Read The Book and the Sword 書劍恩仇錄 PART NINE (End)
The day they crossed the provincial border into Fujian, the hills were covered in flowers and dancing butterflies.
120 minute read
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PART NINE (End)
1
The day they crossed the
provincial border into Fujian, the hills were covered in flowers and dancing
butterflies. Chen thought of Princess Fragrance and how she would have loved
such a scene.
They were met at the Shaolin
Monastery by Lord Zhou, who had come south to Fujian with his wife and servants
to meet the Monastery's abbot, Heavenly Rainbow. With Zhou's great name in the
fighting community, the Shaolin priests were happy to exchange knowledge with
him. Heavenly Rainbow insisted that he stay in the temple, and by the time the
Red Flower Society heroes arrived, several months had slipped by.
The abbot led his assistants,
Great Insanity, Heavenly Mirror, Great Hardship and Great Idiocy into the great
hall to meet the visitors. After they had introduced each other, the abbot led
them to a quiet antechamber when tea was served. He asked the reason for their
visit.
Chen knelt down before the
abbot, tears glistening in his eyes. Greatly surprised, Heavenly Rainbow moved
quickly to help him up.
"Great Helmsman," he
said. "What need is there for such formality? Please say whatever you
wish."
"I have an embarrassing
request to make that according to the rules of the fighting community should
not even be uttered," Chen replied. "But, Venerable Sir, for the sake
of millions of souls, I boldly make this appeal to you."
"Please speak
freely," the abbot said.
"The former Great
Helmsman of the Red Flower Society, Master Yu Wanting was my foster
father…" Heavenly Rainbow's expression changed immediately as he heard the
name, and he raised his white eyebrows.
Chen told him in detail about
his relationship with the Emperor Qian Long and about the plan to restore the
Chinese throne and overthrow the Manchus. Then he asked why his foster father
had been expelled from the Shaolin school and whether it had anything to do
with Qian Long's identity.
"Please, Venerable
Sir," he concluded, his voice almost choked with sobs. "Think of the
common people…"
Heavenly Rainbow sat in
silence, his long eyebrows trailing over his closed eyes. He was in deep
meditation and no-one dared disturb him.
After a while, his eyes sprang
open, and he said: "For several hundred years, it has been the practice of
the Shaolin school not to reveal to outsiders information on members who offend
against the school's regulations. Great Helmsman Chen, you have come a great
distance to our monastery to enquire into the behaviour of our expelled pupil,
Yu Wanting. According to the monastery's rules, this would ordinarily be out of
the question…" the faces of the heroes lit up with delight. "…but as
this affair involves the fate of the common people, I will make an exception.
Great Helmsman Chen, please send someone to the Upholding the Monastic
Regulations Hall to collect the file."
Chen bowed to the abbot in
thanks, and another monk led the heroes to guest rooms to rest.
Chen was congratulating
himself on his success when he saw Lord Zhou looking worried. "What's
wrong?" he asked.
"The abbot asked you to
send someone to the Hall to collect the file. But to get there, it is necessary
to pass through five other halls, each guarded by a kung fu master and each one
stronger than the last. It will be difficult to make it through all five,"
Zhou replied.
"We could try and force
our way through together," Wen suggested.
Zhou shook his head. "No,
the problem is that one person has to win through all five halls alone. If
anyone helped him, the monks would come to the assistance of the guardians of
the halls and it would turn into a brawl. That wouldn't do at all."
"This is an affair
involving my family," Chen said quietly. "Perhaps Buddha will be
merciful and let me through."
He took off his long gown,
picked up a bag of his 'chess piece' projectiles, tucked the ancient dagger
into his belt, and let Zhou lead him to the first hall.
As they reached the hall
entrance, Zhou stopped. "Master Chen," he whispered. "If you
can't make it, please come back and we'll think of some other way. Whatever you
do, don't try and force your way through or you may get hurt." Chen
nodded.
"Everything is
arranged!" Zhou shouted, and then stepped to one side.
Chen pushed open the door and
walked inside. Under the bright candle-light, he saw a monk seated on a mat,
and recognised him as one of the abbot's chief assistants, Great Hardship.
The monk stood up and smiled.
"So you have come yourself, Great Helmsman Chen. That is excellent. I
would like to ask you to instruct me in a few martial arts moves."
Chen saluted him with his
fists. "Please," he replied.
Great Hardship bunched his
left hand into a fist and swung it round in a great arc while his right palm
swept up. Chen recognised it as the 'Drunken Boxing' style kung fu. He had once
studied the style, but decided not to reveal the fact by using it now. He
clapped his hands together and countered with the 'Hundred Flowers' kung fu
style. Great Hardship was taken off guard and only avoided being struck by
dropping to the floor. He rolled away and stood up, and the two continued to
fight closely, each a master of his own style.
Great Hardship aimed a blow at
Chen's legs. Chen leapt up, and as he landed, hooked his right leg round,
tripping the monk up neatly. As fast as lightning, Chen bent over and stopped
him from falling. Great Hardship's face flushed red with embarrassment and he
pointed behind him.
"Please proceed," he
said.
Chen saluted once more and
walked through into another hall, seated in the middle of which was the senior
monk, Great Insanity. As Chen entered, the monk rose and picked up a thick
staff lying beside him. He casually tapped the floor with its tip, and the
impact shook the very walls of the hall, bringing a shower of dust down from
the rafters. The monk lightly flipped the staff from left hand to right, then
attacked using the 'Crazy Demon' staff style of kung fu. Chen knew it would be
folly to underestimate the power of this opponent, and he drew his dagger.
Great Insanity swept the staff across and Chen ducked down to avoid it then
countered with a thrust from his dagger. The two fought round and round inside
the hall, their weapons apparently greatly mis-matched.
Rather than attack, Chen
concentrated instead on trying to tire the monk out. But Great Insanity's Inner
Strength Kung Fu was profound, and as time passed, Chen could discern no
hesitation in the monk's actions. On the contrary, the staff seemed to whirl
and dance with ever-increasing speed, forcing Chen back into a corner of the
hall. Seeing Chen could not escape, Great Insanity grasped the staff in both
hands and swung it down at his head with all his strength. Chen stood
stock-still until the staff was no more than two inches from him, then grabbed
its end and carved a deep line across the middle with his dagger, snapping it
in two.
Great Insanity was furious,
and charged at Chen again. But with the staff only half its former length, he
wielded it with much less dexterity. A moment later, Chen snapped another piece
off the end, then dodged passed the monk and ran towards the rear of the hall.
With a roar of anger, Great Insanity threw what was left of his staff to the
floor and sparks flew in all directions.
As he entered the third hall,
Chen's eyes were struck by a bright glare, and he saw both sides of the hall
were full of burning candles, several hundred of them at least. In the centre,
stood the monk Great Idiocy.
"Master Chen," he
said, a welcoming smile on his face. "Let us compete using
projectiles."
Chen bowed. "As your
Reverence wishes," he replied.
"There are nine candles
and eighty-one incense sticks on each side of the hall. Whoever can extinguish
all the candles and incense sticks on his opponent's side is the winner."
The monk pointed to the altar table in the centre of the hall. "You will
find darts and projectiles of all kinds over there. When you have used up all
the ones you have, you can go and get more."
Chen pulled a pile of chess
pieces from his pocket and wished he had spent more time in the past learning
the finer points of dart kung fu from the Red Flower Society's dart expert,
'Buddha' Zhao. "After you," he said.
Great Idiocy smiled again.
"Guests first," he replied.
Selecting five chess pieces,
Chen threw them simultaneously at the foot of the opposite wall and
extinguished five incense sticks.
"Excellent kung fu,"
Great Idiocy praised him. He took a string of prayer beads from around his
neck, snapped the chord and let five of the beads fall into his palm. With one
movement, he slung them away, snuffing out five incense sticks on Chen's side.
Chen quickly extinguished
another five sticks of incense. Great Idiocy replied by knocking out all nine
candles on Chen's side, and in the darkness, the burning tips of the incense
sticks became much easier targets for the monk.
"Of course, why didn't I
think of that?" Chen thought. He chose nine chess pieces and threw them
three at a time at the candles on the monk's side of the hall. But the flames
were untouched. He had heard a series of clicks coming from the centre of the
hall and he realised that Great Idiocy had knocked each of his nine projectiles
down with his prayer beads. As Chen gaped in surprise at such skill, the monk
extinguished another four incense sticks. Chen waited for the monk to throw
another wave of prayer beads, and then aimed chess pieces to intercept them.
But with the candles on the opposite side still burning he found it difficult
to spot the small beads clearly and only managed to hit two of the five. The
other three struck home.
Great Idiocy, already nine
candles and two incense sticks ahead, concentrated on protecting his own
candles, while extinguishing more of Chen's incense sticks whenever the
opportunity arose. In a short while, he had snuffed out another fourteen, while
Chen, putting his all into the task, only managed to extinguish two of the
candles. Suddenly, he remembered one of 'Buddha' Zhao's tricks and threw three
chess pieces at the side wall with great force. They ricocheted off and two of
them struck their targets. Great Idiocy, who had thought the throw was a show
of childish petulance on Chen's part, let out a cry of surprise.
Chen continued in this way,
bouncing chess pieces off the wall. Great Idiocy had no way of protecting the
candles, but he was already several dozen incense sticks ahead, and without
taking any further notice of his opponent, he redoubled his efforts to knock
out the rest. As the last of the monk's candles went out, the hall was plunged
into darkness. Chen counted seven incense sticks left on the monks side while
his own was still a mass of red dots, perhaps thirty or forty. Just as he was
coming to the conclusion that he had lost, he heard Great Idiocy shout:
"Master Chen, I've used up all my projectiles. Let us stop for a moment
and get more from the altar table."
Chen felt in his bag and found
he only had five or six chess pieces left.
"You go first," the
monk added. Chen walked over to the altar table and with a flash of
inspiration, stretched out his arm and swept all of the projectiles into his
bag. He jumped back to his place and Great Idiocy ran over to find the table top
was empty. Chen threw a shower of projectiles at the remaining fiery spots, and
in a moment had extinguished them all.
Great Idiocy let out a hearty
laugh. "I have to hand it to you, Master Chen," he said. "That
was more of a battle of wits than a trial of strength. You win. Please
continue."
"I apologise," Chen
replied. "I had already lost, and only used such a trick because of the
importance of the matter. Please forgive me."
"The masters guarding the
next two halls are my martial uncles. Their kung fu is very good. You must be
careful."
Chen thanked him and went on
to the next hall. This hall was also brightly lit with candles, but it was much
smaller than the previous three. Two rattan mats lay on the floor in the centre
of the hall, and the senior monk Heavenly Mirror was seated on one of them. As
Chen entered, he monk stood up in greeting.
"Please sit down,"
he said, gesturing to the other other mat. Chen wondered how he wanted to
compete, but took his seat in silence.
Heavenly Mirror was an
extremely tall man and very formidable to look at. Even seated on the mat, he
was not much shorter than an ordinary person. His cheeks were two deep hollows,
and there appeared to be no flesh on his body at all.
"You have passed through
three halls, which is greatly to your credit," he said. "But you are
still junior to me, so I cannot compete with you on equal terms. Let us do it
this way: if you can go ten moves with me without losing, I will let you go
through."
Chens bowed to him.
"Thank you for your kindness, Your Reverence."
Heavenly Mirror grunted.
"Now parry this!"
Chen felt a force striking
towards his chest and raised his hands to counter it. Their palms met and Chen
was forced to make use of his full strength to keep from falling backwards. The
shock of the impact caused a dull ache to grow in his left arm.
"Now the second
move!" Heavenly Mirror called. Chen did not dare to counter his hand
directly again. He leant to one side, then hit out at the monk's elbow.
Heavenly Mirror should have responded by withdrawing his arm, but instead he
swept it across in attack, and Chen only just managed to parry it. A bell close
to the hall began to chime, and as it resounded, Chen had an idea. He switched
to the kung fu style he had learned in the White Jade Peak, synchronising his
movements to the sound of the bell. Heavenly Mirror gasped in surprise and
fought back carefully.
When the bell ceased, Chen
withdrew his hands. "I cannot continue," he said.
"All right. We have
already exchanged more than forty moves. Your kung fu is very good. Please
pass."
Chen stood up, and was about
to walk off when he suddenly swayed and stumbled and hurriedly leant against
the wall for support. Heavenly Mirror helped him to sit down again.
"Rest here for a moment
and catch your breath," he said. "It won't affect matters."
Chen close his eyes and did as
the monk said.
"Where did you learn that
style of kung fu?" Heavenly Mirror asked. Chen told him.
"I never guessed that the
standard of kung fu would be so high in the western border regions. If you had
used that style from the start you would not have hurt your arm."
"Seeing as I am hurt, I
am sure I will not be able to make it through the last hall," Chen said.
"What does Your Reverence suggest I do?"
"If you can't make it through,
turn back."
Chen's martial training made
it impossible for him to accept defeat so easily. He stood up and bowed to
Heavenly Mirror, then strode bravely towards the last hall.
He was surprised to find it
was in fact only a tiny room in the centre of which sat the abbot of the
Shaolin Monastery, Heavenly Rainbow. Chen wondered how he could possibly
overcome the best kung fu fighter in the Shaolin Monastery if his junior,
Heavenly Mirror, was already so formidable.
The abbot bowed. "Please
be seated," he said. A steady stream of sandlewood-scented smoke rose from
a small incense stove on a table between them. On the wall opposite Chen, was a
painting of two monks which, although executed with only a few brush-strokes,
was full of vitality.
Heavenly Rainbow meditated for
a moment, then said: "There was once a man who was very successful at
goat-herding. He became very rich, but he was by nature very miserly…"
Hearing the abbot begin to
tell a story, Chen was greatly puzzled, but he concentrated on what the old man
was saying: "An acquaintance of the goatherd knew he was very stupid, and
also that he badly wanted to find a wife. So he cheated the goatherd, saying:
'I know a girl who is very beautiful. I can arrange for her to marry you.' The
goatherd was delighted and gave him a large amount of money. A year past, and
the man said to him: 'Your wife has given birth to your son.' The goatherd
hadn't even seen the woman, but hearing he had a son, he was even more pleased
and gave the man another large sum of money. Later, the man came to him again
and said: 'Your son has died!' The goatherd cried uncontrollably, heart-broken
in the extreme."
Chen had a fairly good general
education, and knew he was quoting from the Hundred Parables Sutra of the
Mahayana school of Buddhism.
"In fact all worldly
matters are like this," the abbot continued. "Power and riches are
like the wife and child of the goatherd: just fantasies. What is the point of
wasting effort to obtain them when losing them will only cause sorrow?"
"There was once a husband
and wife who had three cakes," Chen replied. "They ate one cake each,
but could not decide who should eat the third. Finally, they agreed that
whoever talked first would lose the chance to eat the cake."
Hearing Chen relate another
story from the Hundred Parables Sutra, Heavenly Rainbow nodded.
"The two stared at each
other in silence. Soon after, a thief entered and ransacked the house for the
couple's valuables, but because of their agreement, the couple continued to
stare at each other without saying a word. Seeing them thus, the thief became
even more bold and violated the wife in front of the husband. The husband made
no complaint at all about what was happening, but in the end, the wife could
stand it no longer and cried out. The thief grabbed up the valuables and fled,
while the husband clapped his hands and shouted triumphantly: 'You lose! The
cake is mine!'"
Heavenly Rainbow could not
help but smile, even though he knew the story well.
"He ignored great
suffering for the sake of minor personal satisfaction, allowing the thief to
steal his possessions and violate his wife in order to satisfy his appetite.
According to Buddhist tenets, one should try to help all living things and
should not think only of oneself."
Heavenly Rainbow sighed, and
quoted from the Buddhist scriptures: "There are no rules to regulate
behaviour, there are no rules to which I am subject. Man is at a standstill
until acted upon by a force. Those with no desires, will not be troubled by
dreams and fantasies."
"Life for most people is
full of hardship," Chen replied. "The monk Zhi Daolin once said:
'Emperors are cruel and evil by nature. How can one stand idly by?'"
The abbot could see Chen's
determination to carry out his duty and help ease the people's burden, and was
full of respect for him.
"Your enthusiasm is
commendable, Master Chen," he said. "I will set you one more
question, and then you can have your way."
Chen bowed his head in
acknowledgement.
"An old woman was once
lying under a tree, resting. Suddenly, a huge bear appeared wanting to eat her.
She jumped up and ran behind the tree to escape, and the bear stretched its
paws round either side of the tree to grab her. Seizing the opportunity, the
old woman pressed its paws down onto the tree trunk. As a result, the bear
could not move, but the old woman did not dare to let go either. Some time
later, a man passed by and the old woman appealed to him for help, saying they
could kill the bear together and share the meat. The man believed her and took
her place holding down the bear's paws. The old woman then fled, leaving the
man in the same dilemma she had been in."
Chen knew the moral of the
story: "Never regret helping others, even if you suffer yourself as a
result," he replied.
Heavenly Rainbow lifted the
the long-haired duster he was holding. "Please go through," he said.
Chen stood up and bowed before
him. "Please forgive me for trespassing on this sacred place," he
said.
The abbot nodded. As he walked
out of the room, Chen heard the old man sigh.
2
He passed along a covered
pathway and into yet another hall lit by two massive, flickering candles and
filled with row after row of wooden cabinets, each one marked with a piece of
yellowing paper stuck to the side. He picked up one of the candles and began
his search. Before long, he located the right cabinet. He opened its doors and
found inside three parcels wrapped in yellow cloth. The parcel on the left was
inscribed in vermilion ink with his foster father's name: 'Yu Wanting'. Chen's
hands shook slightly and several drops of candlewax splattered on the floor.
Then, with a silent prayer, he opened the parcel.
Inside was a thick file of
yellowing papers, a man's embroidered waistcoat, and a woman's white
undergarment which was badly ripped and speckled with black spots that appeared
to be blood stains. Chen opened the file and began reading from the beginning:
"I, Yu Wanting, a twenty-first generation pupil of the Shaolin Monastery
of Putian, Fujian Province, do hereby respectfully confess in full my
misdemeanors.
"I was born into a
peasant family and spent my youth in great poverty and hardship. I knew the
girl Xu Chaosheng, who lived next door, from when we were very young. As we
grew, we came to love one another…"
Chen's heart began to thump
wildly. "Could it be my foster father's misdemeanor had something to do
with my mother?" he wondered. He continued reading:
"We secretly agreed to
remain faithful to each other for life, and would marry no-one else. After the
death of my father, there were several years of drought, and with nothing in
the fields to harvest, I went out into the world to find a life for myself. Due
to the compassion of my benevolent master, I was taken in by the monastery. The
embroidered waistcoat enclosed was given to me by the girl Xu when I left home.
"Before I had been fully
initiated into the higher skills of the Shaolin martial arts school, I left
temporarily to return to my home village. Because of the girl Xu's kindness, I
was unable to abandon worldly emotions and went back to see her, but was
shocked to find that her father had married her into the family of the local
landlord, surnamed Chen. In a state of extreme anguish, I entered the Chen
mansion one night to visit her. Using martial skills I had learned from the
Shaolin School, I trespassed on the property of an ordinary citizen for
personal reasons. This was my first breach of discipline.
"The girl Xu moved with
her husband to Beijing, and three years later, having failed to renounce my
love for her, I went to visit her again. As it happened, that very night, she
gave birth to a son. I was outside the window and managed to catch a glimpse of
the child. Four days later, I returned once more and found the girl Xu looking
very pale. She told me that her son had been taken away by the Princess Rong
Zhang and replaced by a baby girl. Before we had a chance to talk further, four
assassins entered, obviously sent by the Princess to kill the girl Xu. In the
heat of the fight, I received a sword wound on my forehead, but killed all four
assassins before passing out. The girl Xu bandaged my wound with the enclosed
undergarment. Having heard a secret of the Imperial Palace and having been seen
to use Shaolin kung fu, I risked bringing great trouble upon the school. This
is my second breach of discipline.
"For the next ten years,
although I was in Beijing, I did not dare to go and see the girl Xu again, but
submerged myself in learning kung fu. Finally the Emperor Yong Zheng died and
Qian Long succeeded him to the throne. I worked out the dates and realised that
Qian Long was the son of the girl Xu. Knowing how cold-blooded Yong Zheng was
and afraid that he might have left orders to have her killed to silence her, I
entered the Chen mansion again. One night, two assassins did indeed come. I
killed them both and found Yong Zheng's written order on one of them. I enclose
the document."
Chen flipped through the rest
of the pile and found at the end a note on which was written: "If, when I
die, Chen Shiguan and his wife are still alive, they must be speedily
killed." It was unmistakably the calligraphy of the Emperor Yong Zheng.
Chen guessed Yong Zheng must have known his parents would not dare to breathe a
word while he was alive, but thought they might try to make use of the
information after his death. He continued reading.
"Qian Long apparently
knew nothing of the matter, for no more assassins were sent. But I could not
rest easy, so I dressed as a commoner and obtained employment in the Chen
mansion, chopping firewood and carrying water. This I did for five years. Only
when I was certain there would be no further repurcussions did I leave. I acted
with great recklessness, and if I had been discovered, it would have caused
great embarrassment to the Shaolin School, and have damaged the school's
honour. This is my third breach of discipline."
Now Chen understood why his
mother had wanted him to go with Yu, and why Yu had died of a broken heart
after the death of his mother. He thought of Yu working for five years as a
lowly servant in his own household to protect his mother, truly an expression
of deep love and an overwhelming sense of duty. He wondered which one of the
dozens of servants around the house when he was young was Yu.
After a while, he wiped his
eyes and read on: "I am guilty of three serious breaches of discipline.
Full of fear, I hereby present the full facts to my benevolent master and plead
for leniency."
Yu's submission ended at that
point and was followed by two lines of vermillion characters which said:
"Yu Wanting has committed three misdemeanors. If he is truly willing to
reform and follow the teachings of the Buddha, why should we not forgive him
since the Buddha was willing to forgive the Ten Sins? But if he hankers after
worldly passions and refuses to use his intelligence to break the bonds of
emotion, then he should be immediately expelled. It is up to him."
So his foster father was
expelled from the Shaolin School because he could not give up my mother, Chen
thought.
He looked up and saw the stars
on the western horizon were beginning to fade while in the east, day had
already arrived. He blew out the candles, wrapped the things up in the yellow
cloth and picked up the parcel. He closed the cabinet doors and slowly walked
back out to the courtyard where he found a statue of a laughing Buddha gazing
down him. He wondered what his foster father must have felt, being confronted
with this Buddha as he left the courtyard after being expelled. He walked back
through the five halls, all of them deserted.
As he passed through the last
doorway, Lord Zhou and the Red Flower Society heroes came forward to greet him.
They had waited anxiously for half the night and were delighted to see him
returning safely. But as he came closer, they saw his weary look, and his red,
swollen eyes. Chen gave them a brief account of what had happened, omitting
only the relationship between his foster father and his mother.
"Our business here is
finished," he said. The others nodded.
Lord Zhou accompanied Chen
back inside to bid farewell to the abbot, then the heroes collected their
belonging and started on the way.
Just as they were leaving the
monastery, Zhou Qi went pale and almost fainted. Her father quickly helped her
back inside to rest, and the monastery's physician announced after examining
her that she was in no condition to travel and would have to rest at the
monastery to await the birth. Zhou Qi could only smile bitterly and nod in
agreement.
The others discussed the
situation and decided that Lord Zhou and Xu should stay to look after Zhou Qi,
and join them in Beijing after the birth of the child. Zhou rented a number of
peasant huts a couple of miles west of the monastery for them to live in, and
Chen and the other heroes started off north.
3
When they arrived in the town
of Tai'an in Shandong province, they were met by the local Red Flower Society
Helmsman who informed them that 'Melancholy Ghost' Shi had also just arrived
from Beijing. The heroes were delighted and went to see him. Xin Yan ran on
ahead and shouted "Twelfth Brother! The traitor's dead!" Shi looked
at him blankly. "Zhang Zhaozhong!" Xin Yan shouted.
Shi's face lit up. "Zhang
is dead?"
"Yes, he was eaten up by
wolves."
Shi bowed before Chen and the
others.
"Twelfth Brother,"
said Chen. "Have your wounds fully recovered?"
"Thank you for your
concern, Great Helmsman, completely recovered. You and the others have had a
long, hard journey."
"Is there any news from
the capital?"
Shi's expression turned grim.
"None from the capital. But I have hurried here to report that Master
Muzhuolun's entire army has been destroyed."
"What?" Chen's face
went white and he stood up.
"When we left the Muslim
regions, General Zhao Wei and the remains of his army was competely
surrounded," Luo Bing said. "How could the Manchus score another
victory?"
Shi sighed.
"Reinforcements suddenly arrived from the south. From what the Muslims who
managed to flee say, Master Muzhuolun and his son fought to the death. Mistress
Huo Qingtong was ill at the time of the attack and was unable to direct the
defence. No-one knows what happened to her."
Chen slumped down into his
chair.
"Mistress Huo Qingtong
has an excellent command of kung fu," Lu Feiqing said. "She would not
come to harm at the hands of the Manchu troops."
They all knew he was just
trying to ease Chen's anxiety. It was difficult to see how a sick girl could
protect herself in the confusion of battle.
"Huo Qingtong has a
sister," Luo Bing said. "The Muslims call her Princess Fragrance. Did
you hear any news of her?"
"Nothing at all,"
Shi replied. "But she is a well-known person. If anything had happened to
her, there would be bound to be reports circulating in the capital. I heard
nothing, so I presume she is all right."
Chen was embarrassed by their
elaborate concern for his feelings. "I will go inside and rest for a
while," he said, and walked to his room.
"Go and look after
him," Luo Bing whispered to Xin Yan. The boy ran after his master.
After a short while, Chen
thrust aside the curtain to his room and strode out again. "We must eat
quickly, and get to Beijing as quickly as possible," he said.
A new note of determination in
his voice surprised the heroes. Wen raised his thumb in agreement and dug into
his food with increased gusto.
As they travelled on, Chen
forced himself to smile and chat with the others, but his features became more
haggard as the days went by. Before too long, they arrived in Beijing. Shi had
rented a large residence in Twin Willows Lane. Priest Wu Chen, the Twin
Knights, 'Buddha' Zhao and 'Pagoda' Yang were there waiting for them.
"Third Brother,"
Chen said to 'Buddha' Zhao. "Please go with Xin Yan to see the Emperor's
chief bodyguard, Bai Zhen. Take the lute that the Emperor presented to me and
the jade vase that Luo Bing stole and give them to him to pass on to the
Emperor, to let him know that we are here."
Zhao and Xin Yan left and
returned several hours later.
"We went to Bai Zhen's
home to look for him and he happened to be at home," Xin Yan reported.
"We gave Zhao's name card to one of his servants, and he rushed out to
greet us. He dragged us inside and insisted on us drinking several cups of wine
before letting us go. Extremely friendly."
Chen nodded.
Early the next morning, Bai
Zhen paid them a visit. He chatted with 'Buddha' Zhao for a while about the
weather, then asked respectfully if he could see Chen.
"The Emperor has ordered
me to take you to the Palace," he whispered to Chen when he appeared.
"Good," replied
Chen. "Please wait here for a moment."
He went back inside to discuss
things with the others. They all thought he should take strict precautions.
Several of the heroes accompanied
him into the Forbidden City, while Wen and the rest stationed themselves
outside the palace walls to await their return.
With Bai Zhen leading the way,
Chen and the others walked through the palace gates, passed guards who
respectfully bowed to them. They were overawed by the imposing atmosphere of
the palace: its thick, sturdy walls, the heavy defences. They had walked for a
good while when two eunuchs ran up to Bai Zhen.
"Master Bai," said
one. "The Emperor is in the Precious Moon Pavilion, and orders you to take
Master Chen there to see him."
Bai nodded, and turned to
Chen. "We are now entering the forbidden area of the palace. Please ask
everyone to leave their weapons here." Despite their uneasiness at this,
the heroes had no alternative and did as he said, placing their swords on a
nearby table.
Bai led them through halls and
across courtyards and stopped in front of a large, richly-decorated pavilion.
"Announcing Chen
Jialuo!" he called out. Chen straightened his cap and gown and followed
the old eunuch into the pavilion while Priest Wu Chen and the others were
forced to remain outside.
They climbed up the stairs to
the fifth floor, and entered a room in which they found Qian Long, seated and
smiling. Chen knelt down and kowtowed before him respectfully.
"You've come," said
Qian Long. "Excellent. Please be seated." With a wave of his hand he
dismissed the eunuchs. Chen remained standing where he was.
"Sit down and let us
talk," Qian Long repeated. Only then did Chen thank him and take a seat.
"What do you think of
this pavilion?" the Emperor asked.
"Where else would one
find such a building but in the Imperial Palace?"
"I told them to build it
quickly. From start to finish, it took less than two months. If there had been
more time, it would have been even more elegant. But it will do as it is."
"Yes," replied Chen.
He wondered how many workers and craftsmen had died of exhaustion during the
construction.
Qian Long stood up. "You
have just returned from the Muslim areas. Come and look. Does this look like a
desert scene?" Chen followed him to a window, and as he looked out,
started in surprise.
To the right, was a classic
Imperial Chinese garden, filled with purples and reds and twisting paths, a
sumptuous scene. But looking left, towards the west, the view was entirely
different. For about a third of a mile, the ground was covered in yellows and,
arranged into small sand dunes. Looking closely, Chen saw the signs of
pavilions having been knocked down, water pools filled in and trees and bushes
uprooted. The scene naturally lacked the majesty of the endless desert, but it
was a good likeness.
"Does your highness like
desert views?" he asked.
Qian Long smiled. "What
do you think of it?"
"A lot of work has been
put into it," Chen replied. There were a number of Muslim tents staked on
the sand with three camels tied up nearby and with a sudden heartache, he
thought of Princess Fragrance and her sister. Looking beyond, he saw several
hundred workers demolishing several more buildings: the Emperor had obviously
decided he wanted a bigger desert.
Chen wondered why on earth
Qian Long would have had a piece of dry, desolate desert constructed in the
palace grounds. Incongruously placed in the middle of such a lush Chinese
garden, it looked simply ludicrous.
Qian long walked away from the
window and pointed to the antique lute he had given Chen, now lying on a small
table.
"Why don't you play me a
tune?" he said.
Chen could see the Emperor did
not wish to discuss the important business at hand, and he could not raise it
himself, so he sat down and began to pluck the strings. As he played, something
caught his eye, and he looked up to find the jade vases decorated with Princess
Fragrance's image smiling at him across the room. With a twang, one of the
strings broke.
"What's the matter?"
Qian Long asked. He smiled. "Do you find yourself a little afraid, here in
the palace?"
Chen stood up and replied
respectfully: "Your humble servant has disgraced himself in front of your
Celestial Majesty."
Qian Long laughed., greatly
pleased by this. Chen lowered his head and noticed Qian Long's left hand was
bound with a white cloth as if it was wounded. Qian Long's face flushed red and
he hurriedly put the hand behind his back.
"Did you bring the things
I wanted?" he asked.
"They are with my friends
downstairs," Chen replied.
Qian Long picked up a small
hammer and rapped the table with it twice and a young eunuch ran in. "Tell
the gentlemen accompanying Master Chen to come up," he ordered, and the
eunuch returned a moment later with the six heroes.
Chen stood up and shot them a
glance and they had no option but to kneel down and kowtow before Qian Long.
"You stinking
emperor!" Priest Wu Chen thought as he did so. "We almost scared you
out of your wits that day in the pagoda in Hangzhou, but you're still just as
damned arrogant. If it wasn't for the Great Helmsman, I would kill you this
instant."
Chen took a small, sealed
wooden box from 'Buddha' Zhao and placed it on the table. "They are in
here," he said.
"Good. That will be
all," Qian Long replied. "When I have looked at them I will send for
you." Chen kowtowed again. "And take the lute with you," he
added.
Chen picked up the lute and
handed it to 'Leopard' Wei. "Since Your Highness has already subdued the
Muslim areas, your servant pleads with you to be merciful and to order that
there be no indiscriminate killings there," he said.
Qian Long did not answer, but
simply waving them away with his hand. Bai Zhen led them to the palace gate
where Wen and the others were waiting.
4
When Chen had gone, Qian Long
dismissed the eunuchs and opened the small box. He read the Emperor Yong
Zheng's note and the letter written by his natural mother, which said correctly
that he had a red birthmark on his left buttock. He sighed. There could no
longer be any doubt about his true origins. He ordered a eunuch to bring him a
brazier and threw the documents one by one into the fire. As the flames leapt
up, he began to feel more at ease, and on an impulse, threw the small wooden
box into the flames as well, filling the room with heat and smoke.
He stared for a moment at the
jade vases on the table, then said to the eunuch: "Send her up." The
eunuch disappeared, and returned on his knees to report: "Your slave deserves
to die. The lady refuses to come."
Qian Long laughed shortly and
glanced at the jade vases again. Then he stood up and went downstairs. Two
eunuchs followed carrying the vase.
One floor down, a maid servant
pulled aside a curtain and Qian Long walked through into a room full of fresh
flowers. Two other maids servants took the vases from the eunuchs and carefully
placed them on a table.
A girl wearing a white gown
was sitting facing the wall. With a wave of his hand, Qian Long dismissed the
maid servants from the room. He had just opened his mouth to speak when the
door curtains parted and two bodyguards came in and stood quietly by the
entrance.
"What are you doing here?
Get out," he said angrily.
"Your slaves have orders
from the Empress Dowager to protect Your Highness," said one of the
bodyguards.
"I'm fine. What do I need
protection for?"
"The Empress Dowager
knows she… that the lady is not… that she is strong-willed, and is afraid that
she will inflict injury on Your Highness's precious self."
Qian Long glanced down at his
bandaged hand, and shouted: "There's no need. Get out!"
The two bodyguards kowtowed
frantically but did not retire. He knew that no matter what, they would not
dare to disobey the Empress Dowager's orders, so he took no further notice of
them, and turned back to face the girl in the white gown.
"Turn round, I have
something to say," he said in the Muslim tongue. The girl took no notice.
In her hand was a dagger. She gripped it even tighter.
Qian Long sighed. "Look
at what is on the table," he said. The girl ignored him for a moment, but
finally her curiosity got the better of her. She glanced round and saw the pair
of jade vases, and at the same moment, the Emperor and the bodyguards were
dazzled by the sight of her beauty: it was Princess Fragrance.
She had been captured by
General Zhao Wei's army and sent to Beijing under special guard to the Emperor.
Qian Long thought it would be more interesting to be able to talk to the girl
directly, so he called for a teacher to teach him the Muslim tongue. He was an
intelligent man and studied diligently, and after a few months he could talk in
a halting fashion.
But Princess Fragrance was
already tightly bound to Chen. Furthermore, Qian Long had been responsible for
the death of her father, making her even more adament in her refusal of his
advances. Several times she had been forced almost to the point of suicide, but
each time she thought of Chen and restrained herself.
"I will be just like I
was when surrounded by the wolves," she thought. "That large wolf
wanted to eat me, but my knight finally saved me."
Qian Long watched her becoming
more haggard day by day. He was afraid she would die of melancholy, so he
called for the capital's best craftsmen and had the Precious Moon Pavilion
built for her to live in.
But Princess Fragrance took
not the slightest notice. The priceless treasures used to decorate the pavilion
were ignored, except for the murals covering the walls. They depicted scenes of
the Muslims areas, and she stared at them glassy-eyed, reliving over and over
the carefree happiness of the days when she and Chen had been together.
Sometimes Qian Long spied on
her secretly and saw her staring into distance, the trace of a smile playing
around her lips. One day he could resist it no longer and he stretched out his
hand to grasp her arm. There was a flash of a dagger, and only Princess
Fragrance's ignorance of kung fu and his own sprightliness saved him. But his
left hand had been cut and in a moment was covered in blood. He was so scared
by the incident that from that moment on, he did not dare to risk annoying her
again. When the Emperess Dowager heard of the matter, she ordered the eunuchs
to take the dagger off her, but Princess Fragrance pointed it at her chest whenever
anyone came near her and threatened to commit suicide. So Qian Long ordered
them to stay away from her and not to interfere.
Princess Fragrance was also
afraid they would put something in her food or drink, so apart from fresh fruit
she had peeled herself, she would touch nothing. Qian Long had a Muslim-style
bath constructed for her, but she refused to use it, and after many days of not
bathing, her body's fragrance became even more pronounced. Originally naive and
ignorant of worldly affairs, she became increasingly strong and knowledgeable
as the weeks went past as a result of her exposure to the evil people who
populated the palace.
As soon as she spotted the
vases, she started in shock and quickly turned back to face the wall, gripping
the hilt of the dagger tightly and wondering what Qian Long was up to.
He sighed. "When I first
saw your image on the vases, I was certain that such a person could not exist
in this world," he said. "But now I have seen you, I know that the
greatest of craftsmen could not capture a ten thousandth of your beauty."
Princess Fragrance ignored
him.
"If you continue to worry
like this all day, you are going to become ill," he continued. "Do
you miss your home? Go and look out of the window." He ordered the
bodyguards to open the window shutters.
Seeing the two bodyguards and
Qian Long standing near the window, Princess Fragrance harrumphed and turned
away. Qian Long understood and walked to the other side of the room and ordered
the bodyguards to do the same. Only then did Princess Fragrance slowly walk
over to the window and look outside. She saw the expanse of sand and the Muslim
tents and her heart twisted in pain. Two tears rolled slowly down her cheeks,
and she picked up one of the vases on the table and threw it with all her
strength at Qian Long's head.
One of the bodyguards shot
forward and intercepted the vase, but it slipped from his grasp and shattered
on the floor just as the second vase came flying after the first. The other
bodyguard tried to catch it, but it slipped through his hands and smashed
beside the first vase.
Afraid that she would try some
other way of harming the Emperor, the bodyguards sprang across the room at her.
Princess Fragrance immediately turned her dagger round and put it to her throat.
"Stop!" Qian Long
shouted frantically, and the bodyguards halted in the tracks. Princess
Fragrance retreated several steps, and as she did there was a clinking sound as
something fell from her dress to the ground. The bodyguards were afraid it was
some kind of weapon and quickly picked it up. Seeing it was a piece of jade,
they handed it to the Emperor.
Qian Long took hold of it, and
his face drained of colour. He recognised it instantly as the piece of warm
jade he had given to Chen on the breakwater at Haining. When he had presented
it, he had told Chen to give it to the lady of his heart as an expression of
love.
"Do you know him?"
he asked, flustered. He paused for a second, then said: "Where did this
piece of jade come from?"
Princess Fragrance put out her
hand. "Give it back to me," she said.
Qian Long's jealousy flared.
"Tell me who gave it to you and I will return it."
"My husband gave it to
me."
Qian Long was greatly
surprised by this reply.
"Are you married
already?"
"I have not married him
in body yet, but my heart has long been married to him," she answered
proudly. "He is the kindest and bravest person in the world. I know he
will rescue me from you. He is not afraid of you and neither am I, even though
you are Emperor."
"I know the man you are
talking about," he said, his voice full of hatred. "He is the Great
Helmsman of the Red Flower Society, Chen Jialuo. He is just a bandit leader.
What is so special about him?"
Princess Fragrance's heart
leapt for joy at the sound of Chen's name and her face lit up.
"So you know of him too.
It would be better if you let me go."
Qian Long looked up and
happened to catch a glimpse of his own face in a dressing table mirror. He
thought of Chen, his features handsome and cultured, equally versed in
scholarship and the martial arts and knew he was no match for him. Full of
jealousy and hatred, he threw the jade piece at his image and smashed both it
and the mirror, covering the floor in broken glass. Princess Fragrance rushed
forward to pick up the jade, which was unharmed, and wiped it lovingly, making
Qian Long even more angry. With a stamp of his foot, he stormed out of the room
and down the stairs.
He went to the quiet study
where he usually read and wrote poetry, and spotted a half-written poem on the
desk entitled 'The Precious Moon Pavilion': "The Fairy Princess is in the
Pavilion, A vision from the Son of Heaven's dreams of former days."
Now, in a flash of anger, he
ripped the poem up, and then sat in silence for a long time.
Slowly, his temper cooled, and
he thought: "I am the Son of Heaven, I am all-powerful. So it finally
comes out that this barbarian girl's stubbornness is the result of interference
by Chen Jialuo. His appeal to me to drive the Manchus out of China is a good
idea, but if things do not go as planned, not only will the affair end in
failure, but could end my life as well. I've been debating this matter for
months now, unable to come to a decision. What should I do?"
And another thought rushed to
the fore: "I can do whatever I like already, and if this affair is
successful, it could mean I would be controlled by these people. Can I allow
myself to become a puppet? Why abandon concrete assets for the sake of
improving my reputation? This Muslim girl thinks of nothing but him. All right,
we'll settle these two matters together."
He told a eunuch to call for
Bai Zhen who appeared shortly afterwards. "Station four top-ranking
bodyguards on each floor of the Precious Moon Pavilion and another twenty
outside," he ordered. "There must be no slip-ups of any kind."
Bai Zhen bowed. "And call for Chen Jialuo again. I have important business
to discuss with him. Tell him to come alone."
5
When Chen received the
Imperial Command, he went to discuss the situation with the others. Master Lu
and Wen were worried that the order to go alone could indicate a trap.
"The fact that he calls
me back so soon after receiving the evidence I gave him must mean he wants to
talk about it," said Chen. "This is the big chance for us to recover
China for the Chinese. I have to go no matter what dangers are waiting for me.
Second Brother," he added turning to Priest Wu Chen. "If I don't
return, please take over command of the Red Flower Society and avenge me."
"Don't worry, Great
Helmsman," the priest replied, deeply moved.
"There's no need to wait
for me outside the palace this time. If he means to harm me, there is no way
you could help me and trying would just cause needless casualties."
By the time Chen re-entered
the forbidden precincts of the palace with Bai Zhen, it was already dark. Two
eunuchs carrying lanterns led them through webs of tree-branch moon shadows to
the Precious Moon Pavilion. This time, they ascended to the fourth floor, and
as soon as the eunuchs reported Chen's arrival, Qian Long ordered him sent in.
He was seated on a couch in a small room, a far-away look in his eyes. Chen
knelt and kowtowed and Qian Long told him to be seated. He was silent for a
while. Chen looked around him and noticed a poetic couplet on the wall written
by Qian Long himself.
"What do you think?"
Qian Long asked, seeing him reading the couplet.
"Your Highness has high
aspirations and the spirit of an Emperor of great courage and intelligence.
When the Great Endeavour is successfully accomplished, and the Manchus have
been driven from China, your merit will far exceed even the Han dynasty emperor
who expelled the Tartars or the Ming dynasty emperor who threw out the Mongols,
and will be remembered for ten thousand generations."
Qian Long was delighted to
hear such praise. He smiled and stroked his whiskers. "You and I may be
servant and master, but in spirit we are brothers," he said after a
moment's contemplation. "In future, you must assist me well."
Chen was overjoyed to hear
these words: From his tone, Qian Long did not appear to be planning to go back
on his oath. His doubts dispersed, Chen knelt down once again and kowtowed.
"Your Highness's wise
decision is truly a great blessing for the people," he said.
Qian Long sighed. "I may
be the Son of Heaven, but I am not as fortunate as you," he said. Chen
wondered what he meant. "In August last year, when we were in Haining, I
gave you a piece of jade," he added. "Do you have it with you?"
Chen was startled. "Your
Highness told me to pass it on to someone else, and I have already done
so," he replied.
"You standards are very
high. Whoever it is must be one of the world's most beautiful women."
Chen's eyes reddened.
"Unfortunately, I do not know if she is dead or alive, or where she might
be. When our business is concluded, I will search to the ends of the earth to
find her."
"Do you love this lady
deeply?"
"Yes," said Chen
quietly.
"The Empress is a Manchu,
you know that?"
"Yes."
"She has served me for a
long time and is very virtuous. If we go ahead with this plan, she will
certainly fight to the death. What do you think should be done?"
Chen was unable to answer.
"Your Highness's opinions are sacred," he finally said. "Your
servant would not dare make any reckless suggestions."
"I cannot allow the
nation to be split in two. This consideration has made me very hesitant of
late. Also, at present I have a personal problem which unfortunately no-one can
help me with."
"I will do whatever Your
Highness orders."
"Gentlemen should not
snatch prized possessions from others, but this is something decided by
Fate," replied Qian Long. "Ah, when one's love is concentrated on one
person, what can one do? Go over there and take a look."
He pointed to a doorway on the
western side of the room, then stood up and walked out.
Chen was greatly confused by
this strange speech, but he calmed himself and pulled aside the thick door
curtain. He walked slowly through into what he saw was an extremely sumptuous
bed chamber. A red candle burned in the corner, and a girl in a white gown sat
staring at its flame.
Suddenly seeing Princess
Fragrance in the depths of the Imperial Palace, Chen was dumbfounded. He swayed
unsteadily and was unable to speak. Upon hearing the footsteps, Princess
Fragrance had grasped the dagger hilt tightly. Then she looked round to see the
very person she had been dreaming of day and night. Her angry glare immediately
melted into an expression of delight. She cried out and threw herself across
the room into Chen's arms.
"I knew you would come
and save me," she cried. "I waited patiently, and finally you have
come."
Chen held her warm body
tightly. "Are we dreaming?" he asked. She looked up and shook her
head as tears began to course down her cheeks.
Chen's first thought was that
the Emperor had found out she was the lady of his heart and had brought her
from the Muslim areas to be with him. He put his arms around her waist and then
unself-consciously kissed her on the lips. In the midst of the sweetness of the
long kiss, they became oblivious to everything around them.
After a long, long time, Chen
finally looked at the pink flush on her cheeks. Behind her on a dressing table,
he noticed a broken mirror, and the image of them both embracing in each
segment.
"Look," he
whispered. "There are one thousand me's, and every one is holding
you."
Princess Fragrance glanced at
the broken mirror, and then pulled the piece of warm jade from her pocket.
"He stole my jade piece
and broke the mirror with it," she said. "Luckily it wasn't
damaged."
"Who?" Chen asked,
startled.
"That evil emperor."
"Why?" Chen asked,
even more astonished.
"He bullied me, but I
said I wasn't afraid because I knew you would rescue me. He was very angry and
tried to grab me, but I have this dagger."
"Dagger?" he repeated
distantly.
"Yes. I was with my
father when they killed him. He gave me this dagger and told me to kill myself
if the enemy violated me. People who commit suicide are sent to Hell, but if
they are girls dying to protect their virtue then Allah makes an
exception."
Chen looked down and wondered
how many times this weak, naive girl had come close to death in the past few
months. His heart was filled with love and pain and he embraced her again.
After a while, he steadied himself and began to carefully consider the
situation.
He now realized that Qian Long
had had Princess Fragrance brought to Beijing because he wanted her himself. He
had obviously ordered the construction of a desert in the Imperial Gardens to
try to please her. But she had sworn never to give in. He had threatened and
cajoled her in every way he could think of, all without effect. That must be
why Qian Long had said that he was not as fortunate as himself.
He looked down at Princess
Fragrance as he held her and saw she had closed her eyes and was fast asleep.
Why did he let me see her? he wondered. He had raised the problem of the
Empress and said that if the Great Endeavour was to accomplished, she would
have to be discounted, and that a choice would have to be made between family
and country. Yes, his meaning is…"
He shivered and began to
sweat. He felt Princess Fragrance move slightly against him and heard her sigh.
A smile appeared on her face like a flower bud opening.
"Should I break with the
Emperor for her sake, or ask her to give in to him for the sake of the Great
Endeavour?" The thought shot through his brain like a lightning bolt, and
he cringed from it.
"She loves me so deeply.
She's managed somehow to maintain her virtue for my sake, she believes firmly
that I will rescue her. How can I really bring myself to reject her, to betray
her? But if I think only of us two, I must break with my brother, and this rare
opportunity to recover the throne will be lost. If I did that, would we not be
cursed by generations to come?" His brain was in turmoil, and he had no
idea what he should do.
Princess Fragrance opened her
eyes. "Let's go," she said. "I'm afraid of seeing that evil
Emperor again."
"Wait here for a moment.
I'll go out for a while then come back." She nodded and took the dagger
from his hand, then watched him leave the room with smiling eyes.
He went up the stairs and
found Qian Long on the next floor up sitting on a couch, stony-faced and
motionless.
"Affairs of state are of
more importance than private concerns," Chen announced. "I will urge
her to give in to you."
Qian Long jumped up off the
couch in delight. "Really?" he exclaimed.
"Yes, but you must swear
an oath." Chen stared at him as he spoke.
"What oath?" asked
Qian Long, avoiding his gaze.
"If you do not honestly
do all in your power to drive the Manchu barbarians out, what then?"
Qian Long thought for a
moment. "If that is the case, then no matter how glorious my life may be,
may my grave be dug up and my skeleton smashed to pieces."
The grave of an emperor was
inviolable. Such an oath was extremely serious.
"All right," said
Chen. "I will talk to her. But I will have to do it outside the
palace."
"Outside?" Qian Long
asked, startled.
Chen nodded. "At the
moment, she hates you to her very bones. She won't be able to quietly listen to
what I have to say here, so I wish to take her to the Great Wall to explain
things."
"Why do you want to go so
far?" said Qian Long suspiciously.
"I once promised to take
her to the Great Wall. When I have done so, I will not see her ever
again."
"You will definitely
bring her back?"
"We members of the
fighting community consider our word to be worth more than our lives. I will do
what I have said."
Qian Long was uncertain of
what to do. He wondered how he would ever find this beauty again if Chen
escaped with her. But on the other hand, he knew the girl would never give in
to him unless Chen could think of a way of convincing her to do so. He was sure
Chen was committed to their Great Endeavour and would not give it up just for
the sake of a girl.
"All right," he said
finally, slapping the table. "Go, both of you."
He waited until Chen had gone,
then said to the curtain behind him: "Take forty bodyguards and follow him
the whole way. Whatever you do, don't let them get away."
Chen returned to the fourth
floor and took hold of Princess Fragrance's hand. "Let's go," The two
walked together out of the pavilion and out of the Forbidden City. The guards
had already received their orders and made no attempt to stop them. Princess
Fragrance's heart was full of joy. She had always believed her knight was
capable of doing anything, and was in no way surprised that they could just
walk out of the palace gates.
As they reached the outside,
the sky was already growing light. Xin Yan was standing close by, the reins of
the white horse in his hands, keeping watch, and when he spotted Chen, he
rushed over. Seeing Princess Fragrance standing by his master's side, he was
even more surprised and delighted.
Chen took the rein from him.
"We are going on a trip out of the city for the day," he said.
"We won't be back until late evening, so tell the others not to
worry."
Xin Yan watched the two mount
up and ride off north, and was about to leave when the sound of galloping
hooves rose behind him and several dozen palace guards thundered past. He
recognised the frail old man leading the troop as Bai Zhen, and returned
quickly to Twin Willow Lane to report.
As the white horse left the
city, it galloped ever faster. Princess Fragrance, snuggling into Chen's arms,
watched the trees on either side of the road zip past, and all the distress and
sorrow of the previous few months evaporated. The horse's strong legs carried
them quickly past the small villages to the north of Beijing, and as they
approached a crossroads, Chen said: "Let's go and see the tombs of the
Ming dynasty emperors."
The horse galloped on. Just
past the Jade Stone Bridge, they came upon a huge stone monument inscribed with
the words: 'The Sacred Tombs of the Great Ming'. On the right-hand face of the
monument were several lines of poetry in Qian Long's hand.
"What is it?"
Princess Fragrance asked.
"It's a poem written by
the Emperor."
"He's vile and horrible.
Don't look at it," she urged. She took his hand and they continued on, and
soon found themselves walking along an avenue flanked by stone lions,
elephants, camels and strange mythical creatures. "I have only this one
day left with her so I must make sure she enjoys it," Chen thought.
"After today, we will neither of us ever pass another happy day
again." So he roused his flagging spirits and smiled.
"You want to ride on the
camel, don't you?" he said and lifted her up onto its back and sat behind
her. With shouts and calls, they urged the stone camel forward. Princess
Fragrance bent over double with laughter, then after a moment she sighed.
"If only this camel could
really run and could carry us back to the Tianshan mountains," she said.
"What would you want to
do there?"
She looked into the distance.
"Oh, I would be very busy. I would have to pick flowers for you to eat,
and look after the goats and feed the small deer. And I'd have to visit the
graves of my father and mother and brother to keep them company, and think of
some way to find my sister…"
"What happened to
her?" he asked.
"She was ill the night
the Manchus attacked. We were split up during the battle and I have heard no
news of her since."
Chen was silent as they
remounted the horse and started on their way. The road wound upwards and before
long they arrived at Ju Yong Pass and caught sight of the Wall, writhing like a
long snake through the clusters of hills.
"Why did they waste so
much effort to build this thing?" Princess Fragrance asked.
"It was to stop the
northern enemies from invading," Chen replied. "Countless people must
have died on either side of this wall."
"Men are truly strange.
Why don't they all live happily together and dance and sing instead of
fighting? I really can't see the point of it all."
"If you ever get the
chance, you must tell the Emperor not to make war on the poor peoples of the
border areas. All right?"
"I will never see that
evil Emperor again," she replied, puzzled by his sudden solemness.
"But if you were able to
make him do your bidding, you must urge him not to do bad things, and to do
some good for the people. Promise me!"
"What a funny thing to
say. Do you really think I would be unwilling to do anything you asked me to
do?"
"Thank you," Chen
said, and she smiled.
They walked along a stretch of
the wall hand-in-hand.
"I just thought of
something," said Princess Fragrance.
"What?"
"I am very happy today,
but is it because of this beautiful scenery? No. I know it's because I am with
you. As long as you are by my side, I would think even the most ugly place on
earth was beautiful."
The happier she was, the more
uncomfortable Chen felt. "Is there anything you would like me to do?"
he asked.
"Oh, but you have already
done everything. You have always given me everything I wanted, even without
asking for it." She pulled the snow lotus from her pocket. The flower was
now dry and withered, but it still possessed a strong fragrance.
"There is only one thing
you refused to do," she added with a smile. "And that is to sing me a
song."
Chen laughed. "It's
true," he said. "I have never sung you a song."
Princess Fragrance pulled a
face. "Well, I'm not going to sing for you any more either."
"I remember my mother's
maid servant singing several rhymes when I was young. I'll sing one for you
now, but you're not allowed to laugh."
She clapped her hands in
delight. "All right! All right! Sing!"
He thought for a moment, and
then began:
"The light rain falls
The wind blows in squalls
Someone outside saucily calls,
I think it's my loved one,
And softly curse him round and
right.
But looking once again
I see it's not, and jump in
fright."
After he had finished, Chen
explained the words of the song in the Muslim tongue, and Princess Fragrance
laughed.
"The lady's eyesight was
not too good, apparently," she said.
They explored the top of the
wall, which consisted of battlements on the northern side, a stone hand rail on
the other and a walkway in between. Every three hundred feet or so, there was a
watchtower. They came to a beacon tower, and Chen thought of the time Huo
Qingtong had burned wolf dung as part of her plan to destroy the Manchu army.
He wondered again if she was alive or dead, and his sadness increased.
"I know what you are
thinking," said Princess Fragrance.
"Do you?"
"Yes. You are thinking of
my sister."
"How did you know?"
"When the three of us
were in the Secret City together, I could see how happy you were in spite of
the danger. Oh, you mustn't worry so!"
He took her hand, "What
do you mean?" he asked.
She sighed. "In the old
days, I was just a child. I didn't understand anything. But every day I was in
the Imperial Palace, I thought about the times we were together and realised
many things that had not occured to me before. My sister loved you all along,
and you love her, don't you?"
"Yes. I shouldn't try to
deceive you."
"But I know you truly
love me too. And without you, I cannot live. So let's go and find my sister
quickly and we can all live happily together forever. Don't you think that
would be lovely?"
Her eyes and face radiated happiness.
Chen squeezed her hand. "You have thought it out perfectly," he said
softly. "You and your sister are the nicest, the best people in the
world."
Princess Fragrance stood
looking out into the distance, and noticed the sun glinting off a body of water
to the west. "Let's go and have a look over there," she said.
They made their way across the
hills, and came upon a clear spring bubbling merrily out of a crack in the
rocks.
"I will wash my feet
here, is that all right?" Princess Fragrance asked.
"Of course," Chen
replied with a smile. She took off her shoes and socks and stepped into the
water, relishing the coolness as the crystal clear water flowed around her
milk-white feet. Chen happened to see his own shadow on the water, and realised
the sun was already sinking into the west. He reached into his bag and pulled
out some food for them. Princess Fragrance leant against him and wiped her feet
dry as she ate.
Chen gritted his teeth.
"There is something I must say to you," he said. She turned and put
both her arms round him, resting her head on his chest.
"I know you love
me," she said quietly. "I understand. You don't have to say it."
He cringed and swallowed what
he had been about to say. After a while, he started again: "Do you still
remember Mami's last testament that we read inside the White Jade Peak?"
"She is living in Heaven
now with her Ali. That's the way it should be."
"You Muslims believe that
after good people die, they will live forever in paradise, is that right?"
"Of course that's what
happens."
"When I return to
Beijing, I will go and find an Islamic Imam and get him to teach me so that I
can become a good follower of the Muslim faith," said Chen.
Princess Fragrance was
overjoyed. She had never guessed he would be willing to voluntarily join the
Muslim faith. "Oh my brother," she said looking up at him. "Will
you really?"
"Definitely."
"You're willing to do
even that because of your love for me. I never dared to hope for such a
thing."
"Because in this
life," Chen continued slowly, "we will not be able to be together. So
I want to be sure that after death, I can be with you every day."
The words struck Princess
Fragrance like a clap of thunder. After a moment's silence, she said in shaking
voice: "You…what are you talking about? We can't be together?"
"No. After today, we will
not be able to see each other again."
"Why?" Her body
quivered and two large tears fell onto his gown.
Chen embraced her tenderly.
"If it were possible for me to be with you, I would be content even
without food or clothing, even if I was beaten and humiliated everyday. But do
you remember Mami? The good Mami was willing to leave her true love Ali in
order that her tribe would no longer be oppressed and bullied by Sanglaba and
was even willing to go and allow herself to be violated by him…"
Princess Fragrance's body went
limp. "You want me to give in to the Emperor?" she whispered.
"You want me to kill him?"
"No, he is my blood
brother." He told her everything about his relationship with Qian Long,
and the Red Flower Society's plans, about the oath sworn in the Six Harmonies
Pagoda, and of Qian Long's demand earlier that day. As he spoke, Princess
Fragrance realised that what she had been longing for day and night and thought
she had achieved, was slipping from her grasp again. She was overwhelmed by a
wave of panic and fainted away.
As she came to, she felt Chen
holding her tightly, and was aware of a damp patch on her dress soaked by his
tears. She stood up.
"Wait for me here,"
she said softly, and walked towards a large flat rock in the distance where she
prostrated herself in prayer towards the west. She appealed to the True God,
Allah for guidance on what she should do. The pale sunlight glanced off her
white dress, her back presenting a picture of both great melancholy and warmth.
After a while, she walked slowly back.
"Whatever you want me to
do, I will do," she announced.
Chen jumped up and ran over to
her, and the two embraced each other tightly.
"If I had known we had
only today, I would have wanted you to hold me the whole day rather than come
here," she whispered. Chen kissed her, unable to answer.
A long time passed. Then
suddenly, Princess Fragrance said: "I have not had a bath since I left
home. I am going to have one now." She began to take off her outer gown.
Chen stood up. "I'll go
over there to wait for you," he said.
"No! No! I want you to
watch me. When you saw me for the first time, I was bathing. Today is the last
time…After you have seen me, I want you to never forget me."
"Do you really believe
that I would ever forget you?"
"Please don't go,"
she pleaded, and there was nothing for Chen to do but to sit down again.
While Chen watched and the
mountain spring gurgled, she removed all her clothing piece by piece, until the
golden evening sun illuminated one of the world's most beautiful bodies. Chen
felt giddy, and hardly dare to look directly at this vision. But he could not
fail to notice her innocent, guileless expression, and suddenly thought of her
as simply a naked three or four-year-old child. She was so beautiful and so
pure.
"To make a body of such
incomparable beauty, there must be an all-knowing, all-powerful God in
heaven," he thought. His heart was filled with reverence and gratitude.
Princess Frgrance slowly wiped
the pearls of water from her body, and then put her clothes back on.
"This body," she
thought self-pityingly. "I will never again be able to show it to the one
I love."
She rubbed her hair dry and
then returned to sit in Chen's embrace.
"I once told you the
story of the cowherd and the spinning girl, do you remember?" Chen asked.
"Yes. I remember. You
said that although they met only once a year, they still saw each other
countless times more than ordinary people."
"Yes. We cannot be
together forever, but the True God will make sure we meet again eventually. In
the desert, and here, we have been very happy. The time has been short, but we
have perhaps had more happiness than many couples who live together for
decades."
She listened to his soothing
voice comforting her, as the sun slowly sank towards the hills with her heart
following it down. Suddenly she jumped up and wailed: "No! The sun is
disappearing!"
Chen's heart shattered.
"I have asked so much of you!" he exclaimed, taking her hand.
She continued to stare at the
point where the sun had gone down. "If only it was able to rise again,
even for just a moment," she said quietly.
"It is right that I
should undergo hardship for the sake of my people, but you have never even seen
them, let alone loved them."
"I love you, so are they
not my people too? Do you not love all our Muslim brothers?"
The sky was growing darker.
The sun did not rise again, and a wave of coldness touched her heart.
"Let's go back," she
said. "I am very happy. My life is fulfilled."
They climbed onto the back of
the white horse and started back the way they had come. They were both silent
and neither turned back to look at the place of beauty they had just enjoyed.
Less than an hour's ride
later, they heard the sound of many galloping hooves in front and several dozen
riders emerged out of the evening mist with Bai Zhen in the lead. His face lit
up as soon as he saw Chen and Princess Fragrance, and signalling to the others
to stop, he leapt off his horse and stood by the roadside. Chen did not even
glance at him, but urged the white horse on even faster. Soon after, horses'
hooves sounded in front once again, and the Red Flower Society heroes appeared.
"Great Helmsman!"
'Leopard' Wei shouted. "We're all here!"
6
The sky gradually became light
and Qian Long watched the sun rising from the east as the eunuchs laid out the
Imperial breakfast for him. It consisted of many delicacies, but he found it
difficult to swallow them. With Chen and Princess Fragrance gone, he felt
nervous and unsettled.
That day, he did not grant an
audience to his ministers, and spent his time napping fitfully. On several
occasions, he sent guards out to search for news, but the sky grew dark and the
moon sailed up over the palace walls, and still none of them had returned to
report.
He started to become extremely
anxious and tried to calm himself by staring fixedly at the desert murals on
the walls of the Precious Moon Pavilion.
"Seeing as she likes him,
she will certainly like Chinese clothes," he thought. "When they
return he will already have convinced her, so why don't I take off these Manchu
clothes and put on something Chinese to give her a surprise?"
He ordered his eunuchs to find
him some, but where would Chinese clothes be found in the heart of the Manchu
court? Finally, one bright young eunuch ran over to the theatre troupe and
brought back a theatrical costume, which he helped Qian Long to don.
Qian Long examined himself in
front of a mirror, and was delighted by his dashing appearance. Then he noticed
a few white hairs amongst his whiskers and urgently ordered the young eunuch to
get a pair of tweezers to pull them out.
Just as he was sitting with
bowed head to allow the eunuch to remove the offending hairs, he heard the
patter of light footsteps behind and another eunuch announced: "Her
Highness the Empress Dowager has arrived."
Qian Long started in surprise.
He looked up and saw the Dowager's image in the mirror, her face stern and pale
and full of anger.
"I trust you are well,
Madame?" he said, hurriedly turning to face her. He escorted her to the
couch where she took a seat, and then dismissed the eunuchs with a wave of her
hand.
There was a moment's silence.
"The slaves say you have
not been well today," she began in a deep voice. "They said you did
not hold court this morning and haven't eaten, so I have come to see you."
"I am better now,"
he replied. "It was just that I ate something fatty which made me a little
uncomfortable. It was nothing. I would not have dared to have bothered Your
Highness about it."
"Huh! Was it Muslim fat
or Chinese fat?" she said, to Qian Long's consternation.
"I think some roast lamb
I ate last night disagreed with me," he replied.
"That is one of our
Manchu dishes. Huh! You seem to be tired of being a Manchu."
Qian Long did not dare to say
anything.
"Where is that Muslim
girl?" the Empress Dowager asked.
"She was in a bad mood so
I sent her out with someone who can talk some sense into her."
"She has a knife, and
would clearly prefer to die rather than give in to you. What use is there in
getting someone to talk to her? Who did you send?"
Qian Long noticed anxiously
how close her questioning was becoming.
"An old guard officer,
surnamed Bai," he replied.
The Dowager looked up and let
the silence hang for a moment. Then she laughed coldly. "You are the
Emperor, the master of all under heaven. You can do whatever you like, and
concoct whatever lies you like, too."
Qian Long knew the eyes and
ears of the Dowager were many and guessed he probably would not be able to
deceive her about this affair. "The other person I sent with the
girl," he answered quietly, "was a scholar I met in the south, who is
very learned…"
"It's someone from the
Chen family of Haining, isn't it?" the Dowager's voice rasped out sharply.
Qian Long hung his head, not
daring to utter a sound.
"No wonder you've put on
Chinese clothes. Why haven't you killed me yet?" Her voice had become even
harsher. Qian Long knelt down in fright and began kowtowing frantically.
"May I be damned by
Heaven and Earth if I have been unfilial in any way," he said.
The Dowager flicked up the
long sleeves of her gown and walked out. Qian Long rushed after her, then
stopped when he realised he was still wearing the Chinese costume. To be seen
wearing such clothes would not do at all, so he hurriedly changed back into his
usual gown and rushed out after the Dowager. He found her in a side room of the
Martial Hero Pavilion.
"Please don't be angry,
Madame," he pleaded. "I have committed some errors and would
willingly accept your criticism."
"Why have you called that
man Chen into the palace several days running?" she asked coldly.
"And what happened in Haining?" Qian Long hung his head and was
silent.
"Do you really intend to
restore the Chinese style of dress?" she shrieked. "Are you going to
kill every one of us Manchus?"
"Please don't listen to
the nonsense spouted by servants," he replied, his voice shaking.
"How could I plan to do such a thing?"
"How do you intend to
deal with this man Chen?"
"His society is large and
widespread and many of his followers are martial arts masters who would die for
him, so I have been polite to him throughout while waiting for an opportunity
to deal with them all at once. I want to remove the roots as well as chopping
off the grass."
The Dowager's expression
softened slightly. "Is this true?"
Qian Long knew the secret had
leaked. With no room left to maneouvre, he decided he had no choice but to
swear to destroy the Red Flower Society.
"I will see to it that
Chen is beheaded within three days," he said.
The shadow of a smile appeared
on the Dowager's forbidding face. "Good," she said. "Only then
will you be holding to the wishes of our ancestors." She stood up.
"Come with me," she added.
She stood up and walked over
to the main hall of the Martial Hero Pavilion with Qian Long close behind. As
they approached, a eunuch gave a shout and the huge doors were opened. Inside
the brightly-lit hall, two files of eunuchs stretched away from the entrance towards
eight princes kneeling on the floor to receive the Emperor. The Dowager and
Qian Long walked over to two chairs on the dais in the centre of the hall and
sat down. Qian Long saw all eight princes were of the immediate Imperial
family, including his own brothers. He wondered uneasily what the Dowager was
planning.
"When the late Emperor
passed away," she began slowly, "he left orders that the command of
the Imperial Banner troops should be divided amongst eight members of the
Imperial family. But because of the constant dispatch of forces to the Muslim
border regions in the past few years, it has never been possible to act on the
Emperor's last wish. Now, thanks to the blessed protection of the Ancestors,
the Muslim areas have been pacified, and from today, the leadership of the
Banners will be divided amongst the eight of you." The princes kowtowed
and expressed their great gratitude.
So she has decided to disperse
my military strength, Qian Long thought.
"Please make the
assignments, Your Highness," the Dowager said to him. He knew he was in a
losing position, but he decided that as long as he did not attempt a revolt, a
temporary dispersal of military power would be of no great consequence. The
Dowager, he could see, had been very thorough, and he guessed that she had also
made preparations in case he refused. So he assigned each of the eight princes
to be commander of one of the Banners.
Meanwhile, the eight princes,
all full of curiosity, were thinking: "Based on the wishes of the founder
of our dynasty, three of the Banners should be under the direct leadership of
the Emperor, and the other five subordinate to them. The Dowager's action to
divide the Banners among us is a serious violation of rules laid down by the
Ancestors and is obviously intended to weaken the Emperor's power." None
of them dared to directly refuse the Dowager's command, but all decided it
would be best to return the command to the Emperor the following day in order
to avoid the possibility of execution.
The Dowager signalled with her
hand and one of the princes came forward holding a tray on which was placed a
small iron box. He knelt before her and she picked the box up and opened it,
and took out a small scroll. Qian Long glanced at it out of the corner of his
eye and saw the inscription, written in the Emperor Yong Zheng's hand, read
"Posthumous Edict." Next to this was a line of smaller characters:
"If there should be any political changes, the eight princes who lead the
Banners must gather together and open this."
Qian Long's face drained of
colour as he realised his father had long ago taken precautions to guard
against his secret ever being revealed. If he dared to alter in any way the
instructions of his ancestors, let alone attempt to overthrow the Manchus, the
eight Banner commanders would be required to dispose of him and set up a new
Emperor. He steadied himself.
"The late Emperor was
far-sighted indeed," he said. "If I can match even a ten thousandth
of his abilities, then you have no need to worry further, Madame."
The Dowager passed the scroll
to the most senior of the eight princes and said: "Take this edict of the
late Emperor and have it placed in the Lama Temple. Assign one hundred
bodyguards to guard it day and night." She hesitated for a moment, then
added: "They are not allowed to leave their posts for a second, even if
ordered to do so by the present Emperor."
The prince complied with her
command and left with the scroll for the Lama Temple. The temple was in the
northern part of the city near the Gate of Serenity, and had been used by the
Emperor Yong Zheng as his home before ascending the throne. After he died, Qian
Long had had the residence expanded and turned into a Tibetan Lamaist temple in
memory of his grandfather.
Her arrangements complete, the
Dowager yawned lazily. "The achievements of our Ancestors must be
safeguarded," she sighed.
7
Immediately after seeing the
Empress Dowager out of the Martial Hero Pavilion, Qian Long called for his
bodyguards. Bai Zhen came forward to report.
"Master Chen has escorted
the lady back to the palace, and she is now awaiting Your Highness in the
Precious Moon Pavilion," he said.
Qian Long was delighted with
the news and walked briskly to the door of the Martial Hero Pavilion. Then he
stopped and turned. "Was there any trouble on the road?" he asked.
"Your slaves came across
a large number of Red Flower Society fighters at one point, but luckily, Master
Chen intervened and prevented an incident."
When Qian Long arrived at the
Precious Moon Pavilion, he found Princess Fragrance seated as before, facing
the wall.
"Did you have fun at the
Great Wall?" he asked happily. She ignored him. Qian Long decided to deal
with more pressing matters first before questioning her further. He went into
the adjoining room and gave orders for his favourite, Fu Kangan, to be
summoned.
Before too long, Fu rushed in
and Qian Long ordered him to lead a troop of Imperial Guardsmen and lay an
ambush around the Lama Temple. After he had departed, Qian Long ordered Bai
Zhen to also hide near the temple.
"I intend to hold a great
feast in the Lama Temple tomorrow evening," he added. "Tell Master
Chen and all of the senior Red Flower Society people to attend."
Bai Zhen immediately guessed
the Emperor intended to deal with all the Red Flower Society leaders at one
stroke and shuddered at the thought of the slaughter that would take place.
"Also," Qian Long
added, "summon the Head Lama of the temple immediately."
As the old Lama kowtowed his
way into the Imperial presence, Qian Long asked: "How many years is it
since you came to the capital?"
"Your vassal has served
the Emperor for twenty-one years."
"Do you want to go back
to Tibet?"
The Lama kowtowed again but
said nothing.
"There are two Living
Buddhas in Tibet, the Dalai Lama and the Panchen Lama," Qian Long
continued. "Why isn't there a third?"
"Your Highness, that has
always been the way, ever since…"
Qian Long silenced him with a
wave of his hand. "If I made you the third Living Buddha and gave you an
area to govern, no-one would dare to defy the order, would they?"
The Lama's joy soared to the
skies, and he kowtowed furiously, unable to believe his luck. "Your
Reverence's benevolence will be difficult to repay," he said.
"I want you now to do
something for me. Go back to the temple and gather together all your trusted
lamas and prepare gunpowder, firewood and other inflammable materials." He
pointed at Bai Zhen. "When he gives you the signal, you will put the
temple to the torch."
The Head Lama began
frantically kowtowing again, this time in fright. "But it is the former
residence of the late Emperor," he protested. Many of his possessions are
there, I wouldn't dare…"
"Do you dare to disobey
my command?" Qian Long roared, sending the old Lama into a cold sweat.
"I…I will do as Your
Highness commands," he replied in a quavering voice.
"If half a breath of this
matter leaks out, I will have you and every single one of your eight hundred
lamas executed." After a moment, he added in a more friendly tone:
"There will be Banner troops guarding the Suicheng Pavilion in your
temple, so you must be careful. When the time comes, I want those troops
trapped inside and burned to death. When things have been successfully
completed, you will be the third Living Buddha of Tibet. Now go!" He waved
his hand and the Lama left with Bai Zhen, thanking the Emperor for his
benevolence as he went.
His preparations completed,
Qian Long considered how his plan would enable him to kill two birds with one
stone, both the Red Flower Society and the Dowager's forces. After tomorrow
evening, his position secured and stable, he could continue his reign in peace.
He felt very satisfied.
Looking round, he noticed a lute sitting on a tabletop and went over to play
it. After a few phrases, his playing became increasingly strident and
aggressive, and with a twang, the seventh string broke. He started in surprise
and laughed loudly. Then, pushing the lute aside, he stood up and walked back
to the other room.
Princess Fragrance was sitting
at the window staring up at the moon. As she heard his footsteps, there was a
glint of light as she pulled the dagger out again. Qian Long frowned and sat
down at a distance.
"When you and Master Chen
were at the Great Wall, did he tell you to kill me?"
"He told me to do as you
said."
"Are you going to disobey
him?"
"I would never do
that."
Qian Long was both delighted
and jealous. "Then why are you still carrying the dagger? Give it to
me!"
"No, I'll wait for you to
become a good emperor first."
Aha, thought Qian Long, so
that's how he hopes to control me. Anger, jealousy, lust and hatred rose within
him all at once, and he laughed harshly. "I am already a good
emperor," he replied.
"Huh! I heard you playing
the lute just now. You're going to kill people, you're going to kill many, many
people. You're…you are evil."
Qian Long realised that his
thoughts had indeed revealed themselves through his playing. "Yes,"
he replied. "I am going to kill people. I have already caught your Master
Chen, but if you do as I say, I can release him. If you don't do as I
say…" He laughed again. "Then you know I will kill many people."
Princess Fragrance was
shocked. "You would kill your own blood brother?" she asked in a
quavering voice.
Qian Long's face went white.
"So he told you everything?"
"I don't believe you've
caught him. He's much cleverer than you."
"Cleverer? Huh! And even
if I haven't got him today, what about tomorrow?" She did not answer.
"I advise you to forget this idea," he went on. "Whether I'm a
good emperor or a bad emperor, you are never going to see him again."
"But you promised him
that you would be a good emperor," Princess Fragrance protested. "How
can you renege on your promise?"
"I will do whatever I
want," he roared. "No-one can tell me what to do." All his pent
up anger from the humiliating audience with the Dowager spilled out.
His words struck Princess
Fragrance like a fist-blow to the chest. "So the Emperor is going to cheat
him," she thought in anguish. "If only we had known earlier, I
wouldn't have had to come back here." She almost fainted at the shock of
it.
Seeing her face suddenly go
pale, Qian Long immediately regretted being so coarse. "If you will treat
me well," he said, "I will naturally not harm him. In fact, I will
make him a senior official and allow him to become rich and powerful."
But Princess Fragrance was not
listening. She was trying to work out a way of letting Chen know of the
Emperor's deceitfullness, so that he wouldn't fall into a trap. She frowned
deep in thought, her expression adding to the beauty of her face, and Qian Long
stared at her, mesmerized.
"Everyone in the palace
is a servant of the Emperor," she thought. "So who can deliver a
letter for me? There's only one way to do it."
"So you promise not to
harm him?" she said.
Qian Long was delighted.
"I promise, I promise," he replied immediately. There was not the
slightest touch of sincerity in his voice, and Princess Fragrance glanced at
him in hatred.
"Early tomorrow, I want
to go to a mosque," she said evenly. "I will only do as you say after
I have prayed to Allah."
Qian Long smiled. "All
right," he replied. "But there is to be no more delay after
tomorrow."
Princess Fragrance watched him
leave, laughing as he went, then found a pen and paper and wrote out a letter to
Chen warning him of the Emperor's intentions, and telling him that the plan to
overthrow the Manchus was just a dream. She urged him to quickly devise away to
rescue her. When she had finished, she wrapped the letter in a blank sheet of
paper and wrote on it in the Moslem script: "Please deliver speedily to
the Great Helmsman of the Red Flower Society, Chen Jialuo." She knew the
respect all Muslims had for her father and sister, and the way in which they
worshipped her herself, and felt certain that if she just had a chance to pass
the letter on to any Muslim in the mosque, they would certainly find a way to
deliver it.
Having written the letter, her
heart felt much easier. She was certain Chen was capable of anything and would
easily find a way to rescue her. At that point, a sense of indescribable warmth
and sweetness swept over her, and tired out from the day's exertions, she fell
fast asleep.
Through the mists of slumber,
she became aware of bells chiming around the palace, and opened her eyes to find
the sky was already growing light. Hurriedly, she arose and washed herself,
then combed her hair. The maid servants went to look after her knew she would
allow no-one near her and watched from a distance. She carefully secreted the
letter in her sleeve and then left the pavilion. Eunuchs were already waiting
outside with a palanquin and took her to the mosque on the West Avenue of
Eternal Peace while bodyguards crowded round both before and aft.
Seeing the round dome of the
mosque as she descended from the palanqin, she felt both happiness and anguish.
She walked through the mosque's entrance with head bowed and noticed two men
walking on either side of her. They were dressed as Muslims, and she was about
to pass the letter to one of them, then stopped herself. His features and
manner were not at all those of her people. She glanced at the other man and
saw he was the same.
"Were you sent by the
Emperor to guard me?" she asked quietly in the Muslim tongue. Both men
nodded, not understanding what she had said.
Disappointed, she turned round
and saw there were another eight palace guards dressed as Muslims behind her,
and that all the real Muslims were being kept at a safe distance. She walked
over to the chief Imam of the mosque and said: "Please make sure this
letter is delivered no matter what happens." The Imam started in shock as
Princess Fragrance pushed the letter into his hand. A guard rushed forward and
snatched the letter away and gave the Imam a heavy push on the chest, causing
him to stumble and almost fall. The other worshippers looked at each other in
surprise, wondering what was going on.
"What do you people think
you're doing?" the Imam demanded angrily.
"Mind your own
business," the guard hissed at him. "We are from the palace."
Severely frightened, the Imam
did not dare to say another word, and turned to lead the gathering in prayer.
Princess Fragrance knelt down
with the others and tears welled out of her eyes like water from a spring. In
the midst of her pain and sorrow only one thought remained: "How can I
warn him to be on his guard? I must let him know even if I die doing it, but
how?"
"By dying!" The
realisation streaked across her brain like a flash of lightning. "If I die
here, word will get out and he will hear of it. That's it. There's no other
way!"
Then the Prophet's words
sounded in her ears like thunder: "Those who take their own life will fall
into the eternal fires and will never escape." She was not afraid of
death, and believed that people who died could ascend to Paradise and be
re-united with their loved ones for eternity. But with suicide, there was
nothing to look forward to but never-ending pain!
A violent shiver ran through
her and she suddenly felt extremely cold. She listened for a moment to the
congregation reciting the scriptures.
For a true religious believer
there is nothing more terrible than the consignment of the soul to eternal
Hell, but she could see no other way. Love overcame the greatest fear of all.
"Most sacred and Holy
Allah," she whispered. "It is not that I don't believe you care for
me. But there is no other way except by using my own blood."
She took the dagger out of her
sleeve and on the stone in front of her, carved out the words "Don't trust
the Emperor." Then she lightly called out the word "Brother!"
and thrust the blade into the purest, most beautiful breast in this world.
8
That morning, while the Red
Flower Society heroes were discussing the situation in their quarters in Twin
Willow Lane, a servant appeared to announced the arrival of the Emeror's chief
bodyguard, Bai Zhen. Chen went out alone to meet him. Bai Zhen passed on the
Emperor's invitation to all the leading members of the Red Flower Society to
attend a banquet in the Lama Temple that evening to be hosted by the Emperor himself.
He explained that the banquet was being held outside the palace in order to
avoid raising the suspicions of the Empress Dowager and the Manchu nobles. Chen
expressed his thanks. He assumed the news indicated Princess Fragrance had
already done what had to be done and had given in to the Emperor, and felt an
inexpressible mixture of emotions. After having seen Bai Zhen out, he returned
to discuss matters with the heroes, who were very excited that the Emperor was
keeping his part of the bargain, although they were also painfully aware of the
sacrifice Chen had made to make it possible.
They passed the rest of the
morning in kung fu training, and Chen showed the others some of what he had
learned inside the White Jade Peak. Just as they were in the midst of the
practice, they heard wailing and mournful singing outside. At first, they did
not take much notice, but the noise gradually increased in volume, as if
thousands of people were gathering in an state of extreme grief.
Xin Yan had lived in the desert
for a long time and recognised the song as a Muslim funeral dirge. His
curiosity aroused, he ran out to find out what was going on, and returned a
while later, unsteady on his feet and ashen-faced. He walked over to Chen.
"Master!" he exclaimed, his voice shaking.
The heroes stopped their kung
fu training, and Chen turned to him. "What is it?" he asked.
"She… Princess Fragrance
is dead!"
The heroes blanched. For Chen,
everything went black and he collapsed to the ground. Priest Wu Chen dropped
his sword and helped him up.
"How did she die?"
Luo Bing asked.
"The Muslim I talked to
said she stabbed herself to death while praying in the mosque," Xin Yan
replied.
"What else did he
say?"
"That the Empress Dowager
would not let her body back into the palace and had it handed over to the
mosque. They are just on their way back from burying her now."
The heroes all cursed the
Emperor bitterly for his cruelty in hounding such a pure, innocent young girl
to her death. Luo Bing broke down and started to cry. Chen was silent for a
while, and then suddenly said to Prist Wu Chen: "I haven't finished
showing you all the moves yet. Let us continue."
To their amazement, he walked
back out into the middle of the courtyard. Wu Chen decided it would be a good
idea to help distract Chen from his grief, so he raised his sword and resumed
the training session. The heroes saw Chen's footwork was just as sure as before
and his hands moved with the same skill as if the news had had absolutely no
effect on him, and they began to quietly discuss it amongst themselves.
"Men have no
hearts," Yuanzhi whispered into 'Scholar' Yu's ear. "He thinks only
of his great plans for the country, and doesn't care at all about the death of
the woman he loved."
Yu said nothing. But he silently
praised Chen for his self-control. If it were me, he thought, I think I would
immediately go insane.
Aware that a great change had
come over Chen, Priest Wu Chen did not dare press him too hard, and in a few
moves, Chen had easily gained the upper hand. As the Priest retreated, Chen's
hand suddenly shot out and touched his hand. The two leapt apart.
"Good! Excellent!"
exclaimed the priest.
"You weren't really
trying," Chen replied and laughed. But before the laugh was finished, he
vomited a mouthful of blood. The heroes rushed forward as one to help him, but
Chen waved them away with a wan smile.
"It's nothing," he
said. He walked back into the house, supporting himself on Xin Yan's shoulders.
Chen slept for more than two
hours. Upon waking, he thought of all the important things he had to do,
including seeing the Emperor that evening, and knew he had to look after
himself. But as soon as he thought about Princess Fragrance's tragic death the
pain was such that he wanted to end it all. He wondered why she would suddenly
commit suicide after clearly agreeing to give in to the Emperor. Could it be
that she had changed her mind and decided she could not renounce her love for
him? But she knew this was a matter of no small significance. He was convinced
that something must have happened, but what? He meditated on the problem for a
while but could come to no conclusion, so he took out a set of Muslim clothes
he had brought from the northwest and put them on, then blacked his face with
some diluted ink.
"I'm going out," he
said to Xin Yan. "I'll be back in a while." Xin Yan quietly followed
him. Chen, who knew he was simply acting out of loyalty, did not try to stop
him.
The streets were full of
people and noise, intermingled with many carriages and horses, but in Chen's
eyes, all was deserted. He walked into the mosque on the Avenue of Eternal
Peace, went straight into the main hall, and threw himself down on the ground
to pray. "Wait for me in Heaven," he said quietly. "I promised
you that I would be converted to the Islamic faith, and I will make sure that
you do not wait in vain."
He raised his head and noticed
what looked like an inscription on the floor about five feet in front of him.
He went forward to investigate and saw it was several Muslim words etched into
the stone with the point of a knife: "Don't trust the Emperor." There
was some pigment in the grooves of the words, and Chen started in shock.
Looking around, he found a part of the floor nearby that was slightly darker in
colour, and thought: "Could this be her blood?" He bent down to smell
the patch and caught the tang of fresh blood. In a second, he was overcome with
grief and he threw himself on the ground, sobbing.
After crying for a while, he
felt someone tap him lightly on his shoulder. He leapt to his feet ready to
fight, then started in surprise: it was Huo Qingtong, dressed as a Muslim boy.
She had arrived that day with
the Twin Eagles in the hope of rescuing Princess Frangrance, but had heard
almost immediately that her sister was dead. She had come to the mosque to pray
for her.
Chen noticed two palace guards
enter the mosque, and with a tug on Huo Qingtong's sleeve, pulled her down to
the ground where they prostrated themselves in prayer.
The guards walked over.
"Get up!" they barked. Chen and Huo Qingtong did as they were told
and walked over to a window. Behind them, they heard the sound of hammering as
the guards used implements to prise up the flagstone on which Princess
Fragrance's message was engraved. They carried the stone out of the mosque and
rode away.
"What was that?" Huo
Qingtong asked.
"If I had been one step
late I would have missed the warning she wrote in her own blood and sacrifed
her life for."
"What warning?"
"There are too many eyes
and ears here," Chen replied. "Let's kneel down on the floor again
and I'll tell you." So they prostrated themselves again and Chen gave her
a brief account of all that had happened.
"How could you be stupid
as to trust the Emperor?" Huo Qingtong declared angrily.
Chen was mortified with shame.
"I thought that because he is Chinese, and also my blood brother…" he
began.
"And what if he is
Chinese? Do you mean to say Chinese are incapable of doing bad? And what use is
he going to have for brotherly love, as Emperor?"
"I am responsible for her
death," Chen sobbed. "I…I can't bear not to follow her
immediately."
Huo Qingtong saw how
heartbroken he was and felt she had been too hard on him. "What you did
was for the good of the common people," she said softly to comfort him.
"You can't be blamed." After a moment's silence, she asked: "Are
you going to go to the banquet in the Lama Temple this evening?"
Chen gritted his teeth in
rage. "The Emperor will be there, so I'll assassinate him and avenge her
death."
"Yes," Huo Qingtong
agreed. "And also avenge my father and brother, and all the people of my
tribe."
"How did you manage to
escape when the Manchu troops attacked?" he asked.
"I was very sick at the
time, but luckily I had my troop of bodyguards with me who managed to get me
out and took me to my teacher's home," she replied.
Chen sighed. "Your sister
said that even if it meant travelling to the ends of the earth, we had to find
you." The tears began to stream down Huo Qingtong's face.
They walked out of the mosque
and Xin Yan came up to meet them. He was astonished to see Huo Qingtong with
Chen.
"Mistress! How are
you?" he exclaimed. "I've been thinking of you."
"Well thank you,"
she replied. "You've grown a lot since I last saw you."
They returned to Twin Willow
Lane to find the Twin Eagles of Tianshan in the middle of a heated argument
with the heroes. Chen swallowed his tears and told them of the blood-stained
words he had seen in the mosque. Bald Vulture slapped the table.
"Didn't I tell you?"
he demanded. "Of course that Emperor means us harm. The girl must have
obtained some definite proof of it in the palace before she would give her life
to let us know." The others agreed.
"When we go to the
banquet this evening, we won't be able to carry swords, so everyone prepare
daggers or darts," said Chen. "The food and drink may be poisoned so
don't allow anything to touch your lips. We have to kill the Emperor tonight
for the sake of revenge but we must also plan our escape route."
"None of us will be able
to live in central China again," said Bald Vulture. "We should all go
to the Muslim regions."
The heroes had long lived in
the south of China, and the idea of leaving their home was not easy to accept.
But the Emperor was evil and dangerous and bitterly hated by all of them, and
everyone was willing to do what was necessary.
Chen ordered 'Leopard' Wei to
go to the west gate of the city with several of the heroes and to kill the
guards at the right moment to allow them all to escape. He then ordered Xin Yan
to arrange for horses to be waiting outside the Lama Temple. Turning to Yu, he
told him to immediately inform all the Red Flower Society's members in Beijing
and all other provinces to go to ground to avoid being arrested.
The arrangements complete,
Chen turned to the Twin Eagles and Master Lu. "I would like to ask you
three elders for suggestions on how the assassination should be carried
out," he said.
"Isn't it simple?"
replied Bald Vulture. "I go up and grab his neck and give it a good twist.
That should finish him."
Lu smiled. "I'm afraid
you won't get close enough to grab his neck with all the bodyguards he is bound
to have around him."
"It would be better if
Third Brother attacks him with poisonous darts," suggested Priest Wu Chen.
"Even if just one hits the target, that will be enough."
Lu turned to Luo Bing.
"You could dip your throwing knives into some poison too, and I could do
the same with my Golden Needles," he said.
Luo Bing nodded. "If we
all loose our weapons at once, a few at least will hit him no matter how many
bodyguards he has," she said.
Chen watched the heroes as
they dipped their various weapons into a pot of bubbling poison on the stove,
and thought uncomfortably about how the Emperor was born of the same mother as
himself. But then he remembered his cruelty and deviousness and his rage burned
up again. He drew his dagger and placed it for a moment in the pot of poison
along with the others.
9
That afternoon, the heroes had
a large meal and then waited for the time to leave. At about four o'clock, Bai
Zhen arrived with four bodyguards to accompany them. The heroes put on formal
gowns, and rode to the Lama Temple. Bai Zhen noticed with relief that none of
them were carrying swords.
At the temple gate they
dismounted, and Bai Zhen led them inside. Three tables had been prepared in the
Hall of Tranquillity, and Bai Zhen solemnly invited the heroes to be seated.
Chen sat at the head of the middle table while Bald Vulture and Master Lu took
the head seats on the other two tables. Underneath a statue of the Buddha, a
fourth table had been set up with one large chair covered with satin and
brocade, obviously the Emperor's seat. The heroes began to weigh up the
distances in preparation for the assassination attempt.
Dishes of food were brought out
and placed on the tables and the heroes quietly awaited the arrival of the
Emperor. After a while, footsteps sounded outside and two eunuchs marched into
the hall with a senior military official whom the heroes all immediately
recognised as Li Keshou, the former Commander-in-Chief of Zhejiang Province.
Yuanzhi gripped Yu's hand and almost cried out in surprise at the sight of her
father. She wondered when he had been transferrd to the capital.
"Here is an Imperial
pronouncement!" one of the eunuchs shouted, and Commander Li, Bai Zhen and
the other officials present immediately knelt kown. Chen and the rest of the
heroes had no alternative but to do likewise.
The eunuch unrolled a scroll
and announced: "On the orders of the Heaven-ordained Emperor, the following
proclamation is made: We are benevolent in order to encourage talent just as
our ministers and the common people should strive for merit in order to gain
rewards. Chen Jialuo and the others have been loyal citizens and deserve to be
honoured. Accordingly, I bestow upon Chen Jialuo the title of Successful
Candidate of the Imperial Civil Service Examination, while the others are to be
given good positions in the Board of Rites and the Military. We invite you to
dine at the Lama Temple. The Commander-in-chief of the Imperial Forces in Zhili
Province Li Keshou will host the banquet." The eunuch looked up from the
scroll and shouted: "Express thanks for the Imperial benevolence!"
The heroes realised with a
shock that the Emperor had cheated them and was not coming.
Commander Li walked over to
Chen and bowed before him.
"Congratulations, Master
Chen. You are honoured to be so highly favoured by the Emperor. It is truly
unexpected." Chen replied with a self-deprecating remark.
Yuanzhi and Yu walked over
together. "Father!" Yuanzhi said quietly.
Commander Li turned to find
his lost daughter standing beside him, as if she had dropped out of nowhere. He
grasped her hand, tears welling into his eyes.
"Yuanzhi," he said,
his voice shaking. "Are you all right?" She nodded. "Come, come
and sit with me," he added, and pulled her over to a table on the side.
The two eunuchs, obviously
kung fu experts, walked over to the central table and stood before Chen. One of
them saluted with his fists, then turned and shouted: "Boy!"
Two young attendants entered
carrying a tray on which was placed a pot of wine and several cups. The eunuch
lifted the pot and filled two cups, then picked one of them up. "I drink
to you!" he said to Chen, and drained the cup at one draught. He picked
the other one up and offered it to Chen.
But Chen had been watching
intently, and had noticed two small holes on the side of the wine pot. The
eunuch had put his thumb over the left hole when he poured the first cup of
wine, and had moved it to cover the right hole as he poured the second cup.
Chen guessed the pot was divided into two compartments inside, and that the
flow of wine from each could be controlled by covering one or other of the
holes. He glanced at the eunuch in distaste and knew that if it had not been
for Princess Fragrance's warning, he would have drunk the cup down.
He saluted with his fists in
thanks, and lifted the cup as if to drink it. Expressions of delighted
anticipation sprang to the faces of the eunuchs, but then Chen put the cup down
again, picked up the wine pot and poured out another cup. This cupful he drank
then offered the original cup to the second eunuch.
"You drink a toast as
well, sir," he said.
The eunuch turned pale as he
realised Chen had seen through the trick. His right foot shot up and kicked the
cup out of Chen's hand and the other eunuch shouted: "Get them!"
Several hundred Imperial bodyguards and guardsmen sprang into view from every
side.
"If you gentlemen don't
wish to drink, then don't," said Chen with a smile.
"His Imperial Highness
decrees," one of the eunuchs shouted, "that the Red Flower Society
has engaged in rebellion and continues to harbour evil intentions, and that its
members must be immediately seized and killed."
Chen waved his hand and the
Twin Knights leapt over to the two eunuchs, paralysing each with a blow to the
neck. The Red Flower Society heroes brought out their weapons from under their
gowns, and Priest Wu Chen charged for the door with the other heroes close
behind. He seized a sword from one of the guards and killed three others as he
passed.
Commander Li grabbed his
daughter's hand and dragged her after him as he directed his forces to stop the
heroes, but Yuanzhi pulled herself free and ran off shouting: "Look after
yourself, father!"
Commander Li stared after her
for a moment, then began urgently calling: "Yuanzhi, come back!" But
she had already left the hall and had joined Yu who was fighting fiercely with
five or six guardsmen in the courtyard outside.
Flames were licking up towards
the sky from a nearby hall, and the noise of the battle was deafening. As Chen
and the other heroes broke out of the Tranquillity Hall into the open, they
were surprised to find several dozen Lama monks fighting with a group of Manchu
soldiers outside the burning hall. From the look of things, the monks could not
hold out for long, but as they watched, Bai Zhen led some of the Imperial
guards over and helped them force the Manchu troops back into the hall. Chen
had no knowledge of the enmity between the Emperor and the Empress Dowager, but
he immediately recognised the fight as an excellent diversion and quickly
ordered the heroes to escape over the temple walls.
As they touched the ground,
the heroes involuntarily sucked in their breaths: in front of them were rank
upon rank of Manchu troops, all with bows drawn or with swords in hand. The
scene was brightly lit by several thousand torches.
"He has arranged things
very carefully," thought Chen. Priest Wu Chen and Bald Vulture charged
into the Manchu ranks, killing as they went, and a hail of arrows descended on
them.
"Everyone try and make a
break for it!" shouted Huo Qingtong. The heroes fought like demons.
Priest Wu Chen noticed seven
or eight Imperial Guardsmen attacking Zhang Jin, and he leapt over to help him.
He stabbed three of them in the neck, and the rest howled and retreated.
"Tenth Brother, are you
all right?" he asked.
Zhang Jin looked up at him and
dropped his wolf's tooth club. "Second Brother, I'm finished," he said.
In the fire-light, Priest Wu Chen saw he was covered in bloody wounds. With
only one arm himself, the Priest could not support him.
"Lie on my back and hold
on," the priest said between clenched teeth. He squatted down, and Zhang
Jin put his arms round his neck. He felt the warm blood spurting out of the
hunchback's wounds, but stood up and charged off again with sword raised to
continue the killing.
Chen could see things were
going badly and ordered the heroes to return to the wall to regroup.
"All right, Tenth
Brother, get down," said Priest Wu Chen as they reached the comparative
safety of the wall. Zhang Jin did not move. Luo Bing went over to help him, but
found that his body was stiff and his breathing had already ceased. She threw
herself onto his corpse and began to sob.
Just as the Manchu troops
moved in for the final attack on the heroes, their ranks parted and several
dozen monks fought their way through, their yellow robes glowing in the
firelight. Leading them, his long white beard dancing and shaking, was Lord
Zhou.
"Come with me, all of
you!" he shouted to the heroes, and they charged after him through the
Manchu blockade, and found Heavenly Mirror and the monks battling fiercely with
the Manchu troops.
Huo Qingtong surveyed the situation
with dismay. The heroes were killing large numbers of the enemy, but no matter
which direction they went, they were always surrounded. She looked around for
some possible solution and spotted a dozen or so people standing on a nearby
Drum Tower.
"One of those men must be
the commander," she shouted to the others, pointing at the tower.
"Let's seize him."
The heroes immediately saw the
wisdom of her words.
"Let's go," Priest
Wu Chen roared. Wen and the Twin Knights ran after him. They quickly reached
the foot of the Drum Tower, and leapt up onto the balcony just as several dozen
guards moved to intercept them. Wen, however, dodged nimbly past them and
charged straight for an official standing in one corner who wore a red cap
signifying senior rank. As he caught sight of the official's face in the
firelight, he almost called out "Great Helmsman!" He was almost an
exact twin of Chen's. Wen remembered his wife telling him about the resemblance
of Qian Long's favorite, Fu Kangan, to Chen. This must be Fu, he decided.
It was indeed Fu, who was also
the Beijing Garrison Commander. Wen deftly dodged the swords of two surprised
bodyguards and lunged at Fu with Priest Wu Chen close behind. Down below, the
Manchu troops ceased their attack and stood watching the drama above them.
Fu knew no kung fu and he
cringed in fear as Wen lifted him bodily into the air. A gasp went up the
Manchu troops. By this time, the Twin Knights had killed the last of the
bodyguards on the tower balcony and ran over beside Wen. Fu raised his command
flag and shrieked: "Stop, all of you! Return to your units!"
Three bodyguards bravely
charged forward, but Priest Wu Chen placed the tip of his sword on Fu's throat
and smiled at them. "Come on," he said. "Don't be shy."
The bodyguards hesitated,
glanced at each other, then withdrew.
Wen squeezed Fu's arm and he
screamed in agony. "Retreat!" he shouted. "Back in position, all
of you!" The Manchu troops did not dare to disobey and immediately formed
up at a distance.
Chen gathered the heroes and
the Shaolin monks together on the Drum Tower balcony. He counted up the
casualties and found that apart from Zhang Jin who was dead, eight or nine of
the others had been wounded, only one of them seriously. He surveyed his
followers in the lights of the flames from the temple.
"Let us attack the Palace
and kill the Emperor to avenge Tenth Brother!" he shouted. The heroes
roared their approval, and the Shaolin monks joined in.
"The Shaolin Monastery
has been destroyed by him," Heavenly Mirror added. "Today, the
Commandment against killing is suspended."
"What?" asked Chen,
shocked. "The Shaolin Monastery destroyed?"
"Yes, it's been burnt to
the ground. Brother Heavenly Rainbow died protecting the sacred
scriptures."
The news compounded Chen's
anger. With Commander Fu as their hostage, the heroes marched through the ranks
of Imperial Guards encircling the Lama Temple. When they had passed the last
rank, they saw Xin Yan and a number of the Society's followers standing at a
distance with several dozen horses. They ran over and mounted up, one or two to
each horse, and with a defiant shout, galloped off towards the Imperial Palace.
Xu rode up alongside Chen and
shouted: "Has an escape route been planned, Great Helmsman?"
"Ninth Brother has gone
with some of the others to the West Gate to wait for us. What are you and the
monks doing here?"
"Those Manchu
devils!" replied Xu, his voice full of hatred. "They came one night
and sacked the monastery. Heavenly Rainbow would not leave and was burned to
death. They even kidnapped my son! We have been looking for the officers
responsible ever since, and the chase brought us to Beijing. We went to Twin
Willow Lane and they told us you had gone to the Lama Temple."
By this time, they had arrived
at the Forbidden City with the Imperial Guardsmen pressing in on them from
behind, loath to leave them alone even if they did not dare to attack.
Xu looked over at the Twin
Eagles. "If the Emperor gets wind of this and hides somewhere in the
depths of the palace, we'll never find him. Could you two go on ahead and
investigate?" he asked.
The two old people were
delighted to have the opportunity to show their worth, and immediately agreed.
Xu took four flare rockets from his bag and gave them to Bald Vulture.
"When you catch sight of
the Emperor, kill him if you can, but if he is guarded too tightly, signal us
with these," he said.
The Twin Eagles leapt over the
palace wall and ran swiftly across the courtyard inside and then up onto the
rooftops. As they raced along, they saw the heavy palace gates and the endless
courtyards and pavilions, and wondered how they could ever hope to find the
Emperor in such a place.
"Let's grab a eunuch and
question him," Madame Guan said.
"Good idea!" replied
her husband, and the two jumped down to the ground and hid themselves in a dark
corner. After a while, they heard footsteps approach and two figures walked
quickly by.
"The thin one knows kung
fu," Bald Vulture whispered.
"Let's follow and see
where they go," Madame Guan replied.
The Twin Eagles silently
shadowed the two figures, one very thin, the other fat and much slower on his
feet. The thin man had to constantly stop to wait for him to catch up, and at
one point said: "Faster! Faster! We must report to the Emperor as soon as
possible."
The Twin Eagles were overjoyed
when they heard this. They passed through doorways and courtyards and finally
arrived in front of the Precious Moon Pavilion.
"You wait here," the
thin man said and disappeared upstairs, leaving the fat man standing alone by
the front door. The Twin Eagles crept round to the side of the pavilion and
climbed up onto the roof. Then, with their feet hooked onto the eaves, they
hung down over a balcony smelling of fresh paint and flowers and saw a row of
windows, one of which glowed with the faint light of a candle. They slipped
onto the balcony, just as a shadow passed across the window paper. Madame Guan
carefully wet the paper with her finger, making a hole and then looked through
to find Qian Long seated in a chair, a fan in his hand, and the thin man
kneeling before him: it was Bai Zhen.
"The Tranquillity Hall in
the Lama Temple has been burned to the ground and not one of the soldiers
guarding it escaped," he said.
"Excellent!"
exclaimed Qian Long, very pleased.
Bai Zhen kowtowed. "Your
slave deserves to die. The Red Flower Society bandits eluded capture."
"What?"
"They saw through the
attempt to poison them with the wine, and they escaped while I was dealing with
the guards."
Qian Long grunted and hung his
head, deep in thought.
Bald Vulture pointed at Bai
Zhen and the Emperor, indicating to his wife that he would attack Bai Zhen
while she killed Qian Long, and the two were just about to burst through the
window when Bai Zhen clapped his hands twice and twelve bodyguards slipped
noiselessly out from behind cupboards and screens, each one carrying a sword.
The Twin Eagles knew they were no match for so many expert fighters and decided
to summon the other heroes first. Bai Zhen whispered something to one of the
bodyguards who left and brought the fat man back with him.
The fat man, wearing the
yellow robes of a Lama priest, kowtowed energetically before the Emperor.
"You have done
well," Qian Long said. "Are you sure you left no clues?"
"Everything was done
according to Your Highness's wishes. Nothing is left of the Tranquillity Hall
or what was in it."
"Good, good, good! Bai
Zhen, I promised that he should be made a Living Buddha. Go and see to
it."
"Your Highness," Bai
Zhen replied with a bow.
The Lama kowtowed again.
As they walked out of the
pavilion, Bai Zhen stopped the Lama. "Show your gratitude to his Highness,
abbot," he said.
The abbot looked at him in
surprise, but unwilling to disobey an Imperial bodyguard, he knelt down again
and kowtowed in the direction of the Precious Moon Pavilion. Then he felt an
icy coldness on his neck, and started in shock.
"What…what's
happening?" he asked, his voice shaking.
Bai Zhen laughed coldly.
"The Emperor said to let you become a Living Buddha, so I'll send you to
the Western Heavens where you can be one."
He twitched his hand and the
blade did its work. Two eunuchs brought a carpet over, wrapped the abbot's
corpse in it and carried it away.
Suddenly, Bai Zhen heard
shouting in the distance. He turned and ran back into the pavilion.
"There are bandits
outside causing a disturbance, Your Highness," he said. "Please
retire to the inner palace."
Qian Long had seen the Red
Flower Society fighters in action in Hangzhou and he knew that his bodyguards were
no match for them, so without questioning Bai Zhen further, he stood up.
Just then, Bald Vulture
released a flare, and with a 'whoosh' it scrawled a path of white light across
the night sky.
"Where do you think
you're escaping to?" he roared as they burst through the window into the
room. "We've waited a long time for this!"
The bodyguards around the
Emperor stared for a moment in surprise at the red-faced old man and
white-haired old woman who had suddenly appeared in their midst, then rushed at
the intruders. Bai Zhen slung Qian Lung over his back and with four bodyguards
protecting the front and rear, ran for the stairs. But Madame Guan forced the
bodyguards back with a fistful of projectiles and lunged at Qian Long with her
sword. Bai Zhen leapt backwards in fright.
Meanwhile, Bald Vulture was
fighting with three guards simultaneously. Bai Zhen gave a whistle and four
other guards joined the other three and completely surrounded Bald Vulture. But
he fought like a demon and kept all seven at bay for a while, until one of the
guards lashed out with a whip which cracked loudly against his right arm. In
great pain, Bald Vulture switched his sword over to the left hand and forced
the bodyguards back.
Seeing her husband was
wounded, Madame Guan went over to help him, and the two retreated towards the
second floor of the pavilion. Bald Vulture knew they could not tie down so many
top-class kung fu fighters for much longer, so he slipped over to the window
and shot off another flare. He and his wife blocked the stairs, retreating a
step at a time when the pressure was too great. Luckily, the staircase was
narrow and only three or four bodyguards at most could attack at one time. Even
so, the strain of having to fight against an enemy which always had the advantage
of height was very wearying.
Bai Zhen could see things were
going badly. "Brother Ma," he said to one of the bodyguards.
"Put His Highness on your back." The bodyguard squatted down and the
Emperor climbed on. Bai Zhen gave a shout and charged at Bald Vulture. The two
began to fight, and Bald Vulture cursed his luck. The longer he fought, the
more painful the wound on his right arm became. Bai Zhen by himself was as much
as he could manage, let alone the other four or five bodyguards that also surrounded
him. Bai Zhen's hands dived and flew, every move accurate and deadly, and Bald
Vulture, completely absorbed in fending him off, was unprepared for a
cold-blooded attack from behind. A bodyguard thrust his sword deep into Bald
Vulture's back.
Bald Vulture knew instantly
that he would die. He swung his elbow back with all his strength and smashed
his attacker's skull, then with a huge roar, he raised his sword and threw it
forcefully across the room at Qian Long. The bodyguard Ma who was carrying the
Emperor, saw the blade flying towards them and with no time to dodge out of the
way, put his hand up to stop it. But this was a throw by a man on the verge of
death, backed by incalculable strength and outrage and the sword sliced off
half of his hand and plunged through his chest and out the other side.
Bald Vulture was content,
assuming that the sword must have entered Qian Long. Exchanging his own life
for that of an Emperor made death seem worthwhile. Madame Guan ran to her
husband as Bai Zhen hurriedly picked Qian Long up off the floor.
"Your Highness, are you
all right?" he asked.
Qian Long was scared out of
his wits, but he struggled to control himself. "At least I was
well-prepared," he replied with a smile.
Bai Zhen could see the tip of
Bald Vulture's sword extending six inches out of Ma's back and the rip on the
front of Qian Long's gown, and he wondered in awe how the Emperor had avoided
injury.
"Your Highness is very
fortunate," he said. "Truly, the Son of Heaven has the protection of
a hundred Gods."
What he did not know was that
Qian Long had been so fearful of an assassination attempt as a result of his
decision to break his pact with the Red Flower Society that he decided to wear
a metallic vest at all times. It had saved his life.
Bai Zhen looked round and saw
there was no longer anyone blocking the steps. He lifted Qian Long onto his
back, the bodyguards fell in around him and they all ran straight downstairs.
But just as they were about to pass through the pavilion's main entrance, Qian
Long gave a shout of alarm and struggled free of Bai Zhen's grasp: standing in
the doorway was Chen Jialuo. Behind him, their torches dancing and swords
glinting, were several dozen kung fu fighters. The Emperor turned and ran
straight back up the stairs. The bodyguards swarmed like bees after him with
the Red flower Society heroes on their heels. Two of the guards who were
slightly slower than the rest were intercepted by the Twin Knights and
instantly killed.
Chen and the other heroes had
had to fight their way through the palace to the Precious Moon Pavilion, and
they were delighted to find that in spite of the delay, the Emperor had not yet
escaped. Shouting in triumph, the heroes galloped up the stairs. Chen assigned
men to watch the various exits. Priest Wu Chen stood with his sword at the
ready at the head of the stair well on the third floor, while the Twin Knights
guarded the bottom of the stairs. 'Buddha' Zhao and three of the Shaolin monks
took up positions by the windows.
Huo Qingtong saw her teacher
Madame Guan in a corner embracing Bald Vulture, blood welling in great surges
from the gash in his back. She went over with Master Lu who took out some
ointment. Bald Vulture smiled bitterly and shook his head.
"I'm sorry," he said
to Madame Guan. "Because of me, you've been unhappy for all these years.
When you return to the Muslim areas you must marry… marry Brother Yuan… and
then I will be content in the afterworld. Brother Lu, you must make sure for me
that this happy event takes place…"
Madame Guan's eyebrows flew up
in outrage. "Do you mean to say," she demanded, "that you do not
know how I have felt towards you in the past few months?"
Lu was just about to suggest
it would be better for her to say a few comforting words to her dying husband
rather than start another argument, when she jumped to her feet and shouted:
"Well, I'll rest your mind at ease!" She raised her sword and drew it
firmly across her throat. Lu and Huo Qingting were standing at her side, but
neither was quick enough to save her. Bald Vulture let loose a wail of grief
which was cut short as he also died. Huo Qingtong threw herself onto their
corpses and sobbed uncontrollably.
Chen pointed his dagger at
Qian Long. "Even forgetting the pact we made in the Six Harmonies Pagoda,
we agreed on the dyke at Haining never to harm each other. And yet you use
poisoned wine to try and get rid of me. What do you have to say?" He
stepped forward and pointed the dagger's blade, glinting coldly, directly at
Qian Long's heart. "You have decided to throw in your lot with the
barbarians. You have cruelly oppressed the common people. You are the enemy of
all good men under heaven," he announced in a formal tone. "Our
fraternal bond is broken forever. Today, I will drink your blood to avenge all
those who have been killed in your name."
Qian Long's face turned
deathly pale and his whole body quivered with terror.
Heavenly Mirror strode
forward. "We of the Shaolin Monastery led a simple life," he shouted.
"We had no quarrels with the world. What justification did you have to
send your evil underlings to burn our monastery to the ground? Today, I will
disregard the sacred commandment against killing."
Chen helped Huo Qingtong up
and placed his dagger in her hand. "Your father and mother, your brother
and sister and countless members of your tribe died at the hands of this
man," he said. "You kill him."
Huo Qingtong took the dagger
and walked towards Qian Long. One of the bodyguards moved to intercept her, but
Wen stopped him and with eight or nine swift blows broke all his ribs and his
spine, so that he fell limply to the floor in a heap. A hubbub of voices rose
from outside. 'Buddha' Zhao looked out and saw a sea of torches and faces
around the pavilion.
Wen walked over to the window.
"The Emperor is here," he called. "If anyone dares to come up
here, I will kill him immediately." His tone was forceful and commanding,
and a hush fell over the crowd. The heroes in the Precious Moon Pavilion also
fell silent, and stared fixedly at the gleaming blade in Huo Qingtong's hand as
she advanced step by step towards Qian Long.
Suddenly, a figure darted into
the room and in front of Qian Long. Huo Qingtong stopped in surprise as she saw
it was a Manchu officer holding a baby. He smiled and held up the white, chubby
baby which was sucking its little fingers.
"Give me back my
baby!" Zhou Qi screamed and lunged forward.
"Come on, then," the
man shouted. "If you want a dead baby, come and get it."
Zhou Qi stopped in her tracks
and stared at him in a daze.
The officer, surnamed Fang,
had been commander of the troops sent by Qian Long to destroy the Shaolin
Monastery. He knew of the Emperor's wish to get rid of the Red Flower Society,
and during the night attack, his men had snatched Zhou Qi's baby son. Fang had
recognised this as an achievement of great merit and made his way to Beijing
for an audience with the Emperor.
Qian Long had questioned him
closely that evening, wanting to ascertain for certain that no evidence
relating to his origins could have survived at the Shaolin Monastery. When the
Twin Eagles appeared, Fang had dodged behind a curtain, but he now recognised
an opportunity to gain even greater merit.
"All of you leave the
palace and I will return the child to you," Fang said.
"You devil!" Huo
Qingtong shouted at him. "It's just a trick!" In her excitement the
words came out in the Muslim and Fang looked at her uncomprehendingly.
The heroes had thought they
finally had the Emperor in their grasp. But one man, clearly ignorant of kung
fu and holding a baby, had left them powerless. They turned to Chen, waiting
for his decision.
Chen looked at Huo Qingtong
and thought of how Qian Long had forced Princess Fragrance to suicide. How
could the deaths of her whole family remain unavenged? Looking round, he caught
sight of the corpses of the Twin Eagles of Tianshan. Then he saw Xu's face,
full of fear for his son, and glanced back at the child in Fang's arms. It was
only two months old and was gurgling happily, stretching out its little fingers
to feel the knobbly hand holding its neck. Chen looked at the other heroes:
Heavenly Mirror's eyes radiated compassion, Lu Feiqing sighed and Lord Zhou's
white beard shook as he trembled. Zhou Qi was standing with her mouth wide
open, a crazed expression on her face.
Chen knew Lord Zhou's last son
and heir had died as a result of the Red Flower Society and that the baby
before them was his sole hereditory lifeline. But if they did not kill the
Emperor today, they were unlikely to ever have another opportunity to gain
revenge. So what to do?
Huo Qingtong turned and handed
the dagger back to Chen.
Chen nodded. "All
right," he said to Fang. "We will not harm the Emperor. Give the
child to me." As he spoke, he replaced the dagger in its sheath and
stretched out his hands.
"Huh! Who'd believe
you?" Fang replied darkly. "I'll return the child only after you have
left the palace."
Chen was furious. "We of
the Red Flower Society hold to our word," he said. "Why would we
bother to cheat an animal like you?"
"That's why I don't
believe you."
"All right," Chen
countered. "Then you leave the palace with us." Fang hesitated.
As soon as Qian Long heard
Chen say that his life was spared, he was ecstatic with happiness and didn't
care less what happened to Fang. "Go with them," he said. "You
have gained great merit today. I will naturally not forget it."
Fang shivered as he heard the
Emperor's tone, and realised that he was talking about honouring him
posthumously. But all he could say was: "Thank you, Your Highness, for your
benevolence." He turned to Chen. "If I leave the palace with you,
what chance have I got to live?" He wanted Chen to promise to spare him.
"You've already done
enough evil," Chen replied angrily. "You should have been consigned
to Hell long ago."
Qian Long, worried that other
complications could arise, and that Chen might change his mind, urged Fang on:
"Quickly, leave with them now."
"But I'm afraid that once
I've gone, they will try and harm Your Highness," Fang added.
"So what do you
suggest?" Chen asked in exasperation.
"Allow his Imperial
Highness to leave first and then I will accompany you out of the palace."
Chen could see they would have
to let him go. "All right," he said to Qian Long. "Leave."
Qian Long did not concern
himself further with the bearing an Emperor should maintain, and fled for the
door as fast as his feet could carry him. Suddenly, Chen stretched out his
right hand and grabbed him as he ran past, and boxed his ears sharply with his
left hand -'bang, bang, bang!' the sound ringing out crisp and clearly. Qian
Long's cheeks immediately began to swell up. The heroes were taken by surprise,
and there was a brief silence before they roared out their approval.
"Do you still remember
that poisonous oath you swore?" Chen demanded, but Qian Long did not dare
to make any reply. With a contemptuous wave of his hand, Chen dismissed him,
and Qian Long stumbled out of the room and down the stairs.
"Get the child!"
Chen shouted.
'Buddha' Zhao was holding his
poisonous darts and looking out of the window, waiting for the right moment. As
soon as Chen had hold of the child, and Qian Long appeared down below, he would
fire off several dozen projectiles at the Emperor's body.
Fang, meanwhile, was frantically
looking around, trying to think of some way out for himself. "I want to
see with my own eyes that His Highness is out of danger before I'll hand over
the child," he said, shuffling slowly towards the nearest window.
"You Turtle! You're
already a dead man," snarled one of the Twin Knights. They shadowed him,
waiting for an opportunity to strike.
Qian Long emerged from the
main door of the pavilion, and the bodyguards waiting down below surged
forward.
"You traitor,"
'Buddha' Zhao muttered to himself. "You traitor."
Fang saw the several dozen
bodyguards gathered below, and decided it was better to take a risk than to
simply wait to die where he was. So in a sudden movement, he embraced the child
and threw himself out of the window.
Taken completely unawares, a
cry of surprise went up from the heroes. One of the Twin Knights flicked out
his Flying Claw and hooked it round Fang's left leg, then tugged with all his
might. Fang's body flew up, the baby left his hands and the two began to fall.
'Buddha' Zhao crouched down and launched himself like an arrow out of the
window. As he flew through the air, his head pointing down and his feet up, he
stretched out his left hand and grabbed hold of one of the child's tiny legs
while at the same time throwing three of his poisonous darts at Fang, hitting
him squarely on the head and chest.
A shout went up from both the
heroes in the pavilion and the bodyguards down below. Zhao steeled himself,
hugged the baby to his chest and landed firmly on his two feet. The Twin
Knights, Lord Zhou and some of the other heroes jumped down from the pavilion
and surrounded Zhao and the baby to protect them. Zhao looked down at the child
in his arms and saw it kicking and waving its arms about, chuckling away in
delight. It obviously thought the leap a moment ago that had almost ended its
life had been great fun and wanted to do it again.
Chen pushed their hostage
Commander Fu to the window and shouted: "Do you want him to live?"
Qian Long, once more under the
protection of his bodyguards, caught sight of Fu in the torchlight. "Stop!
Stop everything!" he shouted. The guards turned and waited for his
directions.
Fu was in fact Qian Long's
illegitimate son. The Emperor's first wife was the elder sister of a senior
minister, whose beautiful wife Qian Long had spotted when she came to the
palace one evening to pay her respects to the Empress and he had had illicit
relations with her which resulted in the birth of Fu. Qian Long had many sons,
but for some perverse reason he loved this illegitimate one more than all the
rest. The great physical likeness between Fu and Chen was therefore the result
of the fact that they were uncle and nephew.
Chen knew nothing of this, but
was aware that the Emperor doted on Fu. He and the other heroes escorted their
hostage downstairs. Zhou Qi ran over to Zhao and took the baby from him, almost
crazy with happiness.
On one side, were the Red
Flower Society heroes and the Shaolin monks, on the other, the mass of palace
guards and Imperial bodyguards. Commander Li could see his forces vastly
outnumbered the enemy, but he also knew how the Emperor felt about Fu.
"Great Helmsman
Chen," he shouted. "Let Commander Fu go and we will allow you to
leave the city peacefully."
"What does the Emperor
say?" Chen shouted back.
Qian Long's cheeks were
painful and swollen like over-ripe peaches as a result of Chen's blows, but
seeing his beloved son in the hands of the enemy, he could only wave his hand
and say: "You can go, you can go."
"Commander Fu will see us
out of the city," Chen said, then looked straight at Qian Long and
announced in a loud voice: "All the common people under Heaven would be
happy to eat your flesh and make a bed out of your skin. If you live another
hundred years, may they be one hundred years of fear-filled days and tormented,
sleepless nights!" He turned to the heroes. "Let us go," he
said.
The heroes pushed Fu forward
and made their way towards the palace gate, carrying with them the bodies of
the Twin Eagles and Zhang Jin. The Manchu guards stared at them fixedly as they
passed, but did not dare to stop them.
Soon after the heroes passed
out of the palace, they spotted two horsemen galloping after them, one of whom
was Commander Li.
"Great Helmsman
Chen!" he called as they drew near. "There is something I wish to
discuss with you."
The heroes reined in their
horses and waited for Li and his lieutenant, Deng Tunan, to catch up.
"His Highness says that
if you allow Commander Fu to return safely, he will agree to anything," Li
said.
Chen's eyebrows shot up.
"Huh! Who would believe a cursed word the Emperor said any more?"
"Please, Master Chen. I
ask you to express your wishes so that I can return to report."
"All right," Chen
said. "Firstly, I want the Emperor to rebuild the Shaolin Monastery with
his own funds, making the golden statues of Buddha even larger than before. The
court and government must never harrass the monastery again."
"That is easy to
arrange," said Li.
"Secondly, the Emperor
must not increase the military burden on the common people in the Muslim areas
and all the Muslims taken prisoner must be released."
"That is not difficult
either."
"Thirdly, the Emperor
must not bear a grudge against the Red Flower Society or seize any of its
members no matter where they may be." Commander Li was silent. "Huh!
If you really did try to seize any of us, do you think we would be afraid? Did
not Master Wen here spend some time as a guest in your own military
headquarters?"
"All right. I will rashly
agree," Li said finally.
"Exactly one year from
today, if all three demands have been fully met, Commander Fu will be
released."
"All right. We will so
arrange things," replied Li and turned to Fu. "Commander Fu. Great
Helmsman Chen's word is very precious. Please do not worry. His Highness will
certainly issue orders to see that all three requests are met. I will not allow
a moment to pass without thinking of your safety, and will make sure everything
is done as quickly as possible in the hope that Master Chen may see fit to
release you early."
Fu said nothing.
Chen suddenly remembered how
they had seen Bai Zhen and Commander Li's forces had mysteriously attacked the
Banner troops guarding the Hall of Tranquillity in the Lama Temple. He did not
understand the circumstances of the incident but knew it must involve a very
dark secret. He decided to scare Li a little.
"Tell the Emperor that we
know everything about the Hall of Tranquillity affair," he said. "If
he is treacherous again, it would not be beneficial."
Li started in surprise and
hastily assented.
"Commander Li, we will
take our leave of you," Chen continued and saluted with his fists.
"When you are promoted and become rich, take care not to oppress the
common people."
Li saluted in reply. "I
would not dare," he said.
Yuanzhi and Yu dismounted and
walked over to Li and knelt down in front of him. Li realised sorrowfully that
he would never see his daughter again.
"Look after yourself,
child," he said quietly. He stretched out his hand and stroked her hair,
then turned his horse round and rode back to the palace. Yuanzhi began to cry
as Yu helped her onto her horse.
The heroes galloped to the
city gate where 'Pagoda' Yang and 'Leopard' Wei were waiting for them. Fu
ordered the city gate to be opened. The huge bell in the bell tower above
sounded, ringing out the start of the fourth watch.
As they passed out of the
city, the heroes saw an expanse of reeds beside the city moat flailing about in
the pale moonlight. A bit further on, they came upon a graveyard, and noticed a
crowd of people there wailing and singing a Muslim funeral dirge. Chen and Huo
Qinging rode over to investigate.
"Who are you mourning
for?" they asked the crowd.
An old Muslim man raised his
head, his face coursed with tears, and said: "Princess Fragrance."
"Princess Fragrance is
buried here?" Chen asked.
The old man pointed at a new
grave, the yellow mud on which was not yet dry. "There," he replied.
Huo Qingtong began to cry.
"We cannot allow her to remain buried here," she said.
"You're right," Chen
replied. "She loved that Jade Pool in the heart of the White Jade Peak,
and said how much she would like to live there forever. Let us take her remains
and bury them there."
"Yes, I agree," Huo
Qingtong said, swallowing her tears.
"Who are you?" the
old man enquired courteously.
"I am Princess
Fragrance's sister," Huo Qingtong replied.
"Ah!" another of the
Muslim suddenly shouted to the other mourners. "It's Mistress Huo
Qingtong!"
"Let us open up her
grave," she said, and Chen and the heroes started work helped by several
of the Muslims. They shifted the earth as fast as they could and in a moment,
had uncovered the stone slab placed over the grave. They lifted the slab up and
a perfumed fragrance emerged. But when they looked inside, they found the grave
was empty.
Chen took a burning torch from
one of the mourners and held it over the grave opening. On the floor was a
small pool of blood and the piece of jade that he himself had given her.
"We brought Princess
Fragrance's remains here and buried them ourselves," said the Muslims.
"We have not left this spot since. How could her body have
disappeared?"
"She was so wondrously
beautiful. Perhaps she was a spirit that descended to earth," Luo Bing
suggested. "Now she has returned to Heaven. Don't be distressed."
Chen bent down into the grave
and picked up the piece of jade. Suddenly, he began to cry, the tears running
down his face like rain. She was so beautiful, so pure. Perhaps she was a
spirit.
The people sighed and covered
up the grave once more, and as they finished the work, a large jade-coloured
butterfly appeared and began dancing to and fro above the pile of earth.
Chen turned to the old man.
"I will write a few words. Please ask a master carver to erect a stone
engraved with the inscription on this spot," he said.
The old man nodded, and Xin
Yan gave him ten taels of silver to cover the cost. Then he took writing
implements from his bag and handed them to Chen.
Chen raised his writing brush
and wrote: "Fragrant Tomb" in large characters. Then after a moment's
thought, he wrote: