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The Tale Never Ends Chapter 40 Third Uncle
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The Tale Never Ends Chapter 40 Third Uncle

My head jerked back to look for the origin of the voice and found an unruly brat, clutching a plastic toy rifle in his arms, running towards us. My third aunt was chasing after him from behind, gasping for breath. "I'm breathless just by chasing this rascal!" She managed through her infrequent pants. Seeing us, she came to us and greeted us. "You have graduated, have you, Shiyan?" She asked. "I have. In fact, the three of us here have started our own paranormal investigative firm. We specialized in looking into supernatural incidents and some counseling too. But we have hit a snag; hence we're here today. I heard that Third Uncle knows a man who commands certain authority even over deities and immortals. There were rumors that he could even move mountains and shift the oceans!" My third uncle guffawed hilariously. "What is this you're talking about? From where do I find somebody with such powers!" The boy scurried over and leaped into the arms of Third Uncle. His eyes were unabashedly set upon the fruit basket we had brought there. I tore opened the wrappings of the fruit basket and asked him which of the fruits he was interested in. Feeling encouraged, he stooped down and began holding every fruit and looked interestedly at them as my third aunt scowled with exasperation. "Look at this rascal!" She reached for the fruit basket, muttering, "Let's see what fruits you bring us, and you impudent rascal, have you no manners?" She held the basket in her hand and moved indoors with the little boy trotting after her.

  Third Uncle nipped at his tea as he shifted in his seat, his interest aroused by our mention of the "powerful man he once knew". "Now that you have reminded me of him... we met long ago when I was sent to the countryside during the government's Down to the Countryside Movement that time! I was such a young fool then! A proud young man, fresh and ambitious, eager to serve the Party and country! I answered the Party's call for educated young men which they wanted to send for agricultural re-education! It was important that we continually seek progress, as I was once taught; hence I filled in a form to take part! It was a huge affair that we were sent off in trains with great fanfare as if we were triumphant soldiers going to war! But little did we, the prideful and eager young men, know that great trials and sufferings awaited us at the farming villages! Oh the hot and steaming wheaten pastries which had scorched my throat when I ate them! There were no tools and machines that we could use to harvest the wheat; so we have to reap the crops with our bare hands! Under the sweltering heat of the sun, bare-backed young men pulled and yanked at the already-ripened crops as our backs and muscles screamed with pain at the sore and weariness we felt! Some of the young men were already crying out loud with agony as we worked the fields. But at least, sometime later, we were delivered from our pain, with the timely appearance of that powerful man!"

  He took another swig off his cup and began recounting his story, his face livid with emotions. "He was one of the older seniors. Before the liberation of the country, during the Sino-Japanese War, he was serving as a spy in Tianjin, when in truth, he was supplying intelligence to the guerrilla forces. During an information drop, his identity was discovered. But fortunately he was rendezvoused with another agent sent forth by the guerrilla forces to recover him and they slipped out of Tianjin, after which he began serving directly for the anti-Japanese forces. During the Pingjin Campaign, on the assault of Tianjin, he was assigned to Deng Hua's staff at the front lines due to his extensive knowledge of the terrain around Tianjin and the city's layout. His prowess with gathering intelligence was truly appreciated then and was earmarked for his potential, which then won him a place among the army which was then dispatched to fight in the Korean War against American forces.

  He survived the war and returned to work at the government's Department of Materials. But things began to take a dreadful turn for him. At the government agency for materials that he was working at, he was surrounded by many former post-war veterans who were also discharged from the army following the end of the war. The offices and corridors of the department became a watering hole where former soldiers would share war-time stories and tales of triumph among one another as well as juniors. Despite having forged legends of his own during the war when he was working behind enemy lines, he had always deigned to reveal them to others. Instead, out of his eagerness to stand out from the rest of the old warhorses, he would babble to anyone who foolishly displayed the patience to listen to him his tale of his encounter with a deity during his work as an undercover! Sadly, his tales earned him not only scorn and disdain, but he was also being branded as an alleged 'rightist' and was nearly being prosecuted during the purge of the Anti-Rightist Campaign that swept the country. But he survived the ordeal. Apparently, the Party felt that his gibberish, although heretical, did no damage to the Party. Dismissing his absurd tales as mere nonsense, the Party sentenced him to forced reformation through labor (laogai) at his home town. Then again, no one knew, what should have been an arduous punishment for him, had, in fact, turned out to be a blessing in disguise!

  Due to his past occupation at the Department of Materials, he was close to various officials of minor materials bureaus around the country. Returning to his hometown, he reached out to the local materials bureau and requisitioned for fertilizers, pesticides and various farm-use consumables. This made him a very popular person among the farmers in his home town. Through his contacts, he had even bought over the machinery and apparatuses of a run-down factory which he then refurbished with the help of another expert he sought help from and started a new manufacturing plant in his hometown, specialized in producing large and strong springs commonly used for lorries and trucks. His entrance into the fold of the manufacturing scene could have not been more readily welcomed by the government, who then practically received him with opened arms due to the limited production of state-owned factories. To increase the volume of his production, his products were further processed by a few other third-party machining plants elsewhere; hence gradually, his factories began growing in production output, outstripping even that of state-own factories. In those days, these large springs were sold at more than 70 yuan apiece; the same as the salary of a Level-6 worker in the city!

  He would continue building more factories, eventually becoming the de facto leader of the local production brigade. Many, if not most, of the brigades' affairs required his consent and support as well as input. Even to this day, his village was still being awarded at least several million in contracts every year due to the production output of his factories that had maintained efficiently! All of us, the educated young men, were sent to different factories to work as manual labor. This was no different from the work done by laborers in the city! But we were well-compensated. Working as a maintenance fitter, I received 80 yuan and 10 work points every month. I even received a bonus at the end of the year! It was a job that many would even kill for! Our benefits were even better than Level-8 workers in the city! Word of the favorable work compensation began to travel, and many educated young men in the vicinity would try all ways, be it begging, exchanging favors or even pulling strings, just to get themselves re-assigned here. Some even got married to some other colleagues of the local production brigades to clean their slate and remain here.

  But his good fortune hardly reached its end. In just two or three years into his service with the local production brigade, he suddenly received a pardon and was reassigned back to his former post. Although the Cultural Revolution was far from over, he received a pardon for his past transgressions. This was because the agent who had evacuated him from Tianjin during the Sino-Japanese War was also wrongly imprisoned. Unable to locate his handler who could testify to his accomplishments for the nation and country, he was arrested and his statement taken. In his testimony, he had mentioned of another fellow spy which he had rescued under orders of the Party. Together they escaped Tianjin to safety and they were once reunited, meeting each other by chance at the Department of Materials! The investigation unit went to the Department of Materials to ascertain his claims and verified the agents' claims, effectively proving their contributions and sacrifices during the wars. This was also helped by the pressure piled upon the investigative units by their former subordinates who now held important and influential posts within the new Communist government apparatus. With his name cleared, he was invited back to his former post. Years later when he was honorably retired, the local production brigade of his hometown, in remembrance of his aid and services to the village and its development, build him a house and employed a caretaker to look after him. It was a token of appreciation for him and even to this day, he was still regularly consulted whenever the village council needed further input on major decisions. But he left the house they had given him to his son, and he returned to his old home."

  "Oh God!" I blurted suddenly. "The old man would have been what? More than a hundred years old? Is he still here? He is still alive, I hope!"

  "Of course he is," said Third Uncle, his hands waving me off like a fly as if I had spoken something offensive. "There was a meeting of former youths who had once taken part in the agricultural re-education program; an alumni meeting of sorts. There were some of those who had chosen to remain in the countryside after getting married there. A few of them had spoken about the old man, saying that he still looks healthy and energetic! But for the past two years, he has chosen to remain indoors, rarely coming out." "Can you bring us to meet with this old man, Third Uncle?" I asked quickly. "Now that you mentioned him... It's been a long time since I last saw him... I'd love to go meet him!" Third Uncle replied jovially. I would have been a fool to not notice the momentum of the conversation swaying to our favor for me to strike while the iron was still hot. I prodded, "When would you be free, Uncle? We'll drive you there!" "Any time would be fine," said Third Uncle, beaming happily. "I'm always free after my retirement! Hahaha..." He was always a straight and forthcoming person. "How does tomorrow suit you?" I pressed. "Tomorrow will be fine!" Third Uncle said, nodding. "So be it then! We'll come for you at eight in the morning tomorrow, Uncle!"

  Once we had returned from my Third Uncle's, I immediately placed a call to my parents, informing them that my friends and I would be paying a visit to the countryside. For this very purpose, Lin Feng had driven the car out to have its tank filled to the brim before he, too, made a call to his parents and informed them of the same. Yuan Chongxi too did not remain idle. He readied himself and we prepared another fruit basket, two bottles of wine and a flask of tea leaves as presents for the old man. The next morning, we went to my Third Uncle's and with his guidance, we went deeper into the mountains, heading for the depths of the backcountry. The elevated road winding around the mountains were narrow and serpentine, like a huge snake that weaved and looped around the midriffs of the mountains that loomed over it like guardian giants, but it was smooth, considering we were so far from the modern civilization of the city, being paved of cement rather than asphalt. The dense and green wilderness passed our car windows like a piece of scenery from a painting. Winding down our windows, the cool, moist air shot into the cabin, reinvigorating us and relieving us the sores and weariness of crawling so early out of bed as our journey to the outback continued. Moved by the nostalgic scenes and feels, Third Uncle began humming to a tune of a song of the bygone era; a song called "Guang Kuo Tian Di Lian Hong Xin (loosely translated as 'The Ardent Pursuit of Finesse on the Wide Fields of Limitless Potential') which wistful rhythms invoked his memories of traveling into the countryside decades ago! What a truly melancholic reflection and sentiment that none of our age could possibly appreciate!

  At length, our journey came to a pause when we reached the village and stopped to ask for the old man's present residence. With our way pointed to us by a helpful villager, we came to the house and stood by the gate. We pressed a doorbell by the gate and waited. Moments later, a caretaker came out of the house and unlocked a wicket-gate in the large gates outside the compound. He came out and spoke to us and we related to him of our intentions to visit. The caretaker then returned and opened the large gates to let us drive in. The caretaker locked the huge gates behind us and led us into the courtyard of the residence. The residence was a large house with many separate chambers; After passing through the first hall, we came to a passage where there were rich bushes of Mexican roses blooming handsomely on our flanks and there were two separate chambers to both of our sides. The passage would continue down, leading us into a second hall before we reach the rear courtyard. Still, to call it a courtyard would be a mere understatement; a huge pergola towered over our heads with bunches of unripe grapes hanging from their vines that coiled and slithered along the eaves of the overhead lattice. We continued through the garden and found vines of luffas that curled and convoluted over another pergola. Further ahead, we reached a rock garden with two separate paths winding around it before we reach a pond filled with flowering lotuses! This was hardly a residence! It's a manor or even a small palace at best! After the pond, there was a small flight of steps and railings at the edge of the pond for people to fish, and there was also a cozy gazebo which was backdropped by a blob of fruit trees. Hardly familiar with fruits and vegetables, I could not recognize what trees they were, but I could make out the orb-like fruits growing on the boughs of the trees. There was a stone table in the gazebo, with a teapot and some teacups laid ready. An old man was sitting quietly there, sipping at his tea. "Master Xuan!" Third Uncle walked with long, brisk strides, his anxiousness not longer bridled as he saw the old man and called out loudly. His voice reached the old man, whose head raised and looked at us. Surprised, he stood up with a dexterity that belied his age. "Young Heng! Hahaha..." He called. He took Third Uncle's hand and gripped it warmly, shaking it. Third Uncle's name was Zhang Yuheng. Due to the difference in their age, the old man affectionately addressed him as "Young Heng" while Third Uncle called him "Master Xuan", although the old man's full name was Chen Yixuan. In the dialects of the locals, "Master" could either refer to a senior; and it could also refer to an old folk of a more elder standing. But the manner in which Third Uncle had addressed him with clearly indicated the former.

  They spoke for a while, sharing a few words of greetings after not meeting for quite some time. When they had finished, Third Uncle gestured to us. "This is my nephew, Shiyan!" He introduced. "These are his friends, Lin Feng and (Yuan) Chongxi." But the old man's arm rose suddenly, his finger pointing straight at me as he burst into laughter! "Shiyan! Hahaha! Shiyan! Hahahaha!" He howled happily, his body rocking back and forth, much to our dubious and bewildered amazement!

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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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