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The Tale Never Ends Chapter 184 Three-way Spli
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The Tale Never Ends Chapter 184 Three-way Spli

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"In those days, we use fishing poles to catch fish and a snare called Ti–Yes, the same Ti that means 'hoofs' in Chinese–to trap wild hares. To put it simply, it's just a basket that we leave in the water during daytime and by nightfall, we can easily expect to find any haul in the baskets," Mr. Zhang explained while drinking.

This is the difference between university students of the past and college students like us today! They were actually imparted true knowledge while we were only trained to pass exams... The significance of their qualification could not be adequately equated with ours...

Aunt Fen raised an arm and silence immediately fell upon us. "I suggest here's how we should go on. Let's split up into three groups. The first group will first start with the Bian family burial grounds. The next group will begin searching along the river for the highland where the dud was hidden. Coordinate with this Master Six and Chen Yixuan's route for a better clue of where it can be. And the final group will investigate the few bridges on the river! Keep in touch!" Mr. Zhang added enthusiastically, "There's only one car now. I'll arrange for two more cars. It will be better because one of them is a four-wheel-drive for you to better traverse the uneven terrain along the river."

The next morning, our investigations began with us separating into three groups: Edelweiss and I would begin our search for the Bian family burial grounds, and Chongxi would investigate the bridges nearby. Being a native of these areas, Lin Feng would be most suited to look for the dud's hidden place in those mounds and hills.

Right after splitting up, I switched on my phone and activated the map app. With the convenience of the information from the app, we began our search for any villages that might bear the name Bian of Bian Family and found one. Filled with hope, we sped confidently towards there but only to find that it was almost 2.5 miles away from Yahong Bridge! But the burial grounds were supposed to be just near the village! We then asked around, hoping to find some other clues. Finally, a merchant told us that a village, although not named Bian, had a great number of families with that surname.

Nevertheless, knowing that it could be an important clue, we went to the village that the merchant had pointed us to. When we went there, after asking around, we found out that the village cemetery was just outside the little hamlet. But to our dismay, it was nowhere near any river! Devastated, I stood frozen with shock and disbelief and an old lady saw us. She was sitting on a large rock just beside the dirt road of the village, sitting in the morning sun. Seeing that we were strangers, she asked, "Hey, you two! Who are you? I have not seen you here before! Are you looking for relatives or someone you know?"

We went to her and told her that we were searching for a Bian family or any villages that might carry that name. She thought for a moment, then she said, "There used to be a Bian family village not far from Yahong Bridge. But it is so old that not many people remember about it now. I bet only the older folks might have heard about it. It should be somewhere in North-West of the town of Yahong Bridge, if my feeble memory still serves!"


“Heavens! She's right!” I realized instantly. The tale of Bian Dashou took place during the fall of the Ming Dynasty, just before the rise of the Qing Empire. That would have put the incident at least two or three centuries before! The village which now comprised of Bian Dashou's descendants would now be at least a century old! For all we know, no one could even tell us if Bian Dashou had lived there! Only the older folks might still know something about him!

With that revelation, we traveled in the direction of North-West from the town of Yahong Bridge and reached a place called Gao Qiao–or also, Tall Bridge. It was also about 2.5 miles from Yahong Bridge, well out of the vicinity of Yahong Bridge. But the rapid development from both areas now filled their distance with buildings, apartments, and hovels that no one would realize that this place was well beyond the boundaries of Yahong Bridge town. We looked for an old man, hoping that we had finally found our target, and he yelped with a surprised and confused look, "Ah!?" Thinking that he might have remembered something, I pressed with another question, "Do you remember any notable landmarks here or anything else here that was from the old Yahong Bridge town?" He stopped and took a few paces back, studying me intently, before he said at last, "You might wanna check the bus stations or expressway rest areas! You're that boy from the paranormal investigation agency on TV, right? Come on! Let's take a picture!" He took out his mobile phone and would not allow me to leave unless I took a picture with him.

We left the town and went to the nearby expressway rest area and spoke to many of the villagers that lived nearby. Finally, we found an old man who told us that the last Bian family village had changed its name. It was now a mere settlement with barely a few families, hence not many people heard of it. It was one of the five villages that joined into a local production brigade. Lastly, he bade us go somewhere near the Tangjin Expressway south of here.

And so we journeyed south this time and finally found several families with the surname Bian. But to our horror, their ancestral burial grounds were nowhere near the river too! For an entire day, we had been traveling in all directions all for nothing! A quick glance at the time told us it was already five in the evening. Dejected by the forlorn failures, we then decided to return to the Center and call it a day.

We met Chongxi, who told us about his end of the search. There were two bridges but they were all brick and mortar bridges built in recent years! Lin Feng was the latest to return to the Center. He came through the doors with a face sagged with fatigue and weariness. For tens of kilometers he had been driving through fen and forests, and the highest ground he had found were merely concrete dikes that towered seven to eight meters over the water. The rest were low marshlands left after the huge floods. Along his way, he had also found two cemeteries that hugged closely to the river banks. But after talking to the neighborhood, he was told that the cemeteries were public burial grounds, not the ancestral burial grounds that we were looking for! With that, all of our leads had come to nothing!

With enough disappointments for a day, we could not have been more morose and sorrowful. Even Edelweiss could not help feeling sad after seeing us. We went home after dinner and I, still battered by the successive letdowns, switched on my computer and began looking in Baidu, still clinging to that last fragment of hope that the Internet might be able to yield something that we failed to find.

It was a blog that I found some information on the history of Yahong Bridge. But with no contact details listed on the site, all I could do was register myself as a subscriber of the blog to message the owner. Fortunately, a reply came as speedily as I could barely believe myself. It appeared that the owner was also an avid writer who checked his site regularly. We exchanged contact details and he later told me that he reposted the article from a Wu Zhong forum. A glimmer of hope sparkled amidst the gloom of despair as I immediately asked for the link to that forum.

But my hopes were quickly dashed when he said that the forum was closed down due to some irreconcilable differences between some of its members. All that the blogger knew about the original author of the article, was that he was a historian who had spent more than a decade of his life quietly delving into the past of Yahong Bridge. But it was a pity that the blogger didn't know his contact.

I turned off my computer. When I turned, Edelweiss was already half-asleep with her head on my shoulders, her drowsy eyelids already falling to a close. It was already ten at night, I saw the clock. She must be tired after our search all day. I was in no shape to carry her to the bed, but she might still be able to carry me. I tapped her gently and slowly helped her to the bed. Then I placed a call to Mr. Zhang.

"Mr. Zhang, I found something from a friend that I just made online..." And I told him what I found online, specifically that historian. Then, there was a silence lull from the other end of the line. Mr. Zhang pondered for seconds before saying, "I might have heard of him before. If he's the same man I know, I don't think he's from Yahong Bridge, more likely the Yangjiatao in the North. But don't worry about it! I'll handle it!"

The next morning, Mr. Zhang contacted me. He had found the historian but the latter was busy. Apparently, the historian was engrossed in some work involving some calligraphy script used by ancient tomb markers and he could not come to Wu Zhong. Mr. Zhang urged us to go to him instead and it was best that we step on to it.

We scrambled into our car and took off with Mr. Zhang to meet with the historian. He was cheerful and warm to receive us when we met the elderly expert who heard that a bunch of young men was interested to know more about the history of Yahong Bridge. That filled with renewed vim and verse as he embarked on his tale. (The following information is referred from the works of historian Zhang Zhenjiang)

Yahong Bridge first came into prominence because of the great bazaar that farmers and peasants flocked to since early history. There was no definite information on how the great bazaar came to be, only that it was one of the largest marketplaces due east of the capital and there were records that it originated as early as the Ming Dynasty, in the third year of Jiajing Emperor's reign from traveling markets that moved markets moved from town to town with each on a designated day on every month, beginning from Yahong Bridge on the fifth and tenth days of each month, Gaoqiao town on the second and seventh days, the town beside Xixuan Lake on the third and the eighth days, Zhushuwu town on the fourth and ninth days, and Qianjiagou village on the first and sixth days. The venues of the markets were about 3 miles away at each stop and mostly were characterized by small scale and scattered distribution, catering to 120,000 people in the entire county in those days.

By the twentieth year of Kangxi Emperor's reign, the names of Gaoqiao town and the town beside Xixuan Lake were all but faded. The traveling markets were traveling no more and Yahong Bridge became the center where the great bazaar would remain indefinitely. With the population boom during the two centuries when emperors Kangxi and Qianlong ruled, commerce and trade grew exponentially around Yahong Bridge and more and more traders came after hearing its name. Before long, Yahong Bridge became a bustling market city that sprawled for tens or even hundreds of miles wide.

The grand bazaar of Yahong Bridge endured four great economic climaxes and four downturns as well during its three hundred years of activity. Its first climax occurred during the reign of Tongzhi Emperor of Qing when more and more cotton farmers began to appear by the banks of Huan Xiang River. By the tenth year of Guangxu Emperor's rule, the cotton industry began to boom with numerous families in the southern parts of the county making fabric. The products of the county ranged from common rough spun to cotton yarn and cotton fabric too. Their products were sold across the country, all with the help of the growing river trade and land trade. The Huan Xiang River was connected to Tianjin City and the Jing-Hang Grand Canal through the river trade network and trade caravans covered as far as the passes of the Great Wall, then the Lengkou Pass and the Xifengkou Pass, reaching even Chifeng City as well as other settlements in Inner and Outer Mongolia. In the East, the trade network extended to Shanhai Pass and reached the three northeast provinces of China. Like a spider's webs, the complex circuitry of Yahong Bridge's economic upsurge filled the air of the trade city with constant ringing bells of camels and the swishing of paddles in the water. In the early years when Jiaqing Emperor first took the throne, there were records indicating the famous Sam Sing Kung Temple needed repairs, and then a total of seventy-four enterprises, from large to even greater manufacturing giants, donated vast amounts of money for the restoration. Of all the enterprises which had contributed, there were many large enterprises like oil manual workshops, producers of noodles or vermicelli, wine breweries, vinegar breweries, fabric manufacturers, silk weavers, pawnbrokers, banks, and so on.

...

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Catalogue
Volume 3 Family Feuds --- Chapter 52 Jousting with Jiangshis
Volume 2 Probation- Chapter 27 The Requiem
Chapter 232 An Awkward Family Dinner
Chapter 231 Na San Tamed
Chapter 230 Stepping on a Tigress' Toes
Chapter 229 Letter
Chapter 228 Back to Wu Zhong
Chapter 227 The Shaman's Devices
Chapter 226 Na San, the Shaman
Chapter 225 The Intruder
Chapter 224: A Sally into Society
Chapter 223: Former Acquaintance
Chapter 222 The Invisible Hand
Chapter 221 Stages of Mastery
Chapter 220 New Sister?
Chapter 219 Taken
Chapter 218 Magic against Magic
Chapter 217 The Geeky Girl
Chapter 216 Changbai Mountain
Chapter 215 Waking Up
Chapter 214 Provenance
Chapter 213 Grappling with Ghouls
Chapter 212 Midnight Madness
Chapter 211 Cult of the Damned
Chapter 210 Meeting of the Triune
Chapter 209 Tales of the Pas
Chapter 208 The Earthquake
Chapter 207 Powerless
Chapter 206
Chapter 205
Chapter 204
Chapter 203
Chapter 202
Chapter 201
Chapter 200 A Pseudo Demon Killer Met a Real One
Chapter 199 The Clown-like Old Taoist Pries
Chapter 198 Bian Dashou Was Caugh
Chapter 197 Li Shouzhong
Chapter 196
Chapter 195 The Grotto Graves
Chapter 194 Lost in the Fros
Chapter 193 Interference
Chapter 192
Chapter 191 Zhang Zixiang
Chapter 190 Ringside Witness
Chapter 189 The Ming Dynasty Murong Hai
Chapter 188 Back to the Pas
Chapter 187 Master Six's Returning
Chapter 186 Who on Earth Is It?
Chapter 185 Headway
Chapter 184 Three-way Spli
Chapter 183 Another Fool's Errand
Chapter 182 Revisiting Fort Enigma
Chapter 181 The Champion's Bane
Chapter 180 Foiling of the Windchaser
Chapter 179 Clash from the Pas
Chapter 178 Finale Furor
Chapter 177 The Bonfire Finale
Chapter 176 Squaring off with Soldiers
Chapter 175 Lu Shengnan
Chapter 174 The Bold Confession
Chapter 173 Wish the skull in the Labyrinthian Canyon a Happy New Year
Chapter 172 The In-Laws
Chapter 171 A New Year
Chapter 170 Professor Zhang
Chapter 169 News
Chapter 168 The Chief of Clan Zhang
Chapter 167 Repast of Reparation
Chapter 166 Reacquainting the Champions
Chapter 165 The Hillside Hun
Chapter 164 Battle in the Blind
Chapter 163 Dueling Below the Hill
Chapter 162 Disturbing Discoveries
Chapter 161 The Zoomorphic Deities of Shamanism
Chapter 160 A Walk in the Lost Settlemen
Chapter 159 The Foxes of the Yellow Soil Ridge
Chapter 158 Lost Paradise
Chapter 157 The Yellow Soil Ridge
Chapter 156 Lao Tao
Chapter 155 Trump Card: Zheng Shuang
Chapter 154 Celebrity
Chapter 153 Canine Conflic
Chapter 152 The Crucible of Heaven
Chapter 151 Faring with Foxes
Chapter 150 The Fox and the Weasel
Chapter 149 Teacher
Chapter 148 The Charlatan
Chapter 147 Real Deal
Chapter 146 Chongxi and Shiyan
Chapter 145 Uncanny Coincidence
Chapter 144 Farce
Chapter 143 Plans for New Year's Eve
Chapter 142 Zero Remorse
Chapter 141 Wiped off
Chapter 140 The Forest Sprite
Chapter 139 Night's Errand
Chapter 138 Checkmating the Weasels
Chapter 137 Wile for a Weasel
Chapter 136 The Eld of Yuan Chongxi
Chapter 135 Edelweiss' Wrath
Chapter 134 The Marauder and the Burglar
Chapter 133 Chongxi's Conundrum
Chapter 132 The Homecoming Dinner
Chapter 131 Aunt Ulan's Recovery
Chapter 130 The Windchaser, Zhu Mei
Chapter 129
Chapter 128
Chapter 127
Chapter 126
Chapter 125 Malice at Midnight
Chapter 124 The Mysterious Forest
Chapter 123
Chapter 122
Chapter 121
Chapter 120 Three Centuries Ago
Chapter 119 Godmother's Pas
Chapter 118 Chongxi's Dismay
Chapter 117 Another Godmother
Chapter 116 Hag in the Highlands
Chapter 115 The Hunt Begins
Chapter 114
Chapter 113 My Mother and My Godmother
Chapter 112 Judgmen
Chapter 111
Chapter 110
Chapter 109
Chapter 108
Chapter 107
Chapter 106
Chapter 105 Zhang Zhigui
Chapter 103.104
Chapter 103-104 Dead Man Driving Chapter and Turmoil at the Zhang Residence
Chapter 102
Chapter 101
Chapter 100 The Sash of the Stretching Rainbow
Chapter 99 I Am Shiyan
Chapter 98
Chapter 97 The Final Pursue
Chapter 96 Endgame
Chapter 95 Blood Spilled Red
Chapter 94 Cards Ten, Jack, and Queen
Chapter 93 Frustration Again
Chapter 92 The Tipsy Nightmare
Chapter 91 The Challenge
Chapter 90 Wireless
Chapter 89 Fruitless
Chapter 88 Li Shanpao
Chapter 87 At Wit's End
Chapter 86 Nobility
Chapter 85 The Bazaar
Chapter 84 The Sisters' Mayhem
Chapter 83 Furious Reprisal
Chapter 82 Disturbed
Chapter 81 The Black Cat
Chapter 80 Poultry Problem
Volume Four Provenance --- Chapter 79 The Return
Chapter 78 Reinforcements
Chapter 77 Possessed
Chapter 76 Invasion
Chapter 75 Godmother
Chapter 74 Officer Zhang
Chapter 73 Edelweiss
Chapter 72 The Wolfpack
Chapter 71 The Tracking
Chapter 70 See You There
Chapter 69 The Scheme
Chapter 68 The Truth of the Heartbreaker
Chapter 67 Forty Years Ago
Chapter 66 The Marauders
Chapter 65 The VIP Reception
Chapter 64 Our Haunted Dwelling
Chapter 63 Seven Ghostly Sisters
Chapter 62 The Creed of the Eight Trigrams
Chapter 61 The Blood Charm
Chapter 60 The Date
Chapter 59 The Bat Spirit
Chapter 58 The Bet
Chapter 57 Bolt the Door and Beat the Dog
Chapter 56 Execution of the Thirteenth
Chapter 55 One Fell Swoop
Chapter 54 Night at the Brick Factory
Chapter 53 The Evil Cult
Chapter 51 Ludicrous Absurdity
Chapter 50 The Resolution
Chapter 49 The Cultivation of Seven Lives
Chapter 48 Master Six's Action
Chapter 47 There is No Reason Why it Should Not Be
Chapter 46 The Whole Bandits' Lair Is Wiped Out
Chapter 45 Divinity
Chapter 44 The Dud Round
Chapter 43 Master Six
Chapter 42 Draconic Mutation
Chapter 41 The Hermit of Hidden Talents
Chapter 40 Third Uncle
Chapter 39 The Ignominious Defeat
Chapter 38 An Interview With the Dead
Chapter 37 The Grudge of the Bony Remains
Chapter 36 The Debt
Chapter 35 Depraved Dividends
Chapter 34 Jiangshi?
Chapter 33 Fresh Beginnings
Chapter 32 Maiden Voyage
Chapter 31 Business Groundwork
Chapter 30 Uncle Quan's Derring-Do
Chapter 29 The Lecture
Chapter 28 Xie Bingyi
Chapter 26 The
Chapter 25 Yuan Chongxi
Chapter 24 Hawker Stalls
Chapter 23 So Shall You Weep
Chapter 22 What Goes Around, Comes Around
Chapter 21 The Seething Lee
Chapter 20 Shiyan and Lin Feng
Chapter 19 Undestined Romance
Chapter 18 The Cruel Stroke of Fate
Chapter 17 The Belligerent Reunion
Chapter 16 The Mysteriously Lost Old Man
Chapter 15 Xuan'er Shou
Chapter 14 Nuptial Preparations
Chapter 13 Resurrection
Chapter 12 Fen's Death
Chapter 11 The Post-disaster Episode
Chapter 10 The Unlikely Brotherhood
Chapter 9 Homecoming
Chapter 8 The Mysterious Girl
Chapter 7 Aunt Fen and her Husband
Chapter 6 The Debt of Passion
Chapter 5 Subduing the Ghost At Night
Chapter 4 The Battle With the Plastic Bag
Chapter 3 Nocturnal Sight
Chapter 2 The White Fiend
Chapter 1 Man versus Ghost
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