I keep my mouth shut as I’m wedged into the witness box. A magistrate strolls into the middle of the floor, unbottling and unrolling a vast scroll. As the parchment ribbons across the white sand, the official begins reciting a litany of names, none of which I recognize. The droning persists and I’m just about to beg for recess, when he says my name.
Uh oh.
“You.” Ao Qin hisses, head whipping in my direction. Frills balloon through the flesh of his cheeks and his throat, tearing it apart even as his body spasms and shakes, mammalian anatomy bending under the momentum of divine rage. He snarls, mouth distending too far, skin peeling to reveal oversized teeth, the bone straining as though it might launch itself from its imperfect meat. “You.”
I raise Ao Qin the Vulcan salute. “Yo.”
He screams then. And it is a hurricane gale, a tsunami, a psychic blow so potent that it should have atomized my very essence. But I only feel the damp echoes of the assault, a whiff of salt and death. Ao Qin’s lamplight stare widens.
“Do that again and we will hold you in contempt of the court, Ao Qin.” A new voice. We both turn to its source: a man in the bright robes of a magistrate, unremarkable save for the pitch-black skin and the red tongue lolling from between his lips. Despite the magnitude of the organ, he doesn’t lisp.
“Fan Wujiu, you would take his side over ours? He is vermin. He is mortal. He is dirt. He is nothing. He is—”
“—not the one on trial,” Fan Wujiu interrupts, tone bland. “Rupert Wong attends this court as a witness, not as traitor.”
The word is a gunshot. It culls all conversation, leaves the auditorium haunted by a terrible silence. Ao Qin glares at Fan Wujiu, chest already split open, reptilian breast heaving within a frame of broken ribs. A noise warbles in Ao Qin’s throat, wordless but unmistakable, a vow of violence. If the Dragon King lives, there will be a reckoning.
“All rise for the venerable Yan Luo.” Another voice this time, similar in tenor but lower in pitch: Xie Bi’an, Fan Wujiu’s bone-colored counterpart.
A different silence. Reverent. Everyone who is not already standing clambers onto their feet, and we bow in perfect synchronicity, a ripple of motion to follow the ingress of the massive figure. The King of Hell has arrived.
“Sit,” he says, ascending to the bench, and the court complies. “Begin.”
THE NEXT FEW hours writhe together, bizarre ritual and labyrinthian legal processes, a thousand rites plucked from a hundred cultures, a hundred dynasties. The charges filed against Ao Qin are horrific: perfidy, intent to incite, murder of foreign dignitaries, and more. I throw up when Xie Bi’ian gluts my vision with panoramas of the Erinyes’ death. Ao Qin is unmistakably a proponent of the old adage: an eye for an eye, a hideously disemboweled torso for a hideously disemboweled torso.
Every now and then, I’m poked and prodded, sometimes figuratively, sometimes literally. They make me repeat my testimony so many times that the meaning of the words corrode, leaving only a stammer of syllables. But it’s nothing compared to Ao Qin’s torture.
There’s a downside to immortality, one that polite company rarely discusses. What you can’t kill, you can infinitely hurt. So, they burn him. Over and over. They cook him to the marrow and then pull apart the charred skeleton like a wishbone in a Hollywood Thanksgiving dinner, before waiting until he has reassembled and doing it all again. Through it all, Ao Qin keeps to his story, keeps to his conviction that I’m the patsy responsible for interpantheon war.
“Ask him,” He croaks, eyeballs roasted to a cloudy white. Smoke drools between his teeth. His cheeks are yarn, tangles of scorched tissue haphazardly threaded between slack jaws. “Ask-k-k-k-k him.”
“Rupert,” Yan Luo studies me, gray and sad, like a forgotten geriatric. “What do you have to say?”
“I don’t know what he’s talking about, Your Majesty.”
“Liar—” Ao Qin’s accusation crests into a screech as the flames roar up again, liquefying what little fat and sinew remain. The air sweetens with the smell of crisping bacon, then becomes choking with ash.
Minah. I roll her name in my head, clasp it near.
IN THE END, Ao Qin submits.
In the end, he confesses.
Because, dragon or monkey, that’s what you do when someone won’t stop roasting you alive.
I know what you’re thinking, ang moh. And you’re right. I should have said something, should have halved his punishment by admitting my involvement. That would have been the honorable thing to do. But here’s the rub: damned men don’t get tax breaks.
Besides, the asshole did cost me my deposit.
“RUPERT.”
I raise my head at Yan Luo’s voice, and turn to find the King of Hell looming behind me, no longer sixty feet tall but a more reserved seven-feet-eight. He looks more human now too, his official raiments supplanted by cotton robes and threadbare slippers. A doughy gut rests comfortably along his middle, complementing a bulbous nose and pleasantly round cheeks, creating an utterly unthreatening silhouette. “Yes, Your Majesty?”
“We need to talk.”
I try a smile, teeth and battered bravado. “Nothing good ever comes out of anyone saying—”
“No more jokes, Rupert.” Yan Luo arranges himself into one of the pews, expression mild. “We have to talk about your future.”
Fear creeps into the curve of my spine. “Your Majesty.”
“There is no easy way of saying this. Heaven thinks you’re a traitor. At least half of the pantheon has petitioned to send you to the Greeks along with Ao Qin. Or worse.”
I swallow. “I had nothing to do with this.”
Yan Luo laughs, the sound reverberating through the auditorium, now hollowed of gods and hanger-ons. “You’ve always been a brave one, haven’t you? Do you remember when you called on us?”
A wincing smear of memories. Those were not happy days. “Yes, Your Majesty.”
“You were so adamant about employment. You kept calling and calling, wheedling and scheming. You had an answer to everything and you wouldn’t shut up. Most people would have begged for their lives.”
“I knew better than to ask.” I hold my place, uncertain if I should sit or bow or grovel.
The King of Hell flashes an easy grin, removing a flask from his shirt. He uncorks it, and the scent of plum wine uncoils like an old lie told so many times, it’s become truth. “You did. And I trust you know better than to keep pretenses around me.”
“Your Majesty.”
“Was she worth it, Rupert?” Here, a flicker of sorrow over his voice, the first indication of real emotion. “That girl of yours? She was a monster.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about—”
The ghost of something not unlike a smile, as Yan Luo drains a long mouthful from the bottle. “Oh, please, Rupert. I can see inside your head. Any god who has seen a few millennia can see inside your head. The only reason you weren’t dragged onto the floor is because you weren’t the one on trial and because—well, because I didn’t allow it. But you haven’t answered me yet. Was she worth it, Rupert? That Minah of yours.”
Yes. The word throbs in my head before I can strangle it. Yes. A thousand fucking times. Yan Luo’s smile broadens, his expression bordering on paternal. He chuckles and then eases into silence. The King of Hell sips his wine again and frowns. “The choices she made in life. Those were hers, you understand? The murders, her... expulsion from the cycle. None of it was forced onto her. She made those decisions. She made herself what she is.”
I say nothing.
“And yet, you would sacrifice a king for her.”
“Your Majesty—”
“This might be difficult to believe, but I regard you as a friend, Rupert.” Yan Luo massages circles into the bridge of his nose, pinching the wrinkled skin. “Not just an employee. A friend. I’ve always appreciated your irreverence, your ingenuity, your willingness to play Xiangqi even though I know you loathe the game.”
“
I keep telling you. A PlayStation 4 will change your world. I—”
“So, I hope you understand that I’m speaking as a friend when I say: you need to leave Kuala Lumpur.”
“I—” The words knot in my throat. “Your Majesty? I—go where?”
“Anywhere. You’re a wanted man, Rupert. Get out of here before you become a dead one.”
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
“THIS ISN’T BEACH Club.”
The Boss wedges a sliver of bone between his teeth, begins picking at a thread of pink meat. “No.”
I sit up. “This isn’t a dumpster either.”
“No. No, it’s not.”
“Or my apartment.”
“If that’s what you call that wasteland.” The Boss flicks his toothpick aside and steeples his fingers, leans forward in his chair to stare. Just. Stare. His spouses trade amused looks; a husband reaches across the table to daub at his counterpart’s blood-stained countenance. “And no, it isn’t.”
I knuckle at an eye, taking the interlude to examine my surroundings. Definitely not home. Definitely not in a safe place. And I have definitely—I glance down—had my personal space compromised. My original getup is gone. Instead, I’m dressed like one of the Boss’s help: black tie, black loafers, black pants, and a black shirt, of course. Black goes with everything, especially blood stains. I swing my feet from the table and hop onto the ground, fight the urge to pop my collar, a last-ditch fumble for personal identity.
“Nice threads.”
The Boss tips his head.
“So, to what do I owe the honor, boss?” I keep my gaze from the table, keep it fixed on my employer’s face, even as one of his wives spools a strip of muscle around a fork, unwinding it from the thing trussed up between them. It—I don’t check what it is, I’m too exhausted for it—thrashes in place and screams into its gag, a long, ragged gurgle, full of blind, animal desperation; leg kicking, the gnawed remnants of a foot scrabbling against expensive wood. I ignore it. Not my problem, not my place.
“We heard there was a complication.”
“I didn’t mention any of you, if that’s what you’re asking.” My response is immediate, guarded.
“Yes.” He beams. “We know.”
Crack. Their dinner screeches again.
I cough into a fist and take a meaningful step backwards, hear the slither of silk against steel. I don’t look; there’s no need. My imagination populates the gaps with demurely garbed valkyries, vacant-eyed, unsmiling, bodies and lives committed to the fulfilment of their master’s impulses. “Glad everyone’s on the same page, then. And since we all know that there was no foul and no harm, I’m going to—”
“I never said you could leave, Rupert.” The Boss removes his bib, an ostentatious flurry of white ruffles branded with a bright red lobster, and stands. Even without stage lighting, the man’s an impressive specimen: Olympian silhouette, custom-tailored Desmond Merrion in the most expensive shade of too-damn-much, a patina of make-up so expertly applied that you’d almost believe it’s his own skin. “We need to talk.”
“I’ve been hearing that a lot lately.” I don’t quite keep the whine from my words but I have an excuse, damn it.
There’s something fundamentally uncomfortable about watching a ghoul walk towards you. Call it a lizard brain thing, if you want. It probably relates. The ghouls wrench at their limbs, dragging them on axes too wide by half, joints twisting and crunching through a boneless imitation of human locomotion, infinitely sleeker, exponentially more unsettling.
The Boss stops about three inches away, a distance best described as ‘unnecessarily personal.’ I can smell the carrion on him, a dull stink of rot and metal. He grins. I wish they’d all stop grinning so much. “Do you have a passport, Rupert?”
“What? I mean, yes. Yes, I do. But also, what?”
Crack. Then: crack again, but a flimsier sound the second time around, like eggshells being splintered, or a skull being opened.
“Excellent. Go home and pack up. You’ll be going to London.”
“What?”
His eyebrows rise. Behind him, a team of Amazonian blondes scurry to replace the carcass on the table, swapping the mangled detritus for a fresh entrée. I hear a whisper of silverware, before the muffled wailing renews. Female, this time. Healthy. Marathon runner, judging from that lung capacity.
“You’re going to London.”
“I heard that part.”
“And?”
I press my tongue against the roof of my mouth. “And I—well, I guess I’d like to know why exactly I’m going to London?”
The Boss rolls his eyes to the ceiling, where a blasphemous fresco of the Prophet straddles the dining space, lovingly uplit in gold. “Rupert. I’m disappointed. What happened to the snivelling yes-man that wouldn’t think twice about putting a foot through a man’s throat? What happened to your people-pleasing skills? Because I’m. Not. Pleased. With this. Oh, no. What happened to your understanding of our roles in this existence? Mine is to command. Yours is to roll over and beg.”
The Boss is fast. Faster than I remember, faster than human reflex can accommodate. He rams me into a wall, hand around my windpipe, elevates me so that my feet dangle over the floor. And squeeeezes. I twitch, impotent, every breath now a choking wheeze, saliva singeing tear ducts. “Boss.”
“Meat,” He spits. “You’re meat. Do not ever forget what you are. Meat. Food for the worms, food for the ghouls. Walking, talking, shitting food. And food, Rupert—food doesn’t talk back to its betters. Do you understand that? Do you get where I’m coming from?”
“Yes, boss,” I burble.
“If I tell you to jump, you ask how high; if I tell you to eat dog shit, you ask me for cutlery. If I tell you to gut yourself, you ask if I’d like to have your intestines braised, broiled or beer-battered and airfried—”
“But it’s really hard to cook when you’re disemboweled, boss.”
Unexpectedly, the boss laughs, airy and pleasant, a businessman on a cruise. He releases his grip and I plummet onto the ground, hacking convulsively, the air scraping my throat like the flat of a knife. I stroke fingers across my neck: the flesh is puffy, raw to the touch. Yeah, that will definitely bruise in the morning.
“Oh, that wit of yours, Rupert. I’d miss it if it were gone. Don’t ever lose it. We’d have to eat you otherwise.”
“I don’t doubt it, boss,” I rasp.
The Boss crouches down, his long limbs uncannily arthropodal, surreal. “But to answer your previous question, we’re loaning you to the Greeks. They’ve recently lost their cook and are dying to have some decent cuisine.”
“Wait, wait—”
“Quiet, Rupert. Before I make you eat your tongue.”
I clamp my mouth shut.
“It’ll be fun, I’m sure. Brisk English air. Terrible people, terrible traffic. Terrible fish and chips. An entire history of imperialist arrogance built into shit-colored walls and pretentious accents. You’ll absolutely love it.” The Boss unfolds, smoothing a crease in his shirt as he glides away, circling the rim of the banquet table to trace long fingers around his spouses’ silent, adoring visages, before finally reseating himself at the head of the charnel spectacle.
“Boss. You know I live for your enjoyment, but—but this is going to get me killed,” I blurt, staggering back onto my feet, without any consideration for the magnitude of my objection. “The Greeks have to know what we’ve done. And if they don’t, I’m—”
“What did we just discuss, meat?”
“Just tell me why. I’m practically on the way to the airport already. Context. That’s all I’m asking from you.”
The ghoul, older than his lineless countenance claims, cocks a playful smirk; a husband carves him a chunk of muscle from their dinner’s well-defined thigh. The nub of a tongue protrudes from the boss’s mouth, a sign of rumination; for a second, I’m optimistic.
“No.”
“Yes, boss.”
DESPITE THE
URGENCY of his command, the Boss keeps me in the manor until well after midnight, entertaining a cadre of drunken penanggalans. It could be worse, to be fair. The kitchens that are my fiefdom have actual ventilation, albeit only in select sections (notably those unoccupied by squirming, sniffling ingredients). And the penanggalans rarely demand anything more strenuous than a Bloody Mary.
I make them finger foods, anyway. Not actual fingers—that’d be crass—but stacks of black pudding, accompanied by a fan of wafers, processed bone meal fried to a crisp; miniature char siew baus; nang kai tort, complete with edible bottles of homemade sriracha, sugar-glass glimmering copper in the dim. The penanggalans shrill over my offerings, gobbling hors d’oeuvres in between outbursts of gossip, intestines flailing wetly in the crepuscular light of the living room.
“Aiya, if you ask me, Muhammad has no idea what he’s getting into. America’s such a dangerous place, these days. Why lah they want to go there?” chirps one of the decapitated heads, finally exhausted of kittenish energy, hair and entrails delicately arranged along velvet bedding.
“Because very fashionable mah. Los Angeles, New York. All the big movie stars suka, you know. Some more, they say you can meet the new gods there!” replies a more matronly monstrosity. Her tresses have been clipped into a loose bun, skewered in place with enamelled chopsticks.
“Got meh? Like who ah?”
“Aiya, I don’t know. Like someone they call Big Money.”
A crooning chorus of admiring voices, blending into a single word.
“Seriously?”
The matron glances at me and juts her nose at the platter in my grip, intoning in a strained accent she probably thought of as ‘posh.’ “Do you have any more of those little cracker things?”
“Er.” I set the tray down, allowing the penanggalans to squelch closer, like birds descending on breadcrumbs. “The wafers?”
They assault the tray by way of answer, ropes of viscera pulsating, gleaming pink-gray. I retreat to the kitchen, double-doors opening with a plume of spiced air. Heat undulates against my skin, humid, comforting. But not untenanted. A male figure stands drooped over a pot of broth—tomorrow’s tonkotsu, brewed with genuine-article sarariman.
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