Black Jade (13 page)

Read Black Jade Online

Authors: Kylie Chan

BOOK: Black Jade
12.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Over a hundred armed humanoids carrying swords swarmed out of the Gates building, heading towards my family. The Turtle gently levered everyone off its shell, then stood its ground in front of them. I moved as fast as I could to help it.

‘Greg, down!' I yelled.

‘What?' Greg shouted, then dropped as well, the flyers following him. ‘Where the
fuck
is Guan Yu?'

Greg, the Serpent and I stood in front of my family, who were cowering behind the Turtle's shell. The flyers swooped down, attempting to grab my sisters, but the Turtle knocked them out of the sky with blasts of shen from its mouth.

The demons from the Gates stopped three metres from us, a mass of sharp pointed metal. One of the larger ones stepped forward, opened its mouth to reveal its tusks, then took a deep breath and shot a blast of demon essence — black with pale blue energy around its edge — straight into the Turtle's head. The Turtle imploded into a black hole in reality, leaving my family undefended, and the Serpent disappeared as well.

One of the flyers swooped down, grabbed my sister Amanda, and dropped her into the group of demons.

‘Amanda!' I screamed, and slithered towards them with my head raised.

They pushed her to the front where we could see her: seemingly untouched, but rigid with fear. One of the demons held her with its hand around her throat.

‘Back off or I will kill her right now,' it said.

‘Mum!' Mark wailed behind us.

I changed back to human and raised my hands in surrender. Greg put his sword on the ground in front of him and raised his hands as well. The demon grabbed Amanda's arm and pulled it
behind her, so strong that it seemed effortless. She dropped her head and whimpered.

‘Don't hurt her,' I said. ‘We surrender. We concede. Take me instead. I'm the one you want. I'll send them back home, just don't —'

The demon jerked Amanda's arm and her shoulder cracked. She screamed and collapsed in its grasp, sobbing. Both of her sons screamed as well. Alan tried to run to her and I put my hand out to stop him before he passed me. He fought me, pulling away, and I had to hold his arm tight to stop him from throwing himself at them.

‘Alan, she needs you!' I said.

He made a loud sound of frustration and stood next to me, trembling.

‘Please,' I said. ‘Trade me for her.'

‘If you go home now, nobody else will be hurt,' the demon said. It shook Amanda, making her scream again. ‘Just stop trying to take your family out, okay? When we win, we'll need them to make sure you don't do anything stupid.'

It pushed Amanda towards us and she fell into Alan's arms. Mark and David loudly protested behind me; Greg was stopping them from running to their mother.

‘The next time you try to run away, we'll do this to one of the
children
,' the demon said. ‘Dad's waiting for you to meet him and discuss terms. He won't wait much longer. Now go home.'

* * *

That afternoon I was sitting alone in the living room of the Imperial Residence in the Dark Palace of the Northern Heavens, staring at the contact list on my phone while I waited for John to be returned from Court Ten. The phone started to play music without me touching it: smooth jazz with a velvet-voiced woman singing about smoke and whisky. It was the sort of music that my stone adored. I checked it, but there was no call to answer. It was just playing music that I'd never put into it.

My parents came in and I quickly turned the phone off, then rose to hug them.

‘Are you okay?' I said, sitting them on the other sofa. ‘Is Mandy all right?'

‘She's resting comfortably,' my mother said. ‘Meredith gave her energy healing and her shoulder should be okay in a couple of weeks.'

‘Will she see me now? I need to apologise.'

‘No, you don't,' my mother said. ‘But you should stay away for a while anyway.' She smiled without humour. ‘That was quite a scare, wasn't it?'

‘What happened to Guan Yu?' my father said. ‘The guy that guards the Gates?'

‘They killed him. He's in Court Ten as well. They've taken the Gates.'

‘How did they know we were there?' my mother said. ‘Both times we tried to go through and they were waiting for us.'

‘They didn't know,' I said. ‘Now they have control of the Gates, they've been watching them. Big Shen like John can go down directly, but smaller Shen like me and Greg, and humans like you, have to use the Gates.'

‘Humans like
us
,' my mother said.

‘Emma . . .' my father said, and trailed off.

‘I know. This is all my fault,' I said, looking down at my hands.

‘We want you to be brave, sweetheart,' my mother said. ‘And if it comes to us or the rest of the Heavens, choose the Heavens.' I glanced up at her. ‘What?'

‘If they're blackmailing you with our safety, and they threaten to torture us, just take us out of the picture,' my father said. ‘You mustn't let anything stop you from doing what you have to.'

‘I can't do that!'

‘If you have to, you have to,' my mother said. She took my hand. ‘If we are the only thing stopping you from fighting these monsters, then we want you to remove us so you can concentrate.'

‘I will never do that in a million years,' I said. ‘If I did that, I would be as bad as them.'

‘We won't make you promise,' my mother said. ‘But if you need to make the hard decision, we are right behind you.'

‘God.' I ran my hands through my hair. ‘We think this might be what the Jade Emperor is doing to everybody. Killing you all
because the alternative — being toys for the demons — is worse than death.'

‘If that's the case, then I agree with him,' my father said. He rose. ‘We'll leave you to it. We just wanted you to know how we feel.'

‘Thank you, but it will never come to that,' I said. ‘And it's beside the point, because if they threaten the children then I will have to do anything they say. I may, in a fit of madness, be able to remove you from the equation, but I could never do it to a helpless child.'

‘We wouldn't expect you to,' my father said.

‘We're behind you, Emma,' my mother said. ‘I'll let you know when you can see Mandy. She can't be mad at you forever.'

‘And in the meantime, take care of yourself, honey,' my father said. ‘Let John do some of the work.'

They kissed and hugged me again and went out.

I sat back on the sofa and picked my phone up from the coffee table. I scrolled through the names in the contact list, selected ‘George', and pressed the call button.

‘Ah Wu,' the Demon King said with pleasure. ‘I was worried that the idiot Jade Emperor thought you had a chance of winning and was about to throw you all into the Pits. Please, tell me where we can meet and sort this out so nobody else is hurt.'

‘It's me,' I said.

His voice went richer. ‘Emma, darling. I'd say about time the brain of the outfit was in charge, but I know how damn sneaky his Serpent is. So where do we meet?'

‘The French restaurant on the top floor of the Hong Kong Marriott,' I said. ‘Seven pm?'

‘Good choice. I just replaced the CEO of that hotel chain two weeks ago,' the King said. ‘I'll have the staff pull the finest vintage out of the cellar. Will Simone be coming as well? I'd love to see her.'

‘No. Just me.'

‘Oh well, can't have everything . . . Wait.' He was silent for a moment. ‘Just you?'

‘Yes.'

‘Without Ah Wu?'

‘Yes.'

He wheezed with delight. ‘Holy shit, are you coming to me behind the Turtle's back?'

‘Seven o'clock. French restaurant. I want to talk to you about my family,' I said, and hung up.

13

I fiddled with the strap of my bag as I stood under Central Plaza in Wan Chai, waiting for a taxi; it had been a while since I'd needed to carry one. After nearly twenty minutes I was at the head of the queue, and the first taxi drove away without picking me up.

‘Racist,' I huffed under my breath.

The next taxi was driven by a man with a kind face who let me climb in.

‘Peak. One Black Road,' I said. ‘Off Mount Austin Road.'

‘Wah,' he said, pulling away from the kerb. ‘Your Cantonese is really good.'

I smiled. ‘Everybody says that. Been here all my life.'

‘Which King's your favourite?' he said, turning up the Cantopop on the radio.

‘Leon!' I said with enthusiasm.

He chuckled. ‘You're old. He's one of the old Kings.'

‘I know,' I said, settling back in the seat and trying not to sneeze from the intense cold of the air conditioning combined with the overpowering lemon scent from the air freshener that didn't quite cover his stale cigarette smoke. ‘I'm an old gweipoh.'

He glanced at me in the rear-view mirror and I tried my best to look like an innocent old gweipoh. I was still too new an Immortal to change my shape, and every year had left its mark. I
was twenty-eight when I first started working for John, and now I was forty-three. When I'd learnt John's true nature I thought we'd never be together, or have the chance of a family, have children of our own —

I pushed the thought away.

When we arrived at John's building, I gave the driver a generous tip for being nice to the old gweipoh. I stepped out of the car and stared up at the building, full of nostalgia. We'd had some good times there, just the five of us — John, Simone, Monica, Leo and me.

I hefted my bag and went up to the entrance. The security guards didn't know me and sat watching me suspiciously from their post.

I'm downstairs
, I said to Leo.
Buzz me up, will you?

I have to come down and sign you in
, Leo said.
Be right there.

I tried to look casual as I waited and the guards watched me. It wasn't until Leo came out of the lifts that I realised — the guards hadn't seen me call up to the flat. No wonder they were so suspicious.

‘We've had to increase security. Nobody goes up to the top floor without an escort,' Leo said as he signed me in. ‘We've been constantly tested since we arrived.'

‘How big?' I said as I followed him to the lift. The sound of the doors opening — that particular whining tone followed by a mild clatter — gave me another pang of nostalgia.

‘Biggest was level forty-five or thereabouts — nothing we can't handle.' He crossed his arms over his chest and watched the lights above the lift door. ‘They settled down after a couple of weeks, but we don't take any chances.'

We exited the lift, and Leo tapped the keypad next to the metal gate, opened the gate and door, and stood back to let me in.

Buffy and Er Hao were in the living room, with a collection of toys that any child would be proud to own. Er Hao stood and bowed to me, smiling, and I gave her a hug.

‘Er Hao. I hope these men aren't working you too hard.'

‘It is my pleasure, ma'am. But remember that I am yours and one day hope to return to you.'

‘I'll never forget.'

Through the large picture windows the view over the south side of the island, to the ocean, was obscured by pollution haze. The presence of so many demons in the territory had made the pollution thicker and more poisonous. The government had stopped releasing the pollution figures as they were always an unhealthy level of toxicity.

I went down onto one knee. ‘Hello, Buffy.'

‘Hello, Aunty Emma,' Buffy said, not looking up from her Lego. ‘Where's Aunty Simone? I want to play with her.'

‘Next time,' I said, rising. ‘Can I talk to your dads for a while?'

‘Ba Ba is away,' she said.

‘What, again?'

‘He'll be back soon,' Leo said. ‘Come into the dining room and wait for him.' He turned to the door. ‘Oh, he's back already.'

Martin came in the front door and knelt so that Buffy could run to him.

‘Ba Ba!'

He kissed her on the cheek and stroked her hair, then pulled her in for another hug. He saw me and his eyebrows shot up, then his expression went rigid with restraint. He rose and, still holding Buffy's hand, went to Leo and embraced him.

Then he turned to me. ‘I won't stop.'

‘That's not what I want to talk about,' I said. I gestured with my head towards the dining room. ‘Can we?'

Leo and Martin shared a look, and Martin gave Buffy to Er Hao. We went into the dining room together. Martin had replaced John's ink paintings of sea creatures with his own work: Western-style watercolours of Hong Kong scenes. He'd also framed some of Leo's novice calligraphy and hung it proudly among them.

‘You're needed in the Heavens, Ming Gui, and constantly doing this is wasting everybody's time,' I said. ‘Give it up, and try again when it's all resolved.'

‘You said that wasn't what you wanted to talk about,' he said.

‘I've been given an order; I have to fulfil it.' I sighed and leaned my elbows on the table. ‘I've been avoiding you so I don't have to bring it up, but now I'm here the imperative's taken over.'

‘The Jade Emperor has forced you to interfere?'

‘He has.' I saw his face. ‘He hasn't forced me to order you. He just wants me to talk to you.'

‘We need to be married before it all falls apart. We must ensure Buffy's future. You know how important this is to us. I'll keep petitioning him until he allows it.'

‘I do know. I support you.'

‘So tell the Jade Emperor to let us marry!' Martin said with frustration.

‘I did. He said to stop petitioning him, because the answer is “No” and you're costing the Heavens dearly by constantly throwing yourself under the executioner's blade.'

‘Did you notice he didn't say that the answer will
always
be “No”?' Martin said.

‘Yes, I did. He told me that he can't say more.'

‘If we weren't a same-sex couple this wouldn't be an issue! We could have a quick quiet ceremony and secure the future of our child.'

‘It has nothing to do with that.'

‘He's never permitted same-sex marriage, Emma. If you and Father asked him, he'd let you marry in a second.'

‘He didn't.'

‘He —' Martin stopped. ‘What?'

‘We asked him and he wouldn't let us. He won't let us marry until this is all over and finished, same as you.'

‘He has a blanket ban on marriages?' Leo said.

‘No. Just us. Other people are marrying their partners all over the Heavens for the same reason we want to — to ensure the care of their children and the distribution of their property. He's picking on you two and me. And probably on your father as well.'

‘
Why?
' they said in unison.

‘Wish to hell I knew. He just said no, and if I asked again he'd execute me, same as you. So we have to trust him and stop asking.'

‘Do you trust him with what's about to happen?' Martin said. ‘There are nearly a hundred and fifty thousand of them, and five thousand of us. He's throwing four thousand mortal soldiers to their deaths, and a thousand Immortals into the Pits.'

‘Do we have a choice, Ming Gui?'

He studied me searchingly. ‘Are you still in there, Father, and didn't tell us?'

‘No, Martin, it's just residual time ripples. I'll be like this for a while.'

‘Freaky,' Leo said.

‘You have no idea,' I growled.

‘Leo and I will be first to be sent to the Pits, leaving Buffy orphaned,' Martin said. ‘This King detests our entire family. We must protect the children.'

‘I know. That's why I'm here,' I said. ‘I want to know what my chances are.'

‘Chances of what?'

‘Killing the Demon King. The Horde will probably fall to bits without his leadership. I want your opinion as to whether it's doable.'

‘Only with Seven Stars,' Martin said.

‘Then why hasn't John destroyed the King with it already?' Leo said.

‘You were there when he explained it,' I said. ‘It was the demon attack when they drugged the Serpent.'

‘He did his thing where he blocked out the conversation. I didn't hear anything,' Leo said.

‘He does that?'

‘Sometimes,' Martin said. ‘He's even done it to me two or three times.'

‘He's never done it to me,' I said.

‘That's because he trusts you completely,' Leo said. ‘So what's this thing about Seven Stars?'

‘Are you sure he should know?' Martin said. ‘Father made me vow not to tell anybody.'

‘Leo should know.' I turned to him. ‘If John uses Seven Stars on this King, he'll absorb the King's demon essence and turn back into a mindless nature spirit.'

‘He's done that before,' Leo said. ‘You're Immortal. You can wait. That's not a good enough reason.'

‘He wouldn't return. He'd stay an animal permanently. And that much demon essence could easily make him revert.'

‘Revert to what?'

‘Father was immensely powerful turtle and snake demons before he combined and turned to the Celestial,' Martin said.

Leo was silent for a long time. Then he said vehemently, ‘It's not worth it.'

‘Seven Stars is the only thing that can destroy this King, Emma,' Martin said. ‘Don't waste your time trying with energy. It won't work.'

‘What about the Murasame?' I said.

‘Oh,' Martin said.

‘It can?' Leo said.

Martin nodded.

‘It's in the centre of Hell,' Leo said. ‘You'd have to go right down to the bottom of Hell, and talk your son into giving it back to you when he has no idea who you are.'

‘Yep,' I said.

Leo grinned. ‘Can I come too?'

‘That's why I'm here.'

‘Me,' Martin said.

‘Both of you,' I said. ‘Simone can mind Buffy with Er Hao. Heaven knows, the child has enough toys to keep her occupied for a couple of hours while we go find my sword and bring it back out.'

‘I'm in,' Leo said. ‘We may be able to stop this before it starts.'

‘Me too,' Martin said. ‘But I must have Father's permission.'

‘He may order you not to go,' I said.

‘He is my Emperor and I am his Number One. I won't go behind his back.'

I looked from Martin to Leo. Leo's face was full of pride.

‘It's a matter of honour, Lady Emma,' Martin said.

‘All right, I understand.' I checked my watch. ‘We can talk to him as soon as he's home from Hell. Right now I have a meeting to go to.'

‘Don't try to negotiate with the Demon King,' Martin said. ‘He isn't trustworthy.'

I rose to leave. ‘Too late.'

* * *

I nodded to the restaurant's receptionist. ‘I'm here to meet with George Mo.'

The receptionist checked the booking, saw the character for ‘Mo' — demon — and looked up, confused. ‘His name is a very bad word, very bad luck, very bad.'

‘That's the good luck version of his name,' I said.

‘Why?'

‘You don't want to know. Keep away from him.'

She paled and nodded, shut the book, and led me into the main area of the restaurant. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlooked the latest ugly reclamation on Hong Kong harbour, and the pollution haze effectively blocked the view of the other side of the water.

I stopped when I saw who was sitting with the Demon King. A couple of Mothers, his Number One Andy Ho . . . and John.

John's expression mirrored my shock, then he lowered his head and smiled grimly. I nodded to him and sat next to him.

The Demon King poured some red wine for me. ‘You wanted to talk about the same thing, so I thought I'd do it all at once. One more to come . . . and here she is.'

Simone stopped when she saw me and John and her expression went rigid. She sagged and sat at the table as well, on the other side of John.

‘Let's hear the offers, one at a time,' the King said, swirling the red wine in his oversized glass. ‘Ah Wu, you first.'

‘We discussed me going into the jade cage in True Form. If we lose, I'll do it. I'll go into a cage if you promise to keep Emma and Simone safe.'

‘Done. Emma?'

‘I'll be a mother for as many little serpent babies as you want. Just guarantee my family's safety.'

John stiffened but didn't say anything.

The King saw his reaction and smiled. ‘Just your immediate family?' he asked me.

‘Simone's like a daughter to me. Her too.'

‘Not Ah Wu?'

John remained completely unmoving.

‘No,' I said without looking at him.

‘So . . . I could do what I like to him? I can torture him in the jade cage until the end of time?'

‘If it keeps Simone safe, yes.'

Simone dropped her face into her hands but didn't say anything.

The Demon King's blood-coloured eyes were full of amusement as he looked from John to me. ‘I don't know, he's been tortured so many times that he's used to it. It would be so much more fun to play with your family instead. You've been burnt, you know what it feels like. What if I sent your family to the Hell of the Red-Hot Grates?'

I stiffened as the horrible images raced through my head, and a rush of nausea surged over me. Both the Mothers smiled with satisfaction.

‘I'll do anything,' I said. ‘Just don't hurt them.'

‘Would you take their place on the grill?'

I hesitated, then raised my head and looked him in the eye. ‘Yes.'

Other books

Many Worlds of Albie Bright by Christopher Edge
Los funerales de la Mamá Grande by Gabriel García Márquez
Faerykin by Gia Blue
Blood Moon by A.D. Ryan
The Last Star by Rick Yancey
Midnight Sacrifice by Melinda Leigh