Authors: Kylie Chan
âGood to see you, ladies and gentlemen,' David said. He moved closer to speak softly to me. âThere's something strange going on here. Can you check it out?'
âWhat sort of strange?'
âThere's this woman ⦠she wanders through the place with these men following her, and wherever she goes, everybody falls in love with her. Do you think she might be,' his voice dropped even further, âa demon?'
âYou see demons around every corner, David,' I said with amusement.
He smiled down at me. âWishful thinking, I know.' He glanced behind me and his smile widened. âYou didn't tell me you were bringing John!'
He strode past me and I turned to see. It was John, in his Mountain uniform, his expression puzzled.
I quickly moved to stop David. âHe may have amnesia. Let me talk to him first.'
I went to John and gazed into his eyes, putting one hand on his arm. He looked down at me without recognition. âJohn, it's me, Emma. Do you know who I am?'
âWhat am I doing here?' he said.
I turned and called quietly to Simone. She was talking to Bridget about the function, oblivious that her father had entered. When she saw him, she rushed over to us. âDaddy!'
John still appeared confused. âSimone?'
âLet's take him over to the side and sort this out,' Leo said, looking around to ensure we hadn't attracted too much attention. A couple of people were watching with curiosity but hadn't approached.
David put his hand on my shoulder and spoke in my ear. âTake him downstairs to the lobby level next to the harbour. All the shops there are closed and it'll be deserted. I'll cover for you.'
âThanks, David.' I took John's arm. âJohn, you need to come with us.'
John looked from me, to Simone, to Leo, then Michael, obviously made the decision and nodded.
We took him in the lift down to the small shopping mall under the Convention Centre. Floor-to-ceiling windows on one side looked onto an open area containing a large gilt statue of a bauhinia flower. A row of convenience stores, all closed for the evening, stood
across from the glass. We found a bench and I sat next to John, with Simone on his other side. I took his hand. I wanted to give him a huge hug but was wary of scaring him away. Michael and Leo took up positions on either side of us, guarding.
Simone leaned on his shoulder. âIt's good to have you back, Daddy.'
âSimone. Your name is Simone,' he said. He looked at me, still confused. âMichelle?'
âOh, God,' Simone said quietly.
âNo, it's fine,' I said. âI'm Emma, John.'
âEmma?' He looked up at Michael and Leo. âLion? Tiger?' He looked at me again. âSnake?'
âWelcome to your family,' I said with amusement. âThe Turtles are still in the Northern Heavens.'
âI don't remember anything,' he said, running his hand over his forehead. âMy name is John?'
âYour name is Xuan Wu,' Simone said. âEmma calls you John.'
âThat's not a very auspicious name â dark and war together,' he said.
âThat's your nature: dark and war.' She threw her arms over his shoulders. âAnd you're my father.'
He put his arms around her. âThat I know. That's something that will never change.' He took a deep breath into her shoulder. âYou're my little girl.'
âDaddy,' she said, muffled by his jacket.
He pulled back. âI don't remember anything! Why do I see them as big cats, and her as a snake? Why do you glow with stars and darkness and blue and gold? How come I can see the past and the future and the world around me clearer than just vision? Why do I want to drown everything in ice-cold water and bring death to all?' His voice gained a frantic edge. âWhat am I?'
âYou're a god,' I said. âYou're the God of the North, and dark, and cold, and winter, and martial arts.'
âIf I'm a god then how come I don't remember?' he said, challenging me, his hands still protectively on Simone.
âDo you trust me?' I said.
âYou can trust her,' Simone said.
He studied me for a long time, his arms still around Simone. His eyes roamed my face. Then he nodded once, sharply. âI can trust you.'
Simone exhaled with relief.
âThen trust me that you don't need the details right now of why you can't remember. It's a very long story. Just come home with us and we'll fill you in.'
His eyes unfocused. âSomething unbalanced is coming.'
âHe's right, Emma,' Simone said urgently. âSomething very nasty is heading our way â¦'
Kitty Kwok, flanked by two big Chinese bodyguards, came around the corner and stopped in front of us. I rose to face her, standing protectively in front of John and Simone. Leo and Michael moved behind me, mirroring Kitty's bodyguards behind her.
This is a good time to grab her and give her to the King,
Leo said.
Get this done and finished.
I nodded slightly. He was right. I summoned the Murasame but nothing happened; the sword didn't come.
âWhat have you done?' I said.
âNothing. I just want to negotiate.' She raised her hands. âI know what the King said. I want to offer you a deal.'
âNice to be taken seriously for a change,' I said.
I didn't look away from Kitty and heard rather than saw John move to stand behind me on the left. He touched me on the shoulder and said,
I'm right behind you, but I don't know enough. Speak for me.
I nodded.
âI offer parley under terms of truce,' Kitty said.
Well, that was the grabbing option blown out of the water. It would be dishonourable to attack her when she'd offered parley and waved a theoretical white flag.
âSpeak your mind,' I said, using the formal words to close the deal.
She relaxed slightly and turned to pace in front of us. âYou've vowed never to hurt a human, Emma. But you've agreed to give me to them. Would you betray your own kind and give a human to the demons?'
âYou forfeited all claim to humanity when you harmed innocent children to prolong your own life,' I said.
âI think that makes me particularly human,' she said with humour. âAsk your Mr Chen here, he'll tell you.'
âDemons are often stunned by the depths of atrocity that humans are capable of,' John said without emotion. âIn the ways of cruelty, they often seek to learn from you.'
âI'm one hundred per cent human,' Kitty said. âAsk him, he'll tell you. You can't do anything to me, Emma. You can't give me to them â that goes against everything both of you stand for. You keep humans safe from demons; you don't hand them over for the demons to play with.'
I was silent at that. She was right. I pulled myself together. âName your terms.'
âYou've agreed to give me to the King. He's already paid for me. But if he's destroyed, you don't need to pay the price.'
âThe last thing we need right now is a civil war in Hell,' I said. âHe may be a two-faced bastard, but at least he doesn't create demons that are self-aware, think they're human and are programmed to turn â like the ones your friend the Death Mother is making. Such things are cruel beyond belief.'
âNot my doing,' Kitty said. âI'm only after Immortality; I don't want to destroy anybody. I've never hurt your students. I've stayed quietly in my corner doing my stuff. It's not my fault that I scare the living shit out of the King.'
âYou're nice and humble now your little posse's gone,' I said.
âDestroy the King and I'll set up a replacement. I have one ready to go; he's intelligent, powerful and does what I tell him. Do this for me and I'll put a King on the throne who will never bother you again. You'll no longer have the forces of Hell breathing down your neck, killing your Celestials and harming your little human students.'
âYou want to set a puppet on the throne of Hell?' I said.
She gestured with impatience. âI don't want to rule Hell. I just want to be left alone to succeed with my Immortality and then live my life in peace! I've never wanted any of you dead; I just want to be left alone.'
âGloria Ho,' I said. âAndy Ho. The Death Mother. Before that, Six, and the Geek, and Simon Wong. Don't tell me you won't try to kill us, Kitty; you and your friends haven't stopped trying. You've been the leader of this all along, so don't play the innocent. You want to put a puppet on the throne of Hell and then try to take over the Earthly Plane as well.'
She raised her arms to the side. âThis is a waste of time. Get me out.'
The two bodyguards transformed into humanoid demons with black scales and tusks. All three of them disappeared.
âWhoa!' Simone said. âThey were demons? I saw them as human.'
âMe too,' Leo said, and Michael nodded agreement.
âDid you see them as demons or human, John?'
I said, turning to see him, but he'd disappeared. âIs he all right, Simone?'
âDaddy went back to the Grotto,' Simone said. âHe seemed totally confused by the whole thing.'
âIt was strange my sword didn't come to me,' I said. âKitty must have been blocking it somehow, which is very disturbing.' I raised my hand and summoned the sword and it still didn't come. âAre you having the same problem?'
Simone raised her hand and Dark Heavens appeared in it. She dismissed it. âI have no trouble calling my sword.'
âYou haven't called the Murasame since you lost your demon essence,' Leo said.
âYou're right,' I said. âMaybe it doesn't serve me any more. Maybe it went back to the King?'
âAfter this, we'll head back to the Mountain and ask Miss Chen,' Simone said. She ran her hands through her hair and fluffed it out over her shoulders. âLet's go upstairs and raise some money for these poor kids.'
W
e made our way back up in the lift to the floor above. The speeches had started, and we slipped in at the back to watch. Michael nodded to Leo, then went to the side table and grabbed a tray of drinks for us.
About halfway through David's welcoming speech, a deep vibration thrummed through the floor beneath us. Water hissed for a couple of seconds, then stopped. There was silence from the crowd, then a few giggles and confused conversation. Nothing else happened so David continued his speech.
Oh my God, Emma, look out the window,
Simone said.
I glanced left and stared. The sky and the other side of the harbour had gone. There was just a wall of blackness next to us, as high as the fifteen-metre windows. Its slightly curved vertical surface shifted like liquid in the reflected light of the Convention Centre.
David continued his speech, but people next to the window began moving away. More people noticed, and the chatter became louder and gained a frightened edge.
âDon't worry, it's just an optical illusion,' David said, frantically waving me towards the podium. âIt happens sometimes when there's an inversion layer over the water, because of the change in seasons. It's an atmospheric
anomaly, that's all. Don't bother taking photos; you won't capture anything because it's not really there â it's something like a mirage.'
âWhat is it?' I asked Simone, waving back to David to indicate that I'd be there in a minute.
âIt's just water,' Simone said. âA wall of water. Not an optical illusion.'
âYour dad?'
âNo. Only water. It might be elementals playing around, but I can't sense any.' She moved closer to the glass and concentrated. âNo intelligence behind it.' She cocked her head. âWhy is it doing that?'
I walked towards the podium to reassure David, and some of the people nearby reacted loudly. A lump two metres across had emerged from the wall and was following me. I took a couple more steps towards David and the ball paced me. I continued and a snake's head, at least a metre across, shot out of the water and slammed its snout into the window glass with a wet crack. People screamed and scurried away from the glass.
I stopped and turned to face the snake. Something in its eyes called to me and I raised one hand, desperately wishing I could touch it. It pushed its head more slowly towards me and came through the glass as if it wasn't there. It touched its snout to my hand and time stopped. We hung suspended in the moment, touching snake to snake. The world spiralled away from me and the water rose up to meet me, its darkness filled with the immeasurable cold intelligence of the Serpent. It pulled its head back, nodded to me, and spun to disappear back into the wall of water.
The water collapsed, sending a black surge against the glass and then subsiding.
I jogged up to the podium to speak in David's ear. âPretend that was part of the show, courtesy of Chencorp, please. Nobody's in danger.'
David raised his hands and spoke loudly over the PA system. âLadies and gentlemen, a round of applause for the special three-dimensional installation courtesy of Chencorp, one of the patrons for this evening. That was a one-off display of the installation before it is dismantled for a world tour, a demonstration of some of today's most advanced holographic technology.' He dropped his voice. âHow's that?'
âAbsolutely perfect. I owe you.'
There was scattered applause through the room, then people surged forward and applauded me loudly, discussing the snake and water. I patted David on the shoulder and turned to go back down.
âWait,' he said. âWhat if something like that happens again?'
âJust say it's an encore,' I said.
He shrugged. âTurnout will be double next time we have a charity opening.'
âAll good for the kids,' I said, and went back down to Simone and the men.
Â
Before the auction we wandered around the paintings. Simone showed me a Western-style oil painting of a group of running horses, one of them palomino.
âI like this one. Do you think it would look good in my room?'
âWhich room â on the Peak or at home?' I said.
âAt home. It's too big for the Peak, it's a metre across. It would look good in the living room in my apartment on the Mountain.'
Leo studied the painting. âThis isn't terribly well done, you know. You only want to buy it because it looks like Freddo.'
She nodded a reply.
âHe should pay for it to compensate you for destroying
the carpet and making you move out while it was replaced,' Michael said.
âPay with what?' Simone said.
âA promise not to pee on the carpet in future would be a good start,' Leo said.
âOh geez,' Simone said softly, looking behind me, then quickly went to another painting, Michael and Leo trailing her.
I turned to see what had spooked them and nearly sighed with dismay. It was George Wilson, taipan of one of the big shipping companies. He was a good head taller than me and nearly the same around, carrying a large glass of scotch leaning against his stomach and a predatory grin above his double chins.
âHere's the girl in charge,' he said too loudly, surrounding me in a cloud of alcohol. âRunning the business by yourself, real executive woman. You can be in charge of me any day, honey.' He moved closer and I backed away. He leaned into me and his breath made my eyes water. âI bet you just love showing your good-looking bodyguards how you're in charge.'
Simone stormed to us and glared at him. âYou're drunk, George, and you're making inappropriate comments to my stepmother.'
He grinned at her. âLook at Missy being the boss. I bet your Michael-boy likes you being the boss.' His grin grew into a leer. âYou're growing up fast, honey.'
âThis is sexual harassment!' Simone said.
âOh, Simone, really,' he said, spreading his arms and spilling his drink on the carpet. âI'm just having a bit of fun â don't go all feminazi on me. Don't take offence when I'm just joking around. I haven't even touched you.'
âTouch me and I'll break your arm,' she said, and walked stiffly back to Michael and Leo.
âYou need to teach her, Emma, or she'll end up one of these radical feminists who think they know better than
men; ugly and bossy and no man'll be interested in her,' George said. He sidled closer to me. âSo do you have a new man in your life yet? Peter Tong keeps boasting he's dating you, but I don't believe it.'
âI'm not looking, thanks, George,' I said.
âNo such thing as a woman who isn't looking. Tell you what.' He moved so we were side by side facing the art. âMy wife's gone to South Africa for a couple of weeks. Why don't you come over? I have some fantastic art at my place.' He turned to me and grinned broadly. âWhy don't you pop over, have a drink, maybe lunch ⦠or dinner ⦠take a look?'
I shook my head. âI'm not really that interested in art. I think I'll go catch up with Simone. Later, George.'
He waved his drink at me. âDon't be a stranger, darling. Has to be hard running that big company without any help.'
I rejoined Simone, Leo and Michael, who were forcedly discussing a garish abstract canvas.
âWhy are you so polite to him?' Simone said. âWhy don't you just tell him where to go?'
Leo bent to speak softly to me. âYou should, Emma. He'll only respect you if you tell him to his face. Being polite is only giving him ammunition.'
âBeing rude would give him even more ammunition,' I said. âThere's really no way of dealing with a man like that. I didn't agree to go to his house to see his “art” while his wife's away, so he's probably labelled me already.'
âHe invited you to his house?' Michael said, aghast.
âYou should tell his wife!' Simone said.
âShe knows all about it,' I said. âShe just puts up with it because that's the way he is. She went to South Africa to get away from him for a while.'
We watched as George joined another group, one that held his personal assistant. He placed his hand
around her waist then casually drifted it lower. She stiffened, obviously uncomfortable, but didn't move away.
Simone shivered. âShe should sue him for sexual harassment.'
âThis is the Earthly Plane, Simone. If she did that, he'd make sure she never worked anywhere again. She'd get a bad reputation and be unemployable. These women stay in the job for a year, he gives them a glowing reference, and they go on to something well-paid and worthwhile.'
âThat is so wrong,' Simone said. âAll those other people are standing around talking as if it isn't happening.'
âGo to the lectures at CH about power and dominance,' Michael said. âThey're fascinating.'
âI stayed away because I'm not interested in either,' Simone said. âBut I think I will now.'
David Hawkes approached us again and towered over me. âEmma, do you mind if I have a quiet word?'
I nodded and we went to the side together. He gestured towards a seat placed facing the windows and we sat.
âGeorge Wilson is telling everybody that you're a lesbian,' David said with humour. âJust thought you'd like to know.'
I shrugged. âI'm not surprised. I turned him down.'
âI wanted to ask you about Taoist philosophy. If all that stuff is real, then it's worth pursuing.' He gestured with his chin towards Leo. âTaoist Immortal. Who would have believed it? Everybody's asking who his plastic surgeon is.'
âLeo didn't attain the Tao, though, he was Raised by the Jade Emperor.'
David let his breath out in a long gasp. âDamn. The Jade Emperor. And I thought meeting the President of
the United States was cool. So tell me about pine nuts and spring water.'
âYou've been doing some research?'
âThere isn't much in English. You have the word straight from the source â so, how do you do it?'
I shrugged. âI haven't done it so I don't know.'
âIs there anyone I can ask?'
âDo what?' Bridget said from where she'd approached behind us.
David turned and smiled at her. âEmma's an expert on Taoist philosophy. I was asking her about it.'
She studied him carefully, her expression severe, then relaxed, and I did too.
âI noticed you've been reading up on Taoism â you bought a lot of books,' she said. âAre you thinking of converting?'
âYou don't convert to Taoism, it's not really a religion â¦' I began, then changed tack. âIt's not an exclusive religion, anyway. Many Taoists are also Buddhists; it's more like a spiritual philosophy than a religion. Taoists want to achieve Immortality, but once they've done that, they'll go on to try to attain Enlightenment and become a Buddha. They don't have a god as such â¦' I changed direction again. âOr a single, all-powerful jealous god that doesn't like you worshipping anyone else. It's more about finding yourself and where you fit in the universe. Because when you know who you are, and where you are, and what you are, the rest of Reality just slots into place and you find yourself attuned to it â able to see it and affect it as much as it affects you.'
âI have good reason to believe that what Taoists teach â about achieving Immortality â is true,' David said to Bridget.
She studied him for a long moment. âAs long as it doesn't interfere with anything else, I suppose.'
âI take it that means I'm not allowed to go to the top of a mountain and exist on pine nuts and spring water any time soon,' he said with a grin.
She tapped him on the shoulder. âDon't you dare. I need help taking the boys to soccer on the weekend.'
David rose. âI'll ask you more about it later, Emma.'
âIt's traditional for a Taoist to fulfil his or her duty, then pursue the Tao,' I said. âRaise a family, see to their wellbeing, then take themselves off, as you said, to the top of a mountain.'
âI was thinking Spain for our retirement, actually,' Bridget said. âI don't think there are any mountains there.'
âPyrenees darling, best skiing on the Continent,' he said. âYou can retire to caring for our visiting grandchildren, and I'll study Taoist philosophy.'
She grimaced theatrically. âGrandchildren? Don't wish that on me yet, Phillip's only fourteen.' She gestured towards the podium. âThe bidding starts soon, honey, better get up there and do your stuff.'
David nodded to me and straightened his suit. âDuty calls, Emma, let's see some money raised for these kids.' He held his hand out and I shook it.
Bridget smiled. âGo do your thing, Mr Hawkes, and Ms Donahoe and I will discuss the best places to retire.'
He bent and kissed her on the cheek. âDon't bother asking her, I don't think she'll share hers.' He winked at me and strode away.
âPlease don't set him on a path that will ruin his family,' Bridget said mildly without looking away from David, who was loping up onto the dais. âI need him.'
âDon't worry, Bridget, I have too much respect for you to do anything like that,' I said, also watching David as he introduced the auctioneer. âI'll give him the information he asks for, but I know that his family needs him.'
She turned, quickly hugged me and kissed my cheek. âThanks, Emma.'
The auctioneer moved up to the lectern and David returned to the floor to sit in front of the bidders.
âWe're up,' I said to Bridget. âTime to spend some money.'
Â
When the auction was over, most of the guests hung around chatting, but Simone had spent a long day in school and we decided to head home to the Peak. We'd return to the Mountain in the morning after she'd rested. We paid for the parking at the shroff office under the Convention Centre and made our way to the car. Our footsteps echoed eerily in the car park; there weren't many other people around.