact, and blackish; the soil from the edge of the forest was looser, brown, and had bits of pine needles in it; the third sample, from underneath the balconies, was gravelly; the last, which was from directly alongside the wall, was yellowish and sticky, probably due to the clay used as mortar between the bricks.
The soil from under the bronze maker’s nails matched this last sample.
He labeled the samples and spent the rest of the afternoon going over his notes. At sundown, he threw his notes to the floor in frustration. He had yet to hear any results from the portrait’s being passed around the hospitals and pharmacies, or from the interviews with the bronze workshop employees, but he didn’t hold great hope for either. His idea with the lance in regard to the chest wounds hadn’t worked out. His hypotheses suddenly seemed as foolish as the idea that a blind person would be capable of multiple murders.
Though he had his doubts, he hadn’t put aside the possibility of Blue Iris’s involvement. The link between the post of nüshi and Essence of Jade, though circumstantial, potentially placed her at the scene of every single one of the murders. And as Kan had been so eager to point out, she had ample reasons to hate the emperor. It was a deep-rooted hate, one her father would have fueled with stories of the bad treatment of their ancestor Fei Yue.
Cí’s thoughts turned to the nüshi. Really, he hadn’t stopped thinking about her since the moment they’d met. He didn’t want to admit it, but there was something about her that had hold of him—something beyond the murders, something he couldn’t fully comprehend, much less explain.
Gray Fox was also on Cí’s mind. In spite of the danger represented by Gray Fox’s return, the risks associated with failing to solve these crimes, and all the many reasons that seemed to be telling him to flee, he wouldn’t consider leaving. He’d come too far to stop now. A place in the judiciary was almost within reach. The emperor had promised it, and however great the obstacles seemed, it was his dream, the dream Judge Feng had inculcated in him.
He owed Feng everything. He had only to shut his eyes and there Feng was. And if he kept his eyes shut a few moments longer, his father also appeared. Cí pictured himself receiving the title of judge.
He asked himself what could have become of Feng. He often thought of making another attempt to find him. But much as Cí didn’t want to think about it, he was still technically a fugitive. He had no right to drag Feng into dishonor.
A knock at his door interrupted his thoughts. It was Bo. The transfer of remnants from the bronze workshop was under way, he said, and Blue Iris had sent word that she wished to meet Cí the next day at the Water Lily Pavilion.
She wants to meet me?
It was improper for a married woman to meet a stranger without a chaperone. Although Bo told him Blue Iris’s husband would be there, too, Cí shivered. The norms calling for women to be seen and not heard, serving tea and doing not much more, obviously didn’t apply to a nüshi.
He barely slept that night, so insistent was Blue Iris in his mind.
Cí woke exhausted. It wasn’t the first time his nerves had gotten the better of him, but he was annoyed; he’d wanted to be at his best when he saw Blue Iris again. He decided to wear the same robes as he had at the reception and was dismayed to find they were wrinkled, though Blue Iris wouldn’t see them. He rubbed a few drops of sandalwood essence at his wrists and neck. He had a quick look over the notes he’d made on Jin history before setting out.
The Water Lily Pavilion was situated inside the Forest of Freshness, its walls running parallel to the Imperial civil servants’ palatial buildings. Bo had described how to get there, and Cí had no trouble finding it.
He arrived early at the gleaming pavilion, a two-story structure surrounded by a lemon grove. The building’s eaves curved proudly upward like the flight of a crane. Cí made sure his cap was straight and glanced down at his robes, annoyed to see the wrinkles were still there. Then he stepped forward and reached his hand up to knock, but the door opened before he made contact. A servant bowed and beckoned him to follow. They came to a light-filled room with tiles that appeared to have been freshly glazed, and continued until they came in sight of a woman, with her back to them, wearing a loose-fitting turquoise hanfu and with her hair up in a wide silk band. The servant announced Cí, and when the woman turned to face him, he blushed. Blue Iris was even more captivating in the light of day. He tried to get a hold of himself and glanced around for her husband, who was nowhere to be seen.
“We meet again,” he said, immediately aware of how ridiculous he sounded.
Blue Iris smiled. Just to see her teeth felt to Cí like some kind of erotic invitation. Her hanfu was very slightly parted at the front, and Cí could see a glimpse of her cleavage beneath. In spite of her blindness, he still had a sense she’d catch him looking, and he averted his gaze. She invited him to sit and began serving tea. He was touched by the ease with which her hands seemed to caress the pot and the cups.
“Thank you for inviting me,” he managed to say.
She nodded courteously and asked how he had found the reception. He answered amiably, avoiding any mention of the bronze maker’s murder. Then there was an uncomfortable silence—Cí felt uncomfortable, at least. He was absorbed watching Blue Iris; he felt gripped by every blink, every breath. He wrenched his gaze away and took a sip of the tea. For some reason, perhaps to try and reassert an air of normality, he let out a gasp as if the tea was too hot.
“What is it?” she asked.
“Nothing. I burned my lips.”
“Apologies,” she said, immediately dipping a cloth in some cool water and dabbing at Cí’s lips, which, despite her blindness, she found effortlessly. He trembled, embarrassed.
“It’s nothing,” he said, disengaging from her touch. “And your husband?”
“He’ll be here soon,” she answered, unperturbed. “So. You stay in the palace. Unusual for a simple adviser…”
“And it’s unusual for a woman of your rank not to have her feet bound,” he said before he could stop himself. Blue Iris hid her feet beneath the hanfu.
“Maybe you find it an abomination,” she said, “but it’s a custom my father rejected, luckily.”
Cí couldn’t believe he’d been so tactless.
“I haven’t been here long,” he said. “Kan invited me to stay for a few days, but I’d rather not stay too long. This isn’t my place.”
“Oh? And where is?”
He weighed his response.
“Academia.”
“Really? And what is your specialty? The classics? Literature? Or poetry, perhaps?”
“Surgery.”
A look of deep disgust wiped the beauty from Blue Iris’s face.
“You’ll have to excuse me,” she said, “but I really don’t see the attraction of opening up bodies. Or, for that matter, what that kind of work could have to do with Kan.”
Cí kicked himself for being indiscreet. Far from gaining anything from the conversation himself, it could get out of hand if he gave too much away. He had to be more cautious with his answers.