Taming Poison Dragons (9 page)

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Authors: Tim Murgatroyd

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Sci Fi, #Steam Punk

BOOK: Taming Poison Dragons
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Why Cousin Yi-Yi chose to accompany me to the Provincial Academy each morning, I could not say. He was, however, a simpleton, so I didn’t enquire too deeply.

Yi-Yi had been blessed by nature in one regard only.

Everything about him was outlandishly large, especially his amiable, misshapen face. I later heard his other organs were proportioned the same way.

We would proceed through the streets in silence, nimble boy and ambling giant, past bridge and canal, hawker and street-cry, scents of night-soil, wood-smoke, fried food seeping from buildings several stories high. Voices surrounded us like mist.

At last we entered the many courtyards of the government enclosure; soldiers and officials bustling, some with scrolls under their arms, others in polite debate. I should add we passed a palace where lesser courtesans intended for the use of visiting ambassadors were housed.

Sometimes we spied a curtain parting suggestively, though we never saw the ladies themselves. I finally realised these glimpses were the sole reason Yi-Yi accompanied me.Cousin Hong once informed me – he thought it a great joke – that Yi-Yi would spend the entire morning masturbating in his room after seeing a curtain twitch. So for all his idiocy, Yi-Yi possessed imagination. He was faithful to the dominant sentiment of his family: desire.

Each morning I took my place in that long, bare room full of boys. All were from good families, or at least, wealthy ones. The fees were beyond most people’s means, including my Father’s. Only the goodwill of Uncle Ming enabled me to study at the Provincial Academy.

We sat on the dusty floor, writing blocks on our knees, mixing ink in preparation for the day’s lesson. Teachers and their assistants prowled up and down with bamboo sticks, vigilant for murmurs or disrespect. Cousin Zhi sat near the front among a small group of merchants’ sons, laboriously following every instruction from the teacher.

Beside me knelt a thin, feeble-looking boy with a sharp, inquisitive face who I came to know better than myself.

His wide eyebrows were of noble proportions and his large nose indicated a formidable character. His name was P’ei Ti. I soon learned that, for him, the Provincial Academy and First Examination were a tedious formality.

His family had been scholar-officials for generations, some achieving great honour. He never acknowledged me except to whisper among his friends the nickname

‘Mountain Goat’, in a voice loud enough for me to hear.

The reason for his mockery was plain. Each monthly examination in the Five Classics ended the same way. I came first and he second, unless we were studying the 
Book of History
, at which he excelled. From the start he showed an aptitude for governance.

Success gained me few friends, partly because of my strange accent, and also, I suspect, because P’ei Ti influenced the other boys. Who was I, after all? My father might well be a brave soldier (the tale of his heroism had even reached the capital), but in those days, as now, it was the fashion to despise soldiers until they torched your house.

Memories of our school-room. . . paper-winged flies. . .the drone of a voice reciting passages from the 
Book of
 
Changes
 or the 
Book of Rites
. . . moments of fear when students were beaten for falling asleep. . . copying characters outmoded a thousand years ago, every brush stroke charged with the exhilaration of magical power. . . squatting by myself in the courtyard for a midday meal of rice and salt-fish, while Cousin Zhi was served by his lackeys, poorer boys hanging round, hopeful for leftovers. . .angles of sunlight catching flocks of dust motes. . . the mid-afternoon gong releasing me into the city, a thousand fascinations, as I walked home.

All these things existed. And are no more.

Of course, there were those who wished to send me back to the mountains. My success had provoked Cousin Zhi’s ill-will. His own marks were unexceptional. Indeed, he fluttered between pass and fail as a moth flaps round a lamp, scorching itself but never quite destroyed. Had I not been part of his household, he could have ignored me. As it was, my presence continually reminded him of disappointing his mother, an unbearable thought. Yet he dare not act against me openly because of Uncle Ming’s protection. Thus he resorted to guile.

One midday break, before an examination for which he had prepared zealously, three of the lesser merchants’ sons approached me as I sat eating. I had noticed Cousin Zhi whispering to them earlier, passing round a large basket of honeyed buns.

‘Hey, Mountain Goat! Who are you to come here and insult our families!’ the leader shouted. ‘Go back where you belong! You’re not welcome here.’

I continued to dip my chopsticks.

‘I hear your father is too poor to own a pig!’ squealed another, smaller boy.

The weak are always behind every fight. His companions roared with laughter at his wit and he seemed to grow an inch. Still I ignored them.

‘Hey, I’m talking to you, Mountain Goat!’ shouted the first. ‘Explain yourself!’

I finished my meal and closed the wooden lid of my rice box. In truth, I was shaking inside. The punishment for fighting was five strokes of the bamboo. Far worse, I would forfeit my right to sit the afternoon’s examination, thereby losing months of study. I didn’t care to think what Uncle Ming would say. Cousin Zhi had set a cruel trap. It was obvious his friends wished to provoke me into throwing the first blow.

‘I hear your father is a Mongol coward,’ shouted the leader desperately, looking over at Cousin Zhi for approval.

The significance of his look did not escape me. Yet I was snared. This I could not ignore. I rose, my fists bunched.

‘Pah!’ I said. ‘Cheap singing girl! For a steamed bun you sing anything!’

*

I prepared to follow up my words with a punch.

Suddenly there was laughter all around us. P’ei Ti and his cronies had formed a circle.

‘What do you say to that, Steamed-Bun-Singing-Girl?’ he jeered.

The boy glowered at me, then turned sheepishly away.

Quite unexpectedly, I had won. In a moment P’ei Ti stood beside me.

‘Why didn’t you hit him?’ he asked, excitedly. ‘He insulted your father.’

‘Ah, but I did.’

And it was true. Ever after my persecutor was known as Steamed-Bun-Singing-Girl. That afternoon I gained a slightly lower mark than Cousin Zhi, so perhaps his plan worked after all.

When the gong signalled the end of our last lesson, I was free until supper-time. The City of Heaven lay at my disposal. Where did I go? A place Cousin Zhi or Honoured Aunty would never find me.

In any life, energy and contradiction form patterns you never choose. So it was with Su Lin.

It was summer when we met. The city panted in the heat. Dog-days without a single breeze to dispel torpor and freshen hope. I found her in an alley behind the Wine Market, where I had gone at twilight to escape the closeness of Uncle Ming’s house. My spirits should have been high, having come first in another monthly examination, yet I was troubled by a sense of emptiness. Success came too easily. I longed to challenge myself in new ways.

She sat on a wooden doorstep, fanning herself as she sang, her girl’s voice sad and wistful, innocent and knowing. I might have passed by, except her song made me ache. It was a melody from the mountains, and her accent was my own.

As she finished a verse I began the next. Her mouth opened in surprise, then she laughed that light, scornful laugh of hers. I finished the verse, standing awkwardly. At last I noticed her beauty, and frowned, as though she had challenged me in some way. Her ivory skin covered a perfect, tear-drop face, made enticing by plump lips and almond eyes. Her breasts and legs and thighs, though hidden by robes of the cheapest pink silk, were easily imagined. I cleared my throat.

‘It is too hot!’ I said.

‘Don’t you mean, how is it I know the same songs as you?’ she replied.

She was older than me, fourteen to my twelve. At that age such distinctions are worlds. She yawned and stretched. I peeped shyly at her chest.

‘Seeing you interrupted my practice, small sir, have you nothing to say?’

‘Only this,’ I countered. ‘Why have you so little politeness?’

She watched me languidly, her fan clicking.

‘You are from Chunming Province,’ she said. ‘I can tell from your accent. So am I.’

I felt wrong-footed, and provoked. In truth, I suppressed an unaccountable desire to wrestle with her, to prove my superior strength.

‘Of course,’ I said, haughtily. ‘I am the son of the Lord of Wei Valley.’

*

This seemed to impress her. Encouraged, I added solemnly: ‘One day I will pass the Imperial Examination.

That is why my father sent me here, that is why. . . I am.’

She looked at me pityingly.

‘Is that all?’ she asked.

‘Yes, that is why,’ I said, doggedly. ‘My father sent me here to add to our family’s honour.’

She sighed. Her pout fascinated me.

‘Then we are just the same,’ she said. ‘When I was eleven years old, my father sold me to a broker, a most horrible man, who then sold me to Madam, who owns this house. I, too, must pass many examinations.’

Only then did I realise she was an apprentice singing girl.

‘We are the same in that,’ I conceded, lamely, and hurried on my way.

The next evening drew me back to the alley. Her doorstep was empty, the plain wooden door closed.

One cold, autumn morning Cousin Hong sent a servant to fetch me. He was enthroned in a small gatehouse at the rear of the family enclosure, alongside a table where a clerk was collecting rent from Uncle Ming’s many tenants.

They formed a respectful line right out into the street. The clerk’s abacus clicked and 
cash
 coins clinked on the scratched wooden table. Cousin Hong was eating almonds from a silver bowl, dipping them in rice brandy for sauce. He airily offered me one.

‘Eat it slowly,’ he advised. ‘It comes all the way from Tashkent.’

A miserable, sick-looking man shuffled up to the clerk’s table. Wringing his hands, he bowed low and started to explain why he could not pay the rent. A shameful sight, and one I have never forgotten, though poor men were nothing new to me. Perhaps Cousin Hong’s response fixed his pinched face in my memory.

‘Pay or find your belongings on the street, you dog!’ he roared. ‘If you have a daughter, sell her! Get out, you thief!’

The line of tenants murmured anxiously. Cousin Hong motioned to dismiss the clerk. While we talked, the tenants waited in the wind-picked street. Cousin Hong warmed his hands before a small charcoal brazier, then wagged a reproachful finger.

‘So, Little General, what is this I hear about you offending my brother Zhi? This will never do.’

‘I have done nothing,’ I protested.

‘Ah, but you have. You should understand our ways here. As Eldest Son I will inherit Father’s business. As for Yi-Yi. . . well, never mind him. But Little Brother Zhi is destined for great things. My mother has already decided which duke’s daughter he will marry when he is a great official. It would be unwise to upset such plans.’

‘How am I at fault? Please explain.’

‘Little General, is it sensible to keep beating Zhi in the examinations? Of course not. Why not come second more often, then everyone will be happy.’

‘Even if I came tenth, Cousin Zhi would not beat me,’ I said. ‘Is Uncle Ming displeased?’

‘Not in the least. But that doesn’t matter.’

His advice appalled my pride. Yet I knew he meant it kindly.

‘My father sent me here precisely so I would pass,’ I said.

‘That is not my concern. Take this business with the boy who tried to pick a fight with you. My little brother complains he has lost friends because of it. It seems some of the other boys blame him for spreading rumours and causing trouble.’

It was true Steamed-Bun-Singing-Girl no longer talked to Cousin Zhi, but that was hardly my fault. Hong offered me another almond.

‘And I hear,’ he continued. ‘You have made friends with boys of good family who should really be the companions of Zhi. One day those boys might be useful to him.’

‘P’ei Ti has become a friend,’ I admitted. ‘At least we always talk at midday.’

‘Exactly! Such a one should be talking to Zhi, not you.’

‘But why?’

Cousin Hong considered, then shrugged.

‘Why? There is no good reason why. Why was that wretch unable to pay his rent? Why are we enjoying almonds harvested by pretty barbarian girls with plump thighs and he is deciding which of his daughters to sell?

Only fools ask why. Better to ask what is.’

I had never suspected Hong of philosophy, but all men need some principle to guide them. I also took the hint that I might end up like the poor tenant if I continued to offend Honoured Aunty and Cousin Zhi.

I wandered the streets in disgust for an hour, eventually finding myself in the alley where I had met the singing girl.

The piercing, autumn wind could not reach me here. A pool of cold sunshine lit the doorstep where she had sat.

As I passed, the door opened and, to my surprise, she poked her head out. I halted. We examined each other in silence. Then she smiled.

‘So you have come back to see me!’ she cried.

She was dressed in a gaudy gown and wore cheap, yet tastefully arranged jewellery. Her face had been painted and rouged. I felt like a child in comparison. Given the life she led, I was not misguided.

‘Aren’t you pleased to see me, eldest son of the Lord of Wei?’ she asked, archly. Her coquettish look faded. ‘But you are upset. Someone has upset you.’

She waved me to the step and we sat down. So close, her smell disturbed me. There was perfume, and a scent of wine, as well as something I could not name. Yet I poured out my difficulties, expecting she would find them incomprehensible. It was my first lesson to never underestimate her.

‘Pah!’ she said, finally. ‘You must carry on as you have and take no notice of them. If it is your destiny to be first then all their tricks will never make you last. Besides, your uncle will keep them in order. The fact he sent his heir to fetch you from Chunming Province shows the regard he holds for your father. Such a sense of duty is not a twig, but a strong branch. Besides, only an envious spirit would not realise your success helps Cousin Zhi, for you are related and dwell in his household. Thus he gains honour through you. Your uncle will understand this. But you must keep your mouth shut, whatever the provocation.

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