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.
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