Read Crane Online

Authors: Jeff Stone

Tags: #General, #Speculative Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Juvenile Fiction, #Animals

Crane (9 page)

NgGung cleared his throat. “Um, Boss? What about Ying?”

“What about him?” Mong asked. “He's in prison.”

“That's right,” NgGung said. “The prison is only a few streets due east of here. Perhaps we could go see him and find out if he has any idea where Tonglong might have taken Malao. We'd have to make it worth his while, of course. Maybe we could offer him something?”

“From what I know about Ying,” Mong said, “the only thing he would accept in exchange for helping anybody is his freedom, or possibly Tonglong's head. Unless you are prepared to offer him one of those, I doubt he'd comply.”

“Can't we try?” Hok asked. She looked at NgGung. “Do you think I could sneak in there?”

NgGung stroked his long, thin mustache. “You'd have to break in, and the prison is heavily fortified with the Emperor's personal guard. Hmmm … If you were going to attempt it, tonight would be the night to do it. The Emperor is scheduled to lead the dragon boat festivities this evening, and he is sure to bring most of his protectors with him after this incident at the riverfront. Plus, there will be fireworks, which are always a great distraction. I've never seen a guard who didn't leave his post to watch fireworks.”

“No one is breaking in anywhere,” Mong said.
“The risk is not worth the payoff, assuming there would even be a payoff. We will wait for word from Tonglong about Malao. That is all. Everyone, upstairs. We need to disappear.”

NgGung looked at Hok and shrugged. “I tried.”

Hok nodded her thanks.

The men began to climb the rope ladder, and Hok shifted from foot to foot. She still couldn't see herself hiding at a time like this.

Yuen looked at her. “Are you okay? You seem anxious.”

“I'm fine,” Hok replied. “I just don't want to climb up there just yet.”

“I understand,” Yuen said. “I don't like tight spaces, either. If you don't mind hiding alone, I can show you a different place.”

Hok thought about it a moment. “Yes, that would be nice. Thank you.”

Mong was on his way up the rope ladder, and he turned to Hok. “I'll let your mother know where you're going. We'll see you in a few hours.”

“Thanks,” Hok replied.

“Come with me,” Yuen said. She slipped through the tattered curtain, back into the main dining area, and Hok followed. They were halfway across the dining room when someone began to pound vigorously on the front door.

“IN THE NAME OF THE EMPEROR, OPEN UP!”

Hok's eyes widened and Yuen scowled. “Soldiers!”
Yuen whispered. “Upstairs, quickly! There is no time to hide anywhere else. I'll get rid of them.”

Hok raced back through the curtain into the kitchen—and froze. The rope ladder was being pulled up into the ceiling. She was about to call out softly when she spotted something out of the corner of her eye. It was a small open window.

Hok glanced at the rope ladder rising higher and higher, and she thought of Malao again. If she was going to try to do something to help him, this might be her only chance.

Hok ran to the window and hopped onto the sill. She saw an empty alley outside with an easy jump to the ground. She looked back over her shoulder as a wooden panel in the ceiling began to swing closed. Beyond the tattered curtain, Hok heard the front door open.

Hok took a deep breath and sailed out the window.

L
ess than a quarter of an hour after leaving the Jade Phoenix, Hok found herself taking refuge in the overhanging roof rafters of the prison itself, waiting for the sun to go down. She was surprised how easily she'd found it. Like NgGung had said, it was just a few streets due east of the Jade Phoenix.

Fortunately for her, few people passed down the narrow street along this side of the prison, and the few who did did not look up into the eaves. As the sun began to set several hours later, however, everything changed.

Fireworks exploded in the direction of the river, and everyone started looking up. Hok heard people begin to cheer, and the small number of residents
who weren't already at the riverfront raced out of their homes and shops to catch the display. Hok even caught a glimpse of two men who looked like prison guards racing along at an angle that left Hok certain they had come from the prison's front doors along the main street.

Hok decided to make her move. She soared down from her perch and landed in a silent roll, protecting her injured arm, then hopped to her feet. She ran along the side of the prison to the front of the building and poked her head around the corner. The main street was empty. She waited for a few moments, but didn't see any guards at the entrance.

Hok decided that the most obvious route might also be the best one. She headed for the prison's main doors. They were unlocked. She glided inside and drifted silently through the lantern-lit entry, keeping her body pressed tightly against one wall. Hok felt completely alone. She wondered if Ying was even there.

Hok turned the room's first corner and choked back a startled cough. In front of her was a single large cell with iron bars for a front wall and stone everywhere else. Inside it was Ying. She barely recognized her sixteen-year-old former brother.

Ying lay in the back corner, curled into a ball. His carved face had been beaten to a bloody pulp, and his eyes were almost swollen shut. He breathed through his mouth like a sick animal, wheezing loudly every time he inhaled or exhaled. His forked tongue hung
out of his mouth like a dog's, lying over his pointed teeth. Ying looked like he had lost at least one-third of his body weight, perhaps more. Hok had never seen someone in such condition. He had been beaten to the very verge of death.

Based on the sound of Ying's breathing, Hok could tell that one of his lungs had been punctured, probably by a broken rib. Every breath Ying took would be utter agony. If left untreated, he would surely die a long, slow death. Someone wanted to make him suffer.

While Ying was a horrible person, Hok didn't want to see anyone have to suffer like that.

Ying seemed to sense her presence and looked up. Even through his swollen face he managed to see her. Or perhaps he sensed her
chi.
Either way, his scabbed lips twisted into a grotesque scowl. He forced himself to wheeze two words: “Go … away.”

Hok shook her head. She approached the cell's iron bars. “I need your help.”

Ying wheezed loudly several times in rapid succession. Hok realized that he was laughing. “Look at … me. What could I do … for you? What could you possibly do … for me?”

Hok stared at Ying's broken body. He didn't look like he would survive long without some sort of treatment. It gave her an idea.

“Malao has been kidnapped by Tonglong,” Hok said. “I'm hoping you might have some idea where they took him. In return, I will prepare healing tonics for you and sneak them in here.”

Ying slowly shook his head. “No …,” he wheezed. “I want out. … Get me out … and I will help you…. You have … my word.”

Hok blinked. Break him out of prison? While the last thing she wanted was Ying on the loose, she had a strong feeling he wouldn't be able to go very far. He would most likely get recaptured. Even if he wasn't caught, he could very well die from the strain of being on the run. If he remained here, though, he would surely die. As much as she disliked Ying, she wasn't sure she could leave him to that certainty. It seemed to Hok that breaking Ying out might be the best option.

Hok stared, unblinking, at Ying. “I agree to your terms. How do I get you out of here?”

Ying nodded behind her.

Hok spun around, and froze. A man stood between her and the prison's main entrance. In his hand was a single key. “I have an idea,” the man purred. “You could use
this
to get Ying out of his nest.”

It was Tsung. She should have guessed Ying wouldn't have been left alone.

Hok knew to be ready for anything. She took several steps forward, putting space between the front of Ying's cell and her back. The last thing she wanted was to be pinned against something by Tsung.

“I see you are coming to meet me in the middle of the dance floor,” Tsung said. “Such a forward young lady you are. Are you sure you want to do this? You'll need two good arms to swing with me, you know.” He flashed a big toothy grin.

Hok didn't reply. She lowered herself into a wide
defensive stance, her good arm held out in front of her, her bad one tucked tight to her body. She wanted him to come at her.

Tsung bowed, low and deep. “Let the dance begin.” He dropped the key and sprang at Hok's neck.

Hok was ready. As soon as she saw Tsung leave the ground, she dropped flat onto her back and kicked one leg straight up into the air. Her foot sank deep into Tsung's stomach as he sailed over her.

Tsung groaned as his midsection molded itself around Hok's heel. Hok used Tsung's forward momentum to help slam her leg to the ground, and Tsung went with it. He hit the stone floor with a solid
THUD!

Tsung cursed and Hok tried to pull her leg away, but Tsung was too quick. He grabbed her foot and tucked it under his armpit, and in one smooth motion he locked both his hands around her heel and leaned back hard.

Intense pain shot through Hok's ankle. Tsung had her in some sort of heel lock. Tsung began to twist to one side, and Hok's misery was magnified tenfold.

Unsure of what to do, Hok rolled her body in the direction of Tsung's twist. She felt the pressure on her heel subside, but only for a moment.

Tsung righted himself, then twisted again in the same direction, more powerfully this time. Again, Hok twisted with him.

While the pressure on her heel subsided the second time, too, Hok felt the sinews in her ankle begin
to weaken. If Tsung kept this up, they would snap just like the ones in her elbow nearly had.

Hok sensed Tsung winding up for a third twist when Ying managed to wheeze out loud, “Twist double-time, Hok!”

Tsung unleashed a mighty twist, wrenching his body around one hundred and eighty degrees. Out of options, Hok followed Ying's instructions. She twisted her body around three hundred and sixty degrees in the same direction as Tsung's twist.

It worked. Tsung couldn't maintain a firm grip on her spinning foot and she felt the pressure on her heel subside.

Ying wheezed out loud,
“Crane Spins the Legs!”

Hok spun her free leg in a powerful arc and brought that heel crashing down onto Tsung's temple.

Tsung's body went limp, unconscious, and Hok jerked her foot free. She wondered where Ying had learned to counter a move like that. It certainly wasn't at Cangzhen.

Hok stood and looked at Ying.

Ying had managed to sit upright. He had his arms wrapped around his sides, his chest heaving. Hok realized he was chuckling. “Rescued by … an ax kick … from a girl … named
Peaceful!”
Ying wheezed. “Ha-ha-ha!”

Hok glared at him. “How do you know my given name?”

“I was … seven years old … when you came to … Cangzhen,” Ying wheezed. “Sometimes I …
spied on … Grandmaster.” He shrugged slightly and appeared to attempt a grin.

Hok frowned.

“I had … a different name … too,” Ying wheezed. “Saulong …
Vengeful Dragon!
… I see … you are … no longer … living up to … your name. … Let's see … if I can … live up to … mine.” He nodded toward the center of the room.

Hok turned and saw the key on the floor. She heard Ying begin to struggle to his feet.

Hok bit her lip, then scooped up the key. She hurried over to the cell door and opened it. She had to remember, she was doing this for Malao.

Ying stumbled forward and leaned on Hok's shoulder. “I'll talk … as we walk.”

Hok put one arm around Ying's bony shoulders. He felt like a skeleton.

“We'll go … out the back door,” Ying wheezed. He nodded toward Tsung's unconscious body. “Take me … to him first.”

“No—” Hok began.

“Do it!” Ying hissed. “Look at … his sash.”

Hok glanced at Tsung and saw that he wasn't wearing a sash at all. Instead, a chain whip was wrapped around his waist.

“I'll get it,” Hok said. She gently leaned Ying against the wall for support and released him.

Ying spat on the ground. “I suggest you … kill him…. He will … seek revenge.”

“No,” Hok replied. “I'm not leaving you to die in
his hands, and he's not going to die, either.” She retrieved the chain whip and looped it around Ying's neck. “Let's get moving so we can—”

Ying cocked his head. “Shhhh …,” he wheezed.

Hok listened closely. She heard voices from around the corner at the prison entrance.

“Whew! What a party!” a man said. “The Emperor sure knows how to have a good time!”

“Yes, indeed,” another man replied. “Too bad we had to come back here—”

Ying nodded toward the far corner of the room and Hok noticed a door. As they headed for it, Ying whispered in a wet, wheezing voice, “Tonglong will take Malao … to a place we called … the Riverbank Safe House. It's an … old shack … an hour downriver … from the main Kaifeng bridge. It's on … the southern shore … near a willow … with twin trunks.”

They reached the door and Hok tried the handle. It was locked, but she saw the key was still in the mechanism. She turned it and opened the door. The hinges shrieked.

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