For others, the platform was only about as high as a desk. But for the little one, it was so tall that she had no choice but to clamber up onto it, a sight that utterly charmed the surrounding audience.
"So cute," many people praised.
"It makes me want to have a daughter," many women remarked, and one, in particular, voiced the thought.
"Alright, then let's have a daughter," her man replied.
"No, you're too ugly. A daughter we had couldn't possibly be this cute. Let's just have a boy instead."
"..." The words were absolutely devastating; the man's face fell.
A prescription was engraved on the platform, but it didn't specify any quantities. This was seriously messed up; how was anyone supposed to make the medicine without knowing the proportions? For some ingredients, using too much or too little could create a world of difference in the medicine's efficacy. Such things were known to happen.
Huangfu Huisheng and the other practitioners of Chinese medicine, along with some Western doctors, all shook their heads and sighed as they began to ponder a solution.
The little one, meanwhile, didn't share their troubles. She was actually delighted, having realized she could recognize all the characters on the platform.
With my level of skill, do I even need to go to kindergarten? I refuse, absolutely! Standing on the platform, the little one giggled to herself. To her, kindergarten was the newbie village. She never wanted to go back.
Her little head turned. Her big, bright, adorable eyes scanned the area, noting the pained expressions on many of the physicians' faces. She glanced at Huangfu Huisheng and his grandson, Huangfu Jiusi, on either side of her. They seemed calmer than the others, but they too were frowning slightly, contemplating how to prepare the medicine. The little one looked back at the platform, recalling the Art of Alchemy her father had taught her. It never mentioned using specific quantities of ingredients; it was all about extracting the essence! Thus, the problem that troubled everyone else was completely irrelevant to her. Every medical field had its own strengths.
For example, as a novel by Zeng Jin once put it: "The old masters hidden away in the wilderness may not know of the world's many martial arts, but every school of Cultivation has its own unique strengths."
As the little one shifted her focus back to her own task, Huangfu Jiusi glanced at her, then shot a scornful look toward Wu Tian in the audience. Heh, Wu Tian, he sneered inwardly. Are you so afraid of losing to me that you sent your daughter to compete instead? Haha, she's cute, I'll give you that, but in the end, she'll be nothing but a laughingstock.
His grandfather, Huangfu Huisheng, had personally taught him, which was why he considered himself senior enough to call even Zhang Fengtian his junior brother. In addition to his deep family knowledge, he was also a top student at medical university. He had absolute confidence he would win this Divine Doctor Conference. He felt the Divine Doctor Conference was practically tailor-made for him, created for this very moment of glory. He was destined to make a name for himself here, graduate early from medical university, and become a true Divine Doctor.
「In the square.」
All the physicians were staring at the prescription engraved on the platform, reading it over and over. Finally, some began to act.
The Western doctors were initially the first to move, using scientific instruments to calculate the correct ratios for the listed herbs. But at that very moment, someone acted even faster. The grandfather-grandson pair, Huangfu Huisheng and Huangfu Jiusi, were the first to retrieve herbs from below the platform and immediately began to cook them. They knew the exact proportions for each herb because they had seen this prescription before.
The existence of the Chinese Medicine Association was not without merit; civilians who had family formulas or folk remedies could submit them in exchange for one or two hundred yuan. They went straight to boiling the herbs. Their task was simply to filter out the dregs and then boil the liquid down into a paste. Besides pastes, Chinese medicine also came in the form of pills, powders, and elixirs.
After a while, some Western doctors finally calculated the required quantities and proportions and began their work. They utilized a Chinese preparation method, the Micro-Pill Technique, but added another step: film-coating. This was an improvement adapted from modern Western pharmaceutical technology. A special coating was added to the small pills, making them more resistant to moisture and oxidation, not to mention quite sweet. Traditional Chinese medicines, like elixirs, were often bitter. Western medicine was different; the sweet coating changed everything.

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