She had been a girl of fourteen when she told her mother she wanted to learn to heal people.
Her mother had looked at her for a long moment and then said, "Then go to Sun Ai."
Sun Ai lived at the edge of Chenjia village in a modest hut that was filled with herbs. She never did explain much, she simply demonstrated and waited.
She expected her apprentices to ask the right questions, and if they couldn't formulate the right questions she waited until they could, which had seemed maddening at fourteen and seemed, now, like the only honest way to teach anything.
She had loved those years.
Then her father had introduced her to Pei Desheng. Her choice was not consulted, and it had turned out to be her great fortune.
Her father had told her he was a hard worker who would take good care of her and that Desheng had hounded him for his approval to talk to his daughter.
She had looked at him standing in the doorway and doubted it.
He was smaller than the other men her father had considered, also quieter with no defining features that stood out to her.
He had spent the entire evening of their introduction asking about her apprenticeship. He wanted to know what Sun Ai had taught her. He listened to every answer as if it mattered.
She had thought: this one is full of surprises.
He had gone on surprising her.
She had fallen in love before she noticed it happening, which was, she had decided, the only honest way to fall in love. They had married and she had taken the Pei name and felt, for the first time, that a name had chosen her as much as she had chosen it.
He had done more than do. He had built something with her, moved south to the river fork village when the land was better and the landlords were fewer, worked beside her without complaint through the years that followed.
They had made a daughter first who was gone before she had been in the world long enough to know her own name. She had buried that grief the way she had learned to treat a wound that wouldn't close. She let it scar on its own terms and learned to live with it.
Then Hao had come. He was large and loud and healthy, and she had held him on the morning after his birth and felt the grief redistribute itself into something else, a passionate love for her only boy.
Liang was born two years later.
He was smaller than his brother and quieter in the first weeks, which had worried her until she understood that his quietness was instead attentiveness.
The boy was taking in everything and reserving judgment.
He had his father's eyes and her hands and a quality she didn't have a word for.
He had grown into a clever and lively child who stole vegetables from Old Chen's plot and threw rocks at birds and came home with scraped knees and someone else's radish in his hands while claiming to have not known where it came from.
She had corrected him with a straight face, but privately she had laughed until her ribs ached, because liveliness in a child was something to protect, not suppress, and she had known enough quiet children to understand that the quiet ones carried weight the lively ones did not.
She had been genuinely happy, which was not a small thing in a world that so often revoked it.
Another memory came unbidden, the day that her husband Desheng had come back from the first march.
She remembered the relief of that more clearly than she remembered almost anything else. The cart coming up the road with bodies in it, the sound of the other wailing women, and then Desheng walking through the gate with dust on his face and a limp that would trouble him in cold weather for the rest of his life. She had not wept. She had pressed her hands to both sides of his face and held him there for a long moment and then she had gone inside to start the fire for a meal.
Old Chen had not come back. She had taken food to Chen Mei that evening and every evening for a week after, and said nothing, because there was nothing to say and presence was worth more than words.
Then the boys had changed.
Hao was always Hao, the same warmth, the same openness, though he had become more active in the villages, offering help to the Chen widow and playing with the Wei brothers.
But Liang had become quieter in his twelfth year, then quieter still in his thirteenth. The rock-throwing and the stolen vegetables fell away. The liveliness she had worked so hard to protect went inward and she had assumed it was growth. It wasn’t unusual for children to become more serious, that was the nature of things.
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Then Desheng had left for the second march, and she had watched Liang stand at the gate and look down the north road long after the dust had settled, and she had understood that whatever the change was, it had begun before this and been deepened by it.
She thought of something Sun Ai had said once, in passing:
"Some people carry two souls. The first soul is born with the body. The second is born when the first one dies, be it from grief, from shock, or from a moment the body survives but the spirit does not."
She had not understood it at the time. She understood it now.
She did not know what had happened to her younger son. She remembered the funeral. Both boys standing in the yard, and an argument breaking out between them the way arguments broke out at funerals when grief had nowhere else to go. Hao's voice raised, Liang's voice was quiet and sharp and somehow colder for it.
She had watched them and recognized, in Liang's stillness, that whatever the change was had settled in permanently. Grief did that to some people. It rearranged the furniture and left it that way. She knew this the way she knew a body's constitution from a pulse. His hands were the same, his voice was the same, his face was the same, but something behind the eyes was different.
She had watched both of them, the ghost of her mischievous boy who still surfaced sometimes in the corner of his mouth when he thought he'd gotten away with something, and the planner behind the eyes who had took the burden of a village onto himself and never, not once, cried about any of it.
She loved both of those souls.
This new soul had checked her pulse in the dark for two years without telling her. He had built a clinic and a school that would carry her knowledge past her own death.
That was love. She recognized it regardless of the shape it wore.
She was not afraid to go.
That was the truth she had arrived at slowly, over months of good days and bad days. Sun Ai had not come. The message had reached Chenjia, her cousins had told her, but no reply had returned. The absence sat in the room alongside her family and she accepted it alongside everything else. Sun Ai was old and the roads were long. Some reunions happened. Some didn't.
She had her family around her and that was more than enough. That was the kind of death she had always hoped for.
She envisioned their last ordinary morning.
Both boys asleep on the shared mat, Hao with his arms thrown wide and one leg kicked free of the blanket, Liang curled inward with his hand near his face. Desheng lacing his sandals in the dark as he prepared to leave for what would be his final march. She had pretended to be asleep, but she had watched him touch the doorframe one final time on his way out.
She had stayed very still until the sound of his footsteps faded.
Then she had gotten up and made the fire.
She heard the argument before she heard his voice.
The sound of Liang's voice raised in anger was not a common sound. She could count on one hand the number of times she had heard it in his life.
"Why haven't you used it, Suyin?!"
A murmur. Suyin's voice was too low for her to make out the words.
Then Liang again, louder: "Hao, how can you give up so easily?!"
Her elder son's voice was quiet and sharp: "This is Mother's wish, Liang. We have to respect that."
"Her wish...." Liang’s anger had boiled over, she could hear the shakiness in his voice. "What kind of son can be so calm when their Mother is dying?"
She couldn't stop herself from smiling.
There was her passionate baby boy.
The door opened and Liang crossed the room and knelt in front of her.
"Mother." He took her hands, both of them, holding them as though she would slip away at any monent.
"I'm going to find a cure. There are practitioners I haven't consulted, and other options that I haven't exhausted. I have something, it’s a stone and it could—"
"Liang." She tightened her fingers on his. "Where are Hao and Suyin?"
Her cousins ushered them in. Hao came through the door and stopped when he saw his brother's face, and then moved to sit beside him without a word. Suyin came after, her eyes red, her back straight, standing tall and strong in spite of her sadness.
They sat in front of her, the three of them. Her sons and the girl she had watched become like a daughter to her.
"I am entrusting my family to you," she said. She looked at each of them. "And in turn, I’m entrusting all of you to each other."
She looked at Hao. "I wish to be buried next to your father. I want the same marker that he has.”
Hao's mouth pressed together. He nodded once, and she could see his lips quiver.
She looked at Liang.
He was crying.
He was looking at their joined hands and the tears were falling onto his knuckles without him seeming to notice.
She had to forgive herself for smiling, for being so happy at the sight of it. She turned her attention over to Hao. "When was the last time your brother cried?"
Hao squeezed her other hand. "I cannot remember."
She looked at Liang.
He had heard the words. She watched them move through him, the surprise first, a small flinch, as if the fact of his own tears had caught him off guard the same way it had caught her.
She reached up with one hand and patted his, the same way she had patted his hands when he was seven and had broken Old Chen's fence and didn't know how to say he was sorry.
Then she looked at Suyin.
"I have passed everything I know to you," she said. "Everything I learned under Sun Ai, everything I found myself, and everything I saw you discover that I couldn't have taught. You have surpassed me." She paused. "You may have even surpassed Sun Ai." Her smile brigthened. "Please take care of Liang.”
Suyin's breath caught in her throat. "I will," she said. "I promise."
She gestured, and Hao's children came closer. Chen Mei's boys, who were much larger now, were trying to hold their faces steady. Tong Lian's daughter was too young to understand but she was present nontheless. Wei Ru's daughter, Hao's youngest, was still an infant. Shan Pei was standing near the wall with his arms at his sides and his shoulders were slack.
She looked around the room at all of them, and her chest felt very full.
"I am fortunate," she said, "to have the kind of death that I have always longed for. Surrounded by my family, by my children, and even my children's children."
Liang's grip tightened on her hands. She could feel him gathering himself to say something.
"Mother." His voice was rough. "I have something to tell you. I’m…I’m not really—"
She raised her hand to his chest to stop him.
He needn’t say anything more.
"You are my baby boy, now and forever."
She felt him go still.
Then she closed her eyes.
And now, in the world beyond, she would be greeted by the voice of her beloved husband, as well as the daughter she had never gotten to know. There would be a place waiting for her sons and her descendants, and she would make the fire for them there, as always.
"I love you all," she said one final time.
In this world of war, where victory is determined by the amount of territory you grasp and soldiers you command, Pei Xing, affectionately known as Mother Pei, and whose maiden name was Luan Xing, always felt different.
There is no greater victory, than to fall from this world….surrounded by family.