Authors: Kylie Chan
Ma and Gold joined Zhu, and they flew down to take a look. The benches held octagonal ornamental fish tanks, full of thick, black, bubbling demon essence instead of water. The Generals' demon soldiers were battling a group of water elementals and losing. The water elementals formed water blades that sliced through the demon soldiers, easily destroying them.
Zhu raised her sword and sent a blast of lightning through a couple of elementals. They staggered back then retaliated, shooting balls of ice at the Generals.
âNone of us is equipped to deal with these,' Ma said. âZhu is thunder and I'm fire; these water things are immune to both of us.'
âFall back, hold your ground,' I said. âI'll send Simone.' I turned to speak to her, but she wasn't there. âWhere'd she go?'
âI don't know. She disappeared a while ago,' my father said.
âThat's her, there she is,' Gold said.
A screaming sound, like a jet engine, came from outside the row of houses. The demons stopped fighting and cowered as the whole building shook. The roof peeled away and Simone dropped inside, landing in a low defensive stance in front of the fake water elementals. She stood up, raised her hands, and all of the fake elementals turned to ice. She clenched her fists and ripped her hands backwards, and they shattered.
She dropped her hands. âAnything else I need to worry about?'
A tentacle lashed out of one of the fish tanks, wrapped itself around her throat and jerked her towards the tank. She was pulled along for a moment, then concentrated: the entire fish tank exploded in a shower of glass and demon essence. The tentacle fell, lifeless, from her neck.
âThat was some sort of plant hybrid,' I said. âThe Celestial plants will be furious.'
Simone put her hand to the side of her throat and staggered backwards. âTake care, everybody, those things are poisonous.' She fell to sit on the floor, still with her hand on her throat.
I jumped to my feet. âGold she's poisoned.'
âI know, ma'am,' Gold said. He knelt next to her and put his hand on her arm, then concentrated. âI've never seen anything like this before.'
âIt's okay, I learnt how to deal with this in school,' Simone said, then bent over and retched. âI can handle it.'
Zhu and Ma crouched next to her as well. Another tentacle lashed out of a second tank, but Ma summoned his sword and cut it off before it could touch them. It withdrew into the tank.
Gold's view returned to Simone and I gasped. She was unconscious, her face pale and swollen.
âCall John back,' I said. âQuickly!'
A deeper, booming scream sounded overhead and John shot through the opened roof to land next to Simone. He pushed Zhu and Ma away, knelt next to her and lifted her head into his lap. He put one hand on her forehead and his expression went grim.
I took half a step forward, but the projection became more difficult to see at close range, so I moved back and sat again, helpless.
John gently lowered Simone to the ground again. Her head lolled, her eyes open but unseeing. He pulled Seven Stars from his back and handed it to Ma, then changed to Turtle.
Zhu jumped up and began searching the benches, carefully staying out of range of the plant demons in the tanks. She found what she was looking for â a glass beaker â and returned to John and Ma.
John raised his front left foot and closed his eyes, his Turtle face serene. Zhu held the beaker below the foot, and Ma cut it off. A stream of blood flowed from the stump and Zhu collected it in the beaker. When it was half-full, she turned and dribbled the blood into Simone's mouth.
âOne of the demons poisoned Simone.' I swallowed hard. âShe looks really bad. They're giving her John's blood to drink â it's a healing agent.'
Simone inhaled loudly and gasped, then coughed. John changed back to human form, missing his left hand, and held her. Zhu and Ma cut some strips from Ma's robe, and Gold wrapped them around the stump of John's wrist. John didn't seem aware of them working; he concentrated on Simone.
âCan he grow it back?' I said.
âSorry; busy,' Gold said.
âI understand.'
Zhu moved to take Simone's head in her lap. John rose, turned, and Ma handed Seven Stars to him. John
held it easily in one hand, raised it and loaded it with his chakra energy. The seven holes in the blade sang as they filled with different-coloured lights; then John pointed the blade at the aquariums and dark energy shot out to spread around him, shattering their glass. The demons inside looked like grassy plants: all long, narrow blades, some with yellow flowers. The tentacles weren't visible at first, curled up inside the leaves, but then the demons lashed out towards John, trying to hit him with the tentacles' poisonous spiny ends. John lowered the sword and held out the stump of his left hand towards them, then grimaced and dropped it.
Ma stepped forward, pushed his hands palms out towards the plant demons and enveloped them in a gush of flames. The demons blackened, shrivelled and died.
John turned back to Simone, and Zhu moved out of the way so that he could hold her again. He placed the sword on the ground next to him and put his hand on her forehead.
She opened her eyes and smiled up at him. âThat tasted absolutely awful.'
âI know,' he said. He looked up at Ma, and his eyes unfocused. âIs that all there is here?'
âNo. My commander reports that there are some humans in cages at the other end of the building,' Zhu said.
âRhonda. Clarissa.' I felt a leap of hope. âThe boys!'
John gazed down at Simone, concerned. âCan you walk?'
âNo, leave me here,' she said.
âMa, bring her,' John said, and stood up again, collecting his sword. He shook the stump of his left hand. âI can't grow it back right now, Emma. Either I can wait for it to come back by itself, or visit Court Ten and be renewed. Visiting Court Ten for something
as trivial as this is considered a waste of Pao's time, though.'
âI see,' I said.
Ma lifted Simone and carried her, and they rose into the air.
The demon soldiers had finished with the smaller demons that had tried to escape; all had been either destroyed or turned. The ten demons that had turned stood quietly to one side waiting for a Celestial to give them the Fire Essence Pill.
âPut me down, I can fly myself,' Simone said.
âWhen we're back on the ground,' Ma said.
John led them along the building to the other end. A small partitioned area held four cages, each a metre to a side and two metres tall. I couldn't see from above what was in the cages, and John dropped to examine them.
âStop the recording before you come down,' he said to Gold. âI don't care how many orders Emma gives you, she is not to see this. Leave Simone at the other end of the building while we pull them out.'
The recording blanked out.
âBut are the boys there?' I said.
My mother rushed to sit next to me. âThey found the boys?'
âI'm not sure,' I said. âZara?'
âYes,' Zara said in Gold's voice. âClarissa and the two boys are here. They're in extremely bad shape. We'll clean them up and bring them home.'
Â
Just over an hour later, John rang the doorbell and my family ran to let him in. He stood in the doorway behind Mark and Andrew. Simone was next to him, looking wan and exhausted. The boys had been showered and their clothes changed to Mountain uniforms. They were both gaunt to the point of emaciation, completely bald, with sunken, staring eyes.
Jennifer and Amanda ran to the boys and embraced them, then brought them in and sat them on the couches. Colin and David helped, Colin holding Andrew's hand and David holding Mark's. Their brothers didn't respond.
John came in and knelt in front of Andrew.
What's this one's name again?
âAndrew,' I said. âThe other one is Mark.'
He touched the side of Andrew's head. âAndrew.'
Andrew jerked slightly, and seemed to notice John for the first time.
âAndrew, you're at your grandparents' house,' John said, his voice gentle. âYou're home, you're safe, you're with Colin and your mother. They're right here.'
âMum?' Andrew said, looking around. He saw Jennifer and threw himself into her arms. âMum! You're here!'
John went to Mark and did the same thing, touching him lightly on the side of the face. Mark took longer to come around, but he eventually recognised the family as well, and a joyful reunion took place.
John rose and took a few steps back to let us share the moment. Simone collapsed onto a stool at the kitchen bench and leaned her head on her crossed arms.
I went to John and linked my fingers in his right hand; his left was still gone. âHow's Clarissa?'
âIn a similar state, but for her it is a hundred times worse. She was convinced that Michael would come and rescue her, and he never did. She feels that he abandoned her.'
âOh dear Lord, that's awful.'
âShe's in the Tiger's hospital here in the West, and refusing to see Michael. She will probably never forgive him. It's quite likely none of them will be able to function completely normally ever again.'
âDid you see Rhonda?'
âNo. She is dead, Emma.'
I flopped to sit and put my head in my hands.
âI have something for you,' John said, and held his hand out to me.
I looked in his palm: there was my stone, small, square and green. I took it and turned it in my fingers. âHello, stone, welcome back.'
It didn't reply, and I glanced up at John.
âIt won't talk to me either,' John said. âGold assures me that this is it. Obviously it's been traumatised as well.' He put his arm around me. âWe all have a great deal of healing to do.'
I tried to put the stone back into its setting, but the claws were too close together to slip it in. âI'll have to ask the Tiger for help. The stone isn't dead, is it?'
âIt can't die. I think it's just broken, and it will take some time for it to come back.'
I stroked the stone with my finger. âI'm glad you're back,' I said to it. âI really missed you.'
It seemed to pulse under my finger and then went still.
âWill your family still go into hiding?' John said.
âThat's the last thing on their minds right now,' I said. âProvided the boys get a good level of care, I think they will.'
âAfter this, I don't blame them.'
âWhat about Kitty and the Death Mother?'
âZhao and Guan are tracking them. They headed out very fast, north towards Thailand. We will find them.'
I leaned my head on his shoulder and touched the bandage on his left stump. âDid you really have to cut the whole thing off like that?'
âThe Turtle's blood is deep under the surface, and we were in a hurry. It was the only way.'
âYou seem to have endless patience with my interminable questions,' I said.
âDo I?' He appeared surprised. âIt's just answers.' He squeezed my shoulders. âThe Tiger says we can stay here tonight and say goodbye to your family tomorrow. He has some things he wants to show us; among them, his hospitality.'
âDo you want to stay here as well, Simone?' I said.
Simone nodded into her crossed arms.
John went to her and put his hand on her shoulder. She raised her head and smiled wanly at him.
Jennifer and Amanda were clutching their sons without speaking. My parents joined John and Simone.
âWould you like a drink or something, Simone?' my father said. âYou look terrible.'
âShe was severely poisoned, she nearly died,' John said. âShe just needs to rest.'
âA soft drink would be absolutely awesome,' Simone said. She sat up and took John's hand. âYou saved my life, Daddy.'
My father poured a drink and put it on the bench in front of her. She nodded her thanks and drained it quickly.
âWe're staying here in the Western Palace tonight,' John said.
âYou should take Emma and Simone to bed then,' my mother said. âBoth of them are exhausted.'
âIt's not even nine o'clock,' Simone said.
âYou're having trouble staying upright,' I said. âMum's right.'
âYou don't look too good yourself, John. Do you need that arm seen to?' my mother said. âThat wound is still bleeding.'
John raised his arm; she was right. âIt's minor.'
âTypical. Cut the man's hand off and he says it's minor,' my father said. âNow you all go and get some rest, and we'll see you at breakfast. And John?'
âHm?' John said.
My father held out his hand. âThanks for bringing the boys back. You have no idea how much that means to us.'
John hesitated for a moment, then shook my father's hand. âThey'll need counselling, Brendan. I won't go into detail about what happened to them, but it wasn't good. They'll never be the same again, and I think you'll be cursing me for many years to come.'
âProbably,' my father said. âBut at least they're alive.'
âCome on, ladies,' John said. âLet's leave them to it, and return in the morning.'
I hugged my parents before we left, but Jennifer and Amanda didn't seem to be aware that we were going. They were concentrating on their children, and I didn't blame them.
T
he Tiger showed us to the suite we'd be sharing; it was the same one with the balcony that we'd stayed in all that time ago. Royal blue cushions still decorated the purple couch, and the wind chime sounded gently outside the window.
Simone hugged us both, then took herself straight to bed.
John leaned on the windowsill, then turned to see me. The desert breeze lifted his hair; it had completely come out of its tie again.
âThey have seen things no human should see,' he said. âAnd they are children.'
I went to him and wrapped myself around him, and he held me close, burying his face in my hair.
There was a tap on the door and he raised his head. âThere's a physician here to tidy up my arm,' he said. âIt hasn't stopped bleeding and he'll close it off.' He released me. âI suggest you go run a bath or something while we do this; it won't be pretty.'
âDo you need my energy healing?' I said.
He gazed into my eyes with amusement. âYou have a terminal disease and you're offering healing? Go rest yourself, Miss Donahoe, because you're the one who needs it.'
He stroked my arms and I yelped and jumped back; it
felt like a twenty-centimetre red-hot needle had been plunged into my right arm. I unrolled the bandage: there was a streak of normal skin in the centre of the demon essence.
John raised his left arm. âIt was this.'
I carefully edged the black part of my arm towards the stump, and the second it touched I yelped again. Where it had touched, the black had changed to normal human colour.
âMy blood is removing the essence,' John said with interest.
The physician tapped on the door again.
âEnter,' John said.
âCan we do the rest of it now?' I said.
âWhile it causes you that much torment? I don't think so,' John said. âWe'll wait until you're stronger and back on the Mountain, then we'll block the meridians and do it that way. We may even put you under completely.'
The physician came in with a large black doctor's bag, and saluted us on one knee. John nodded to him then returned to me. âNow go run that bath and wait for me. This shouldn't take long.'
âWon't it hurt you as much as this hurt me?' I said, raising my arm.
âIf it did, do you think I'd be talking to you like this?' he said. He pushed me gently away. âGo, before I die of blood loss and Judge Pao makes me stay on Level Ten for the next six months. He's annoyed enough to do it.'
âNo,' I said. âI want to ask the physician something. Doctor?'
âBai; I don't use a pseudonym,' the doctor said.
âI had my right ovary removed a few days ago. Is there any way for you to check if the left one is still there?'
âPull your jeans down a little and lie on the couch, I'll have a feel,' he said.
I lay on the couch as directed, and John watched as the doctor massaged my abdomen.
âI need to do an internal to be sure. Is that all right?' the doctor said.
âSure.'
He took a pair of latex gloves from his bag and slipped them on, and I stood up and pulled my jeans and panties completely off. I lay back on the couch and he slipped his hand inside me to examine me internally. John moved quickly to stop him.
âNo,' I said. âThis is normal. Let him.'
He used one hand inside me and the other on the outside of my abdomen to palpate it, feeling for the ovaries. I squeaked as he pushed against the scar on the right side; it was still tender.
âSorry,' he said, his eyes unfocused. âThat one's definitely gone.' He moved to the left side. âThis one's still here. I can feel it.'
I let out a huge gasping breath of relief. âThank you.'
âI suggest you have an ultrasound to confirm; that isn't the most accurate method of identification,' he said, helping me back upright and carefully not watching as I pulled my clothes back on.
âWhy couldn't you just feel her pulse like a normal doctor?' John said, obviously distressed.
âBecause her ovaries aren't on her wrists,' the doctor said with amusement. He nodded to me. âNow let me change my gloves and pull out my instruments, and I'll sew up the Dark Lord's arm.'
Â
John came into the bathroom later, looking incongruous with a plastic bag over the end of his arm.
I draped myself over the edge of the bath. âGod of water, can't get his arm wet.'
âI know,' he said. âIt's been so long since my energy has been at full strength that I've forgotten what it's like.'
âI would like to look at you with my Internal Eye and see how big you really are,' I said.
âGo right ahead.'
I opened my Eye on him for the first time since he'd returned. He appeared as a great Turtle, bigger than the building we were in, but so drained that he was only a pale shadow.
âYou're vast,' I said with wonder. âSo strong, and still so weak.'
âNot even a trip to Court Ten can fix this,' he said. âI need to be on my Mountain, undisturbed, for days.'
I hopped out of the tub to help him undress, but he concentrated and lost the clothes before I reached him. I stepped back and admired him.
He saw me looking at him and turned away, knowing full well what the sight of his muscular back and behind did for me. âCould you tie my hair back? I can't do it one-handed.'
I took a hair tie from the toiletries provided on the bathroom counter and went to him. I smoothed his hair back, then couldn't resist the urge to bury my face in it, relishing the silken feeling and the smell of the sea. I pressed myself into him, breathing in the scent of his hair, and ran my hands down his sides, tracing the muscles over his ribs and abdomen. I slipped my hand lower to stroke him, enjoying his reaction.
He took my hands in his remaining one and held them over his chest. âForget the hair tie. I give up,' he said, his voice vibrating through him. He turned around and smiled down at me with his hand and stump low on my back, making the plastic rustle against my skin. âI guess the hair will have to stay loose.'
As he realised what he was doing, his expression changed and he moved his left arm behind his back. âThat doesn't worry you? If you'd prefer not to be touched with it, I would understand.'
I didn't reply; I just climbed into the shower and pulled him in with me. He pushed his face into the water and ran his remaining hand through his hair, squeezing the water through it with obvious pleasure. I pushed him to turn him around and shampooed his hair for him. He sat so I could massage his scalp, obviously enjoying it.
âNot as dry this time,' I said. âIt's strong and healthy.'
âWait until I'm at full strength, then it will have a life of its own. It may even stop you from washing it.'
I ran the conditioner through it, revelling in the silken feeling. With him sitting, it touched the shower floor behind him.
âWhy do all you traditional Chinese warriors leave your hair long?' I said as I squeezed the conditioner out. âIt must drive you nuts sometimes.'
âMy hair is a gift from my ancestors, and it is disrespectful to them to cut it,' he said.
âYou're joking.'
âThat's why we used to leave it long.' He stood up, took the soap and turned to run it over me. âOf course, I have no ancestors, but when I took human form, a man's long hair was his â¦' He searched for the word. âHis manhood? No. His pride? I don't know.'
âI think I understand. It's a little like shaving prisoners' heads to intimidate them. It's your self-respect.'
âExactly,' he said.
He slid the soap over me, making me wriggle in response.
âOh, that's interesting,' he said, rubbing his soapy hand over my back then sliding it onto my breast, making me lean into him and writhe. âYou seem to like this more and more all the time. I just wish I had both hands to do it with.'
âYou drive me crazy, you know that, Xuan Wu?' I said as his strong, slick hand roamed over me. He
leaned to whisper in my ear as his hand slid between my legs. âGood. You drive me insane all the time.'
Â
âLast time we were in this room, I wanted to stay here forever,' I said, wrapped around him in the blue and gold bed.
âI remember,' he said. âWe had to return; we had duties to perform.' He turned to see me. âI hope that isn't the way you feel now.'
âNo. I can't wait to be back on our Mountain.'
He touched the side of my face. âYou delight me and terrify me at the same time.'
âTerrify you?'
He stroked my face. âPlease don't be my Serpent. I like having you around.'
I put my hand over his. âI terrify myself.'
Â
My family were waiting for us on the terrace outside their villa when we returned the next morning. My parents hugged me, and we sat to join them for tea, fruit and pastries.
âAndrew has something he wants to ask John,' my father said.
âAnything, Andrew,' John said.
âI want to know â¦' Andrew took a deep breath. âYou can mess around with people's heads, can't you?'
âI'm not supposed to, but I can,' John said.
âYou want him to erase your memories?' I said.
âBoth of us do,' Mark said. âYou know what was down there.' He turned to his mother. âI think we should talk about this away from you guys. We don't want David to hear what it was like.'
âI'm not little!' David said, protesting. âI'm nearly thirteen!'
âCan you take the other ones for a walk?' John asked my father.
âNo, I want to hear,' Colin said. âI'm nearly the same age as Simone, and she was there.'
âDavid, come with me,' my mother said in a tone that brooked no protest. David opened his mouth to argue, then went quiet and left with her.
âThere,' Mark said. âDid you do something to him to make him go with her?'
âNo, I didn't,' John said. âMessing with heads is something we do only in extreme circumstances and in the direst of need, because if we aren't careful we can cause permanent damage.'
Mark's voice went hoarse. âAnd you think what we went through down there didn't cause permanent damage?'
John looked him in the eye. âI know it did.'
âCan you erase our memories back to the moment before we were taken?' Andrew said.
âI want my little brother back,' Colin said, desperate. âI hate to see him like this.'
âI hate being like this,' Andrew said.
Should I do it, Emma? It would spare them much suffering.
âYes,' I said. âIt's worth the risk. Despite what you think, John, you're the best telepathic healer that's ever been in my head.'
Mark sagged with relief. âThanks, Aunty Emma.'
âIs this what you want as well?' John asked the boys' parents.
âI honestly wish I could join them in forgetting. I don't know how Emma does it,' Allan said.
âI want it too. I want my Andrew back,' Jennifer said.
âDitto for me,' Amanda said. âI hate seeing Mark like this.'
âVery well,' John said.
âYes,' Andrew said softly.
âIt will take an hour for each boy. I'll examine them
carefully before I do anything to them,' John said. âWhen are you planning to leave?'
âHowever long you need, take your time,' my father said. âDo it right.'
âWill it hurt?' Mark said, suddenly unsure.
âNo,' John said. âWhen I am done, it will be as if all of this had never happened.'
Mark nodded once, sharply. âThen that's what I want. I'll go first.'
âFinish your food, then we'll go somewhere quiet to do this,' John said.
I'll have to make contact with their heads on both sides and that means removing the bandage,
he added silently to me.
They won't see it, but anyone else present will, and that's not good. So I'll do this somewhere out of view.
âI understand,' I said. I turned to my father. âHe has to be alone and private, and undisturbed, to do it.'
âAs I said, whatever it takes,' my father said.
We did Andrew first, in his own bedroom where it would be more reassuring for him. It was a typical boy's room: the floor covered in suspect clothing, school notes and books, with a collection of remote-control cars and Warhammer miniatures neatly lined up on his bookshelves. A set of cardboard boxes sat on the floor, ready for the items to be packed.
John needed me there to help him remove the bandage from his arm. The physician had done a fine job: he'd folded the skin over as much as possible, and sealed the blood vessels. I sat Andrew down in front of John, and John put his hand and stump on the sides of Andrew's head, then dropped his own head.
Andrew jumped as John made the contact.
âAre you okay, Andrew?' I said.
Andrew's face lit up with a sly smile. âI've never seen his True Form before, Aunty Emma.' His smile widened to a grin. âHe's really ugly!'
âThat I am,' John said.
âIt's so cold,' Andrew said, more plaintive.
âI am the essence of cold,' John said. âIf I hurt you or I'm too cold, let me know.'
âOkay,' Andrew said.
âI will examine him extensively first,' John said with his eyes closed. âThen I'll make the changes. I'll call you telepathically when I'm done, Emma. Go talk to your parents.'
Neither of them noticed me walking out.
John didn't call me telepathically when he was finished. Instead, he brought Andrew back into the living room with his arm around Andrew's shoulders. They went to the couch and sat across from the rest of the family.
John leaned forward and put his elbows on his knees, clasping his hand to his roughly bandaged stump. âI can't do it. I'm sorry.'