Hell to Heaven (44 page)

Read Hell to Heaven Online

Authors: Kylie Chan

BOOK: Hell to Heaven
12.55Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Simone gasped. ‘That is
freaky.

The women jumped up and came for us, arms outstretched. They weren’t armed and they weren’t high level, but their sheer force of numbers would slow us down.

Bo Niang summoned her slender jade sword, raised it horizontally above her head, held her other hand out in front of her and concentrated. The sword made a single pinging sound and all the demons froze.

‘How long will that last?’ the Tiger said.

‘Forever,’ Bo Niang said. ‘They are frozen in time. They can only be freed if I release them or if they are destroyed.’ She turned to see us. ‘Come back and destroy them later, it is the kindest thing.’

‘Deal,’ the Tiger said.

We ran to the other end of the building, through the rows of frozen identical demons. The stairwell was on the right, padlocked to stop the staff from escaping or passing free merchandise to outsiders. The Tiger broke the lock and we went up to the next floor. It was filled with cubicles, each one staffed by another identical demon. The cubicles had wide corridors between them, and a pole in the centre of each group of four cubicles that contained the electricals.

‘I can’t freeze these; it’s line of sight,’ Bo Niang said.

‘My turn,’ Guang Ze said.

He floated a metre off the floor and summoned his wind wheel beneath him. It spun, producing a blast of titanic air that blew the cubicle walls, desks, computers, everything into the walls. The demons hit the walls as well and splattered into demon essence.
When all the demons were destroyed, Guang released the wheel and returned to the floor.

‘You should have kept it out, just in case,’ the Tiger said.

Four elementals crashed through the double doors at the other end of the building and stomped towards us: one water, one metal, one wood and one stone. They were all about the same size and roughly human-shaped, their heads brushing the high ceiling.

Bi Tian Hua raised both arms, his face went fierce and a bolt of lightning seared up through the pillars that had held the power conduits, across the ceiling and straight down through the tops of the elementals’ heads.

The wood elemental exploded in flames. The metal one changed into what appeared to be mercury and disintegrated outwards, coating everything around it with silvery goo. The water one swayed back slightly, but when the lightning ceased it moved towards us again. The stone one was completely unaffected.

‘Water is me,’ Simone said.

She stepped forward, raised one hand, dropped her head slightly and concentrated on the water elemental, her hazel eyes blazing. It stopped, seeming to stare at her with its featureless face, then took another hesitant step towards her.

‘Oh no, you don’t, you are
mine
,’ she said through her teeth. She clenched her fist and jerked it downwards. The elemental disintegrated into water and splashed over the floor.

‘Good job, little one,’ the Tiger said. ‘Where’d you learn that?’

‘CH, of course,’ she said. ‘One more that doesn’t seem to be bothered by any of us, and I’m weak to earth.’

‘On the contrary, ma’am, I don’t believe you’re weak to anything,’ Guang Ze said. ‘To arms, I think.’

The three generals summoned their swords and prepared to rush the stone elemental.

‘Let me,’ Gold said, and grew so that his stone form became as big as the stone elemental. He changed his arms to hammers, which grew impossibly long, swung out to the sides and crashed into the demon, crushing it. It fell to pieces.

‘Keep moving!’ the Tiger shouted. ‘We still have two more floors and it knows we’re here!’

‘We should teleport straight to the top floor,’ Leo said as we raced up the stairs.

‘Haven’t you tried already?’ the Tiger said.

Leo was silent a moment, then said, ‘I see.’

‘If enough of us work together we can stop others from teleporting in the vicinity,’ Guang Ze said. ‘But we can’t hold it forever.’

The stairs didn’t go up to the top floor so we entered the third floor instead. It was occupied by six polished-metal, high-technology machines, each about three metres cubed, their top half glassed in on three sides and holding a robot arm.

‘They look a bit like futuristic claw machines,’ Simone said. ‘All they need is a bunch of plushy Pokemon inside.’

‘Silicon wafer inscribers?’ Gold said. He went closer and studied one. ‘Aluminium platter etchers? No.’ He walked around it and peered at the control panel and screen. ‘I have no idea.’

‘I do,’ I said without moving. ‘Fake-elemental generators.’

Gold inhaled sharply. ‘Oh my.’

Simone squeaked and ran to one machine and grabbed the handle of the glass door, trying to pull it open. It wouldn’t budge and she pulled harder. Eventually the whole thing gave way and the glass shattered, falling in pieces around her. She reached inside the machine to pull out a blob of green liquid the size of a basketball and swirling with ribbons of creamy opaqueness.

She fell to her knees, ignoring the glass. ‘This is one of mine, and it’s dead,’ she said, desolate. ‘It killed one of my elementals.’

‘So that’s how it made them,’ I said. ‘It must have captured real ones and converted them into the fake ones.’

The Tiger stopped and concentrated. ‘Holy fuck, I never counted mine.’ He clenched his fists to his sides, then strode to one of the machines and punched it, making a huge dent in its metalwork. ‘This bastard is going to
die
!’

‘Why didn’t the elementals tell you?’ I said.

‘They can’t count!’ the Tiger and Simone said together.

‘Numbers mean nothing to them,’ the Tiger said, flexing the hand that had punched the machine. ‘They were unaware that their own numbers were disappearing. They have very little sense of self or individuality, and absolutely no idea how numbers work.’ He raised his head. ‘It’s up there waiting for us, and I really hope that it’s shitted its pants in terror.’ He grinned with malice. ‘Because this is not going to be quick.’

Simone strode to stand next to him. ‘Tell the others.’

‘I already have. The Phoenix says to do some serious damage on her behalf.’

‘And the Dragon?’

The Tiger made a hissing sound of distaste. ‘He doesn’t give a fuck, the heartless bastard.’

‘The Jade Emperor will be just as pissed and he doesn’t have the freedom to rush down here and do what we can do,’ Simone said. She glanced up at the Tiger. ‘So, right now, it’s you and me, Bai Hu. Let’s show this demon exactly what happens to assholes who mess with our treasures.’

The Tiger dropped his head and concentrated, his tawny eyes wide, and raised his hands slightly. The machines melted around him, turning into steaming heaps of slag mixed with melted glass. ‘That’s what happens to them.’ He shook himself out. ‘Let’s go up.’

They both headed towards the other end of the room where a pair of lifts were set into the wall. We followed them. The Tiger put his hand over the button, then shook his head and went to the doors and wrenched them open. He stuck his head into the shaft and looked down and up.

‘Can’t move them,’ he said. ‘Power’s gone and the automatic braking system’s engaged.’

‘We can fly up,’ Simone said. ‘Easy.’

‘What about the Lion and the serpent?’ the Tiger said.

‘I can fly,’ Leo said.

Simone glanced at me. ‘I’ll carry you, Emma.’

‘She’s too big, don’t be stupid,’ the Tiger said, his head still in the lift shaft.

‘I can climb up the wires,’ I said.

The Tiger glanced back at me. ‘Seriously?’

I grew until I was about four metres long, stuck my head into the shaft and wrapped myself around the set of cables. ‘Seriously.’

I didn’t wait for them to reply; I slithered easily up the cables to the top and waited at the door. The Tiger floated up, raised one hand and blew the doors out. I stuck my head out and slithered onto the floor, everybody else following.

This floor was mostly offices and conference rooms around the edge of the building, with some cubicles in the centre. It was deserted.

The Tiger strode into the middle of the central space. ‘Come on out, my friend. If you turn, we will take you in.’

The demon appeared in the doorway of one of the offices. He looked about twenty-five and was overweight with a short ponytail. ‘If I turn, my sister will hunt me down and kill me.’

‘We will protect you,’ I said.

He grimaced. ‘Empty words. Weren’t you just in Hell answering for having so many die in your service?’

I was silent at that.

‘I have a place where you would be perfectly safe,’ the Tiger said.

‘Prison,’ the demon said.

‘Would you prefer destruction?’ Guang Ze said.

The demon shrugged. ‘I’d prefer to win and walk away from this, but I don’t think it’s going to happen.’ He stuck his chin out at us. ‘How’d you find me anyway? I thought I destroyed all the links. The demons here are all copies of a single template. There’s nothing here that could possibly indicate my presence. I even put a manufacturing floor on the first floor of the administration building, like so many other computer companies here that are short of space.’

‘Lady Emma’s too fucking smart for her own good,’ the Tiger said.

The demon focused on me. ‘The serpent. My sister will enjoy meeting you, ma’am.’

I dropped my head slightly. ‘I look forward to it. If you turn, we could put you in Wudangshan, or in the West; either way you will be safe.’

‘Safe and imprisoned.’ He raised his hands. ‘You see all of this? I’m rich. I’m a wealthy Chinese entrepreneur. I have a mansion on five qing of land, beautiful gardens, artificial lake, only a few li north of here. I have a house on the Peak, just up from you, Emma, that I bought for over a hundred million Hong Kong, and a helicopter to take me there when I don’t feel like taking myself. I have a collection of supercars. I have four wives—one of them is even human.’ He lowered his hands. ‘Why would I give that up for a prison cell?’

‘Because life is better than nothing? And if you turn, you could try for humanity,’ I said.

‘Demon, human, so much work to reach Immortality and join the Celestial, when I have it all here already,’ the demon said. ‘Can we just skip—’

A Snake Mother—the Death Mother—appeared next to him. ‘Are they annoying you, honey?’

‘I thought you said nothing could teleport in here!’ Leo said.

‘Nothing can, this whole area is locked,’ Bo Niang said. ‘She didn’t teleport within here, she teleported from somewhere else
to
here.’

The Death Mother grabbed the Geek around the throat with one hand, hoisted him easily and kissed him. He struggled, kicking and pulling at her hand, then punching at her. She ignored it, lingering on the kiss for a long time, then held him away from her and dropped him. He fell to the floor, choking, then rose.

‘I think I’ve had second thoughts!’ he shouted. He raced towards us, hands raised. ‘Get me away from her!’ He grabbed the Tiger’s arm. ‘Protect me, I am yours.’ He glanced around at us. ‘Whoever wants me can have me; just don’t let
her
get me.’

The Death Mother raised herself on her coils. She was one of the biggest Snake Mothers I’d ever seen—more than four metres long, high level eighties or low nineties—and clear venom oozed from between her scales. She grinned menacingly. ‘Oh, come on, Thirty-three, this could be fun.’

Simone took Celestial Form. She grew to more than two metres tall, and her jeans and T-shirt changed to blue-black robes dotted with pinpoints of light. She summoned Seven Stars and removed it from its scabbard. ‘Finally, a challenge,’ she said.

The Death Mother’s expression changed from amusement to ferocity. She hesitated, then slithered backwards, turned and leapt out the window.

‘Calcite, Zara, get her!’ Gold yelled, running to the window. ‘Pin her down! Don’t approach too close…’ He leaned on the window frame. ‘No! Zara, don’t
fight
her…’ He dropped his head and shook it. ‘Damn.’ He leapt over the frame and out.

We ran to the window. Gold splattered like goo as he hit the ground, then re-formed and kneeled next to Zara’s body. Calcite lay dead nearby. Both of the stones disappeared. Gold rose and turned to face the Death Mother. She raced towards the compound exit, made a huge leap over the concrete gate into the street and disappeared.

‘Judge Pao is going to be so pissed with you,’ Simone said, her voice the same as it always was.

‘Yeah,’ I said. ‘I wonder where I can hide.’

‘You can come and hide with me, ma’am,’ the Geek said. He glanced around. ‘Who has the safest hiding place?’

‘By your leave, ma’am,’ the Tiger said. ‘I’ll take him.’

‘Your choice, Thirty-three,’ I said. ‘Wudangshan or the West?’

‘Which is more secure?’ the Geek said.

‘Probably the West,’ I said. ‘Never seen anything quite like it. Like something out of James Bond.’

The Geek smiled slightly. ‘Sounds exactly what I need.’

‘The teleport block is down, we can go,’ Simone said.

‘I’ll send a clean-up team for those machines,’ the Tiger said.

‘I’ll take responsibility for the demons downstairs; my students can practise on them,’ I said.

‘We’re not too far from one of my hotels here, you know,’ the Tiger said. ‘It has an excellent Japanese restaurant.’ He grinned around at us. ‘Who wants sushi for lunch?’

CHAPTER 28

S
imone tapped on my office door later that afternoon and came in.

I saw her face. ‘Are you okay?’

She sat across the desk from me and sighed heavily. ‘I’m supposed to be doing advanced weapons right now, but I really don’t want to.’

‘Then don’t.’

‘It’s not that easy.’ She swivelled her chair so she was side-on to me. ‘That Geek demon, it destroyed my elementals, Emma. They’re a part of me, and it used them and twisted them.’ She spun back to face me. ‘I hate it so much.’

‘I can understand that.’

‘I want to destroy it!’ She ran her hands through her hair. ‘I want it to suffer, Emma, I want to make it scream forever.’ She looked into my eyes. ‘Maybe I’m more demon than Daddy says I am. I’ve killed…’ She dropped her head, then looked back up at me. ‘I killed someone, and I got
commended
for it! I’m a murderer, and look at me now. This demon has asked for protection and there’s nothing I’d like better than to go
in and tear it into very small pieces. I think I’m changing, and I don’t like what I’m changing into.’

Other books

Mikolas by Saranna DeWylde
Restrike by Reba White Williams
Kaavl Conspiracy by Jennette Green
El pequeño vampiro by Angela Sommer-Bodenburg
Niebla by Miguel De Unamuno
Silver Bullets by Elmer Mendoza, Mark Fried