Chapter 152: Your Father and Your Dad, Soul Devourer (5k)
What happens in Chapter 152 of "I Am Your Natural Enemy"? Wen Yan looked at the sleeping baby, and the complicated emotions in his heart couldnât... Read on to find out!
Wen Yan looked at the sleeping baby, and the complicated emotions in his heart couldnât calm down for a while.
He reached out a finger and gently touched this little one, trying to bestow a bit of warm Yang Energy, and sure enough, it worked without any hindrance.
Looking at Pei Tugouâs wife, her face full of exhaustion, she glanced at Wen Yan, then at the silent Pei Tugou, hesitated for a moment, but didnât stop him.
"Donât worry, heâs not in any serious condition, heâs almost recovered."
Pei Tugouâs wife carried the little one to the ward, while Wen Yan chatted with Pei Tugou outside.
Wen Yan only said that he would find a specialist to have a look later, and Pei Tugou handed the medical record to Wen Yan.
Looking at the record book, only Pei Tugouâs name was thereâthere was no name for the child, so Wen Yan asked Pei Tugou directly.
Pei Tugouâs face showed hesitation, looking a bit conflicted.
"This child is frail and sickly. Since I picked him up, heâs spent most of his time in the hospital.
The doctor said he probably wasnât born full-term, born weak.
My mother says, whether we can raise this child to one year old is already a question, so best not to give him a name.
If you give a name, youâll get attached later, and it will only make the family suffer more.
But now, letâs just do our best. We can only do as much as we can manage.
I picked him upâitâs fate. I canât just harden my heart and ignore him.
If he makes it to one year old, then weâll name him."
Wen Yan suddenly understood. He more or less understood after hearing Pei Tugouâs accentâsounded like someone from the Northern Divine Land. There really are some places up north with this kind of custom.
For frail and sickly infants, they wonât be given a formal name, only a nickname, like the old-fashioned humble names, hoping for the child to easily survive.
And in some places, there really is a customâanything picked up.
If itâs just an object, once named, it wonât be thrown away.
If itâs a living thing, once named, it becomes part of the family, signifying responsibility. As long as the family has a bite to eat, theyâll share it with every family member.
Wen Yan had once helped a family with a funeral and met a family with a yellow ox that had lived for forty years.
Decades ago, that yellow ox was the main source of labor for the family. The whole familyâs yearly grain depended on that ox plowing the fields. Back then, the yellow ox was given a name.
Later, when the familyâs situation improved and they no longer needed the ox to plow, the ox also grew old, and they kept caring for it.
When the yellow ox lived out all forty years and passed away, they treated it as a family member and even held a proper funeral, giving it a formal burial, as a gesture of gratitude for the oxâs decades of hard work, feeding a whole household and keeping them all from starving.
A name isnât something you just give lightly.
Itâs like in some places, there are tales about Huang Pi Zi demanding ritualsâmany things canât be agreed to easily. If you agree, and give them a name, you have to take on the responsibility.
Of course, Pei Tugou definitely hadnât thought that far. They didnât name the child simply out of fear that, if the sickly little one didnât pull through, theyâd be too emotionally invested, and also just hoping for a good omen.
"My mother says, elders believe that with no name, King Yan canât take down that name, so thereâs a chance the child can grow up safe and sound."
When Pei Tugou mentioned the old ladyâs reasoning, he himself didnât really believe it, but still couldnât help hoping it was true.
Wen Yan nodded. These were some of the most sincere and simple wishes. Ordinary people, maybe donât understand so much, but when facing hardship, theyâll still find somethingâreal or notâto support their hopes. Whether itâs true or false doesnât even matter anymore.
No one will dig too deep to find out if itâs true or not.
Even the faintest hope is still better than having none at all.
Wen Yan opened the medical record book and looked at its contents.
Nowadays, handwritten entries in medical records are rare, mostly various printouts and a good number of test reports pasted in.
Wen Yan looked at the time on the first report, did a quick calculationâit was a whole four hours earlier than the Scorching Sun Departmentâs predicted time for the Soul Devouring Beastâs appearance.
And accounting for Pei Tugou picking up the child, noticing something was wrong, bringing him to the hospital, registering and waiting for checkups, that would push it back at least another hour.
That is to say, when everyone was preoccupied, fighting life and death, making all this fuss, the little one had always been in Duanzhou, always right under everyoneâs nose.
Carrying the sensitive identity of an abandoned baby, and even so, no one noticed at all.
Because Pei Tugou never even called the police at all. Out of simple moral instinct, his first thought when he found the baby seemed sick was simply to get him treated.
And at the hospital, they treated him right away too. With no name, they just wrote the guardianâs name first.
No birth certificate or anything, but they just treated him first regardless.
Pei Tugou said he picked up the child, and since the boy was frail and sickly, the old doctor whoâd seen it all immediately filled in the backstoryâa miserable life, and so didnât ask much or meddle further.
The old pediatrician had seen all kinds of people, and at a glance could tell, this child being found by this family was already terrific luck.
The doctors in this hospitalâif they had reported it to the police, it might not actually have been good for the child.
So, everything just went on smoothly like this.