by Kylie Chan
‘About four hundred metres,’ the Tiger said. ‘There’s a lift at the end.’
‘Are they in pain?’
‘No. They’re just missing their mommies.’
‘How long do you keep them like this?’
‘As long as it takes,’ he said grimly, and pressed the button for the lift.
‘How long have you had this facility?’ I said. ‘Did John know about it?’
‘We designed it together.’ Inside the lift he held his hand over the panel. It changed to his Tiger paw and the lift doors closed and we started down. He changed his hand back again. ‘It was his idea to start off with, but I had the kids with the brains, so we agreed to build it here.’
‘I wonder if he ever regrets the way he brings up his children,’ I said, almost to myself. ‘They drop the eggs and leave them.’
‘No regrets for being what you are. Ever,’ he said. ‘That is the Way.’
‘But only one in a hundred of his children ever come home,’ I said. ‘Many of them stay reptiles, never aware of who they are. Some of them take human form, but they still don’t know what they are. They live human lives, with this terrible secret of being a snake or a turtle, and they’re never able to truly fulfil their destiny unless we manage to find them.’
‘You have your agents out there,’ he said. ‘You do your best, which is more than he ever did. If they are destined to be found, you will find them.’ He shrugged. ‘It’s in their nature to study the arts, babe; they get it from their father. I think you’d get most of the ones that are worthwhile by monitoring the martial arts schools.’
‘Call me babe again and I’ll have you executed.’
‘You’re already having me executed when we’re done here.’
‘Twice.’
‘Cool.’ The lift arrived at the bottom with a jerk and the doors opened. ‘This is it.’
A group of five scientists in white lab coats, all of them obviously children of the Tiger, stood at the lift doors wearing huge grins and carrying clipboards. Five guards armed with swords stood around the perimeter of the room behind them. I stopped, frozen. It looked like an operating theatre but was much bigger; about five times the size of an ordinary hospital theatre. There were three tables, each with a light above it and a bank of monitoring equipment next to it, together with an IV unit.
I resisted the urge to turn and flee, concentrating on my energy centres and trying to ground myself. The dark energy from the demons up above definitely wasn’t helping; neither was the sight of the ooze demon strapped to one of the tables, its edges flowing outwards as it tried to escape. One of the Tiger’s kids said something but I didn’t really hear it. There was a rushing in my ears and all I could see was that demon trying to escape. Something inside me wanted to free it; something else wanted to destroy it; and a third powerful, horrible voice wanted to eat it.
I moved slightly towards it, the change coming on me. It felt so good. I would finally be free to be what I was, rather than held back in this small, weak serpent form or the even smaller and weaker human form. I glanced around: food everywhere. Finally, I could feed and fill myself and not be so hungry any more.
Control it, Emma, get a handle on it, a voice said into my head.
You can do this, you have the willpower, another voice said.
Fight it down. You need to be here when Xuan Wu—John—returns for you, the first voice said, and I recognised it as the Tiger.
I will help you, the other voice said, and it was John.
Then I was in a glass box, compressed into a tiny space in the back of my mind, with John’s presence all around me and engulfing me. I leapt with joy in my tiny enclosure.
‘Ah Wu, is that you?’ the Tiger said.
I looked around. The Tiger’s children were gathered against the back wall, his guards in front of them, their swords ready.
‘Of course it’s me,’ I said. I arched the first third of my length, touched my nose to the floor, spread my body as flat as possible and concentrated. ‘Tiger, do me a favour, will you? Feed a small amount of yang—a minimal amount, not enough to hurt me—through the floor under me?’
The floor warmed beneath me, glowing with red energy.
The serpent energy centres were very different from the human ones; although there were still three cauldrons, they were elongated and didn’t sit one above the other like they did in the human form. They were long and narrow and stretched out, overlapping through my body, and the gates above each somehow managed to sit at the top without interacting with the cauldrons next to them.
I took deep breaths, turning my consciousness inwards and concentrating on the energy centres. I moved the energy through me, clearing myself of the demon essence.
‘Whiter,’ I said. ‘Stronger.’
The floor didn’t become hotter but the energy intensified. I fed it through my energy meridians, lighting up my serpent length and using it to clear more of the demon essence, burning it away.
The Tiger intensified the energy, making it burn white-hot. ‘Let’s clear that completely!’
‘Stop! Stop!’ I yelled, as the gateways burned too bright. ‘You’ll destroy her! Too much.’
The yang became less intense and I relaxed. ‘That’s a perfect level. Leave it there for a moment.’
I used the yang to clear the essence; it was like burning a black deposit out of the meridians. I couldn’t clear it all without killing myself, but it was enough. I took another deep breath. ‘Thank you, brother. Release the yang so I can come back.’
The energy snapped off and I was suddenly cold. I raised my snout. ‘Okay, let’s see what we have here. Is that an ooze demon? Damn, how’d you catch that and what level is it?’ I looked around; they were all still standing ready to destroy me. ‘I’m not going to hurt you, silly humans,’ I said. ‘But that ooze demon looks delicious.’
‘Ah Wu?’ the Tiger said.
‘Nice job on the facility, old friend.’
‘What about the chick?’ he said.
I turned my attention away from the ooze demon. ‘What are you talking about?’
‘The Emma girl, dumbass. Where is she?’
‘No idea what you’re talking about,’ I said, and slithered towards the demon. I hissed with admiration. ‘Damn, that’s a big one. How’d you get it?’ I turned to look at the Tiger. ‘Nobody died picking this up for you, did they?’
‘Ah Wu, you’re a snake,’ he said. ‘And you’re Emma.’
‘What?’ I felt myself. I was a snake for the first time in ages, and it felt good. I looked around. ‘Did I rejoin? Where’s the rest of me?’
I slithered up and down, looking, but I couldn’t see the turtle half of me anywhere. The separation hit me like a blow right down my middle, from my head to my tail, knocking me onto my back. Half of me was missing and it hurt.
‘Where’s the rest of me? Tiger? What happened?’ I flopped my head back, weakened by the loss, and sensed someone behind a glass wall at the back of my mind, weeping with joy. ‘Emma? Where’s Emma?’ I tried to raise my head but without the other half of me I was barely able to move.
It was Emma sitting at the back of my mind—no, her mind. I was in her head. I was in her body.
I managed to raise my head. ‘I’ve possessed Emma.’
‘That you have, my friend,’ the Tiger said. ‘I didn’t know you still had that power in you. I thought you would lose it when you turned.’
‘I’m going,’ I said. ‘Look after her.’
I took down the wall between her and me and ran.
CHAPTER 21
I felt like I’d been hit by a truck. The Tiger kneeled next to me, his hand on my head, his expression full of concern. ‘You back, girlie?’
‘Three times,’ I said.
‘Deal,’ he said. I raised my head but he stopped me. ‘Do you know what happened?’
‘Yes,’ I said. ‘I don’t want to talk about it.’ I flipped onto my belly, picked myself up and moved towards the
ooze demon. ‘Tell me what you’re doing with this.’
‘But he took you over!’
I turned and glared at him, aware of the power in my serpent eyes. ‘I do not want to talk about it.’ I gestured with my nose. ‘Demon. Now.’
‘Damn, girl, he’s still in there,’ he said with awe.
‘Nope, this is one hundred per cent me,’ I said. I sharpened my voice. ‘Demon!’
‘Tell her,’ the Tiger said, gesturing towards one of the scientists without looking away from me.
A woman stepped forward holding her clipboard.
‘Lower the weapons,’ I said. ‘I’m no danger to you.’
The guards hesitated.
‘Do as she says,’ the Tiger said.
The guards lowered their weapons and moved back to their perimeter positions. The scientists gingerly moved around me, trying to be casual and failing. For a quick evil moment I considered smiling at them to completely freak them out, then decided against it.
‘We captured the ooze demon in the snow, it was incapacitated by the cold,’ the woman said. ‘Nobody could touch it, so we called up a couple of sons to levitate it. We’ve been studying it down here ever since. Cold makes it hibernate; but what we’re really interested in is its morphic nature. It can change form.’
‘Can it shape shift as well or is it always just goo?’ I said, slithering around the table and studying the demon. I ducked out of the way as its tendrils lashed towards me.
‘No, it’s always goo,’ the woman said. ‘They tend to hang onto ceilings and drape themselves over their victims. Nasty way to go, they’re so toxic.’
‘The most difficult thing about them,’ one of the male scientists said, ‘is that it’s impossible to judge their level just by looking at them. We want to find a way to ascertain that.’
I stared at both of them with admiration. ‘Any progress?’
‘We have a technique using shen energy that works. At the moment, any half-Shen like me can get a rough idea of the level from a distance of about two metres,’ the woman said. ‘I can judge them to within five levels.’
‘What level is this one?’ I said, ducking under another lashing tendril. ‘It’s feisty, isn’t it?’
‘It’s a small one, level forty-five,’ she said.
I backed up next to the Tiger and watched it from a safer distance. ‘Have you hurt it at all?’
‘Morphics don’t seem to feel anything; they’re not sentient, they’re just automated nastiness,’ the Tiger said. ‘It doesn’t even seem to know where it is. All it knows is that it wants us to die.’
‘Typical,’ I said. ‘Any leads on the gold demon essence the demon copies were generating?’
‘Uh, they haven’t studied them yet,’ the Tiger said. ‘We need your go-ahead.’
I turned to look at him. ‘You can study them but don’t cut them up, break them or destroy them. Preferably don’t cause them any discomfort either.’
‘How about pain equivalent to a hypodermic?’ one of the scientists said.
‘You’re going to stick needles in them?’ I said.
The scientists nodded, enthusiastic. ‘We want to see inside. We realise we can’t cut them up, but sucking out some of their juice would work a treat.’
‘Okay, but only if they give you permission after you’ve fully informed them of everything involved with the procedure.’
‘The two students have already told us we can basically do anything we like with them,’ the Tiger said. ‘They already volunteered.’
‘They were good kids,’ I said. ‘I think some of that has transferred across.’
The Tiger gestured towards the lift. ‘It’s getting late. We should go back down and take a look at the Snakemobile.’
One of the scientists hissed with laughter, and one of the guards smirked and quietly hummed the theme from Inspector Gadget.
‘I hate you all,’ I said as I followed the Tiger to the lift.
The Snakemobile was a spherical hard spacesuit set on top of a wheeled propulsion unit powered by an electric motor and three car batteries. Panels sloped down from the sphere, over the motor and batteries to the wheels. I circled the vehicle with curiosity. Two rods stuck out from the front of the lower part.
‘What are the rods for?’ I said.
‘Visibility inside won’t be that great so we put them there as antennae to warn you if you’re about to hit something,’ the Tiger said.
‘Not “we”, “he”,’ one of the scientists said. ‘It was Dad’s idea, don’t blame us.’
The Tiger opened the lid of the sphere. ‘You sit in here and there are three control sticks for you to move it.’
I curled up inside the hard suit and pushed my snout against the view port. ‘This is even more ridiculous.’
‘You control it with your tail,’ one of the Tiger’s children said. ‘Can you push it hard enough?’
I touched the lever behind me with my tail; it didn’t shift. I gave it a better push and the sphere lurched forward on its wheels and stopped, slamming my snout painfully against the plastic.
‘The two levers on either side of the main lever are for steering,’ the scientist said. ‘We realise you can only push one at a time, so it’ll stop, then turn, then you can push it to go forward again.’
‘This would be much easier if you just learnt telekinesis,’ the Tiger said, his voice muffled by the fibreglass shell around me.
‘Can’t do it,’ I said.
‘Seems to be working well enough,’ one of the scientists said as I rocked forward, and turned left and right. ‘Let’s try it outside.’
They moved it outside on a standard box trailer, then rolled it off and opened it for me to climb inside. I slithered in and they closed the top above me. I pushed the lever and the wheels spun in the gravel, then bit into it and I moved forward. I spun to face the Tiger, then spun back again and moved towards the scientists.
‘Seems to work well,’ a woman scientist said. ‘Try it up the hill? You’ll be climbing in it.’
‘You know what you look like?’ the Tiger said. ‘Say it for me, babe, go on.’
‘Haven’t we arranged enough executions for you?’ I said.
He waved one hand dismissively. ‘Can never be executed enough, you know that.’
I faced the hill and hit the lever to go forward. The unit rattled to the bottom of the hill, then stopped, its wheels spinning in the gravel.
One of the scientists ran forward and fiddled with the settings. ‘Ramped it up. Try again.’
‘Say the line!’ the Tiger said.
‘No,’ I said, and pushed forward again.
The wheels bit into the gravel and I lurched forward. The vehicle tipped over and I found myself upside down inside the top.
‘You okay, Emma?’ the Tiger said.
‘Yeah,’ I said as they righted me. ‘What happened?’
‘May be top-heavy with your weight in it,’ one of them said. ‘You’re heavier than expected.’
‘Fatty,’ the Tiger said. ‘Say the line!’
I tried the hill again but the vehicle tipped over again.
‘Let’s try giving you a push up,’ one of the women said, righting me. She pushed me slightly up the hill.
‘How steep will it be?’ I said.
‘Fucking steep,’ the Tiger said. ‘Come on, say it for me. Do it.’
I pushed the lever to move forward and the unit tipped over again.
‘Can we weight the bottom?’ the Tiger said.
‘If we do that it’ll wear out the batteries before she gets there,’ the woman scientist said. ‘How far does it have to go?’
‘About fifty k’s.’
‘We’ll be lucky to get that much life out of the batteries we have now. Only way is if we can make the snake smaller.’
‘This is as small as I can go for any length of time,’ I said.
The Tiger shrugged. ‘Back to the drawing board.’
I turned the unit so it was faci
ng down the hill, pushed the lever and it tipped over again, this time rolling down the hill. The Tiger moved quickly to stop me and pushed me upright again.
‘We’ll have to work something else out, but thanks for your time, everybody,’ I said.
The Tiger’s expression filled with mischief through the view port. ‘Say the line and I’ll let you out.’
‘Go to hell.’
‘Come on, Emma, do it for me,’ he said. ‘You know you want to!’
‘Oh my God, these rods on the front are just for show. They don’t do anything, do they?’
‘Couldn’t resist.’
‘Blame Dad. We thought he was being completely lame and tried to stop him,’ one of the scientists said.
‘Let me out!’
‘Just the word! Say the word!’
I took a deep breath and mumbled, ‘Exterminate.’
’Yes!’ the Tiger yelled, punching the air. He popped the lid so I could climb out. ‘Totally worth any number of executions!’
The ringing woke me up. I waved my hand over the bedside table a few times, then hit the alarm button on my clock. It didn’t work, so I hit it again, then realised it was the phone. I picked it up and blearily saw the time as I pressed the button: 1:24 am. ‘Hello?’
‘Lady Emma, my apologies for waking you,’ said the demon, ‘but Lord Gold said that you would want to know. We’ve found the common thread in the data. We have the name of the central agency that all the missing people went to.’
I snapped awake. ‘Are you still at the office?’
‘Yes.’
I threw my legs over the side of the bed. ‘I’m on my way.’
‘Lord Gold says we’ll pick you up, and bring your Hong Kong ID card,’ he said, and hung up.
I quickly dressed and went out into the hallway. As I closed my bedroom door, I imagined for a moment that John was asleep in his room and I could give in to the temptation to go visit him.
I turned and headed out the front door.
Gold, Calcite and Zara were waiting in the lobby. The night sky glowed with the lights of Hong Kong, reflected in the low thick clouds that swathed the Peak above us.