Mud clung to Meng Jiangnu's skirts as soldiers hauled men away; she pressed against the garden gate, the smell of iron and damp soil sharp in her mouth, and a single thought kept returning: Fan Qiliang might never come home. The arrival of the soldiers shut the village like a held breath, the music of simple days folding into the clatter of armor and boots.
Their marriage had been simple—shared meals over a wooden table, moonlit talks beneath paper lanterns, and a promise to keep one another warm when cold came. They traded stories about clouds and fields, and Fan Qiliang would speak quietly of books he had skimmed by candlelight. Those small promises shattered when the conscripts came for able men.
Fan Qiliang slipped between sheds and store rooms, but the soldier's horse found the path he used. He stumbled through muddy ruts as soldiers pulled him into a long line of captives. Meng Jiangnu ran after them, her feet dragging in the village dust, and watched until the column disappeared into the valley.
After they left, she sat at the shrine until her knees ached. She stitched with trembling hands, sending letters tied to a neighbor who promised to carry them. The letters never reached him. Each evening she lit a single stick of incense and listened to the way the wind moved through the trees; sometimes a stray crow answered and she took that as a sign she had not yet been abandoned by hope.
When the silence lengthened, she packed a few blankets, folded her best tunic, and walked toward the Wall along a road that smelled of smoke and ox dung. She kept Fan Qiliang's name in her mouth like a charm, as if saying it aloud might stitch a path to him.
She slept on riverbeds under coarse reeds and warmed herself with small fires. Farmers offered a bowl of thin porridge; one woman cut a strip of cloth to wrap her shoulders. An old woman with a voice like dry paper tied a charm at her belt and told her to keep walking. Children brought bandages and a handful of wildflowers, pressing them into her palms as if their smallness could hold her sorrow.
A sage she met under a leaning pine spoke quietly of a vision: a woman's weeping that opened stone and showed the buried. He added nothing more, but his words followed her like a map sketched in the air.
The Wall rose on the horizon like a long black spine. From a distance, laborers looked like scores of bent reeds, bodies moving in unison beneath the orders that had taken her husband. Meng Jiangnu moved from camp to camp asking names and descriptions, repeating Fan Qiliang's features until the syllables felt worn on her tongue.
The camps smelled of wet straw and smoke. Men rolled their sleeves and attended to wounds the work had given them—blisters, swollen knees, a cough that would not leave. Food was thin: barley boiled long until it turned to gruel. Supervisors measured time by the rhythm of striking stones, and their shadows fell long across the workers' shoulders.
By a low cooking fire two men spoke in clipped tones about a mound by the Wall where a tired man had been buried. They said his name had been lost to fever and exhaustion. The description they gave matched the boy she loved.
She found the spot at dusk, where a pile of fresh earth had been swept close to the Wall's base. Her hands dug into loam that smelled of dust and old sweat. She knelt and allowed the grief to come in a raw, living wave—no elegance, no ritual, only the need to call him by name and be near what he had been.
Her tears ran across her hands and into the dirt. The ground answered: a low rumble, then a crack like the settling of some vast thing. Stones shifted as if breathing. A seam opened where the Wall's packing had been pressed tight for years.


















