n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
Senior wasnât in any serious condition and the woman, too, had woken up from her coma. She had absolutely no idea of the things that had happened.
There was no way of getting any information from her since she did not even recall working for Zhao Bayi.
Her last memory was of her taking a stroll.
She did, however, remember her name and background.
She requested to contact her family to tell them that she was safe and also to get them to bring her home.
The man over the phone, whom she called husband, shared that he had filed a police report two months ago and asked for the hospitalâs address.
I was befuddled and so was Zhao Bayi.
According to him, other than the womanâs name, the way she spoke and her mannerisms were completely different from when they first met.
After reassuring Senior, I went over to the doctor to get more details.
He mentioned that while Senior was just minorly injured, it would be better for him to remain in the hospital under observation for another three days.
He then looked over at the woman and said that she could be discharged any time.
âIâll pay for their bills. Give him the best examinations and amenities,â Zhao Bayi graciously said, hugging his family tight.
âRest a little, Senior,â I encouraged him.
His body was probably still feeling the ache since he merely nodded before his eyes slid shut.
âLet him rest, letâs talk elsewhere,â I told Zhao Bayi.
After paying the remaining dues, Zhao Bayi drove me back to his villa.
His jeep was much more spacious now that there were two fewer passengers.
I sat in the front while his wife and daughter took the backseats.
âIâll have to clarify a few things,â I started.
âPlease.â
âIt was a demon, a wind fox to be exact, that had invaded your home and possessed your employee. I simply scared it off, itâs not dead.â
âWill it come back for revenge, Master?â Zhao Bayi asked, concerned.
He drove somewhat anxiously now and the car started jerking a little.
âYouâre driving, Bayi,â his wife reminded urgently.
âDonât worry about anything else, Iâll finish the job cleanly,â I promised.
âMy familyâs safety is in your hands, Master,â Zhao Bayi pleaded.
I nodded before turning around to address his wife, âYou must be his lover. Do you remember anything that had happened?â
She nodded. âA little. I remember the housekeeper boiling some fish soup for my daughter, Niuniu, and I. I do not remember anything else after, and the next person I saw is you.â
Zhao Bayiâs expression turned grave. âI donât really like soup. It looks like weâve found the cause, but what was the wind foxâs motive?â
âIâll ask you some questions so please answer them honestly,â I said.
âIâll tell you everything I know,â he assured.
âWhere did you find that housekeeper?â
âI passed a park two months ago. She was waving a sign that said she was looking for a full-time job as a nanny. Our helper from the Philippines had asked for a raise prior to that and finding it unreasonable, I fired her and hired that woman,â he explained.
After some thought, I continued, âDid you offend anyone two months ago?â
âI work in a steel factory. Who could I have possibly offended?â Zhao Bayi mumbled.
âNo, husband. Donât you remember the thing that happened at the zoo? Didnât the boss yell something about finding someone to deal with you? Have you forgotten?â she questioned nervously.
âThe zoo?â I blurted out.
âThatâs considered? I did think about that incident after and agreed that I was at fault. Itâs only normal for him to have been harsh about it,â Zhao Bayi answered, lowering his head slightly.
Wind fox? The zoo?
I scrunched my eyebrows.
It canât be that simple.
âGive me the details,â I urged.
âOur factory does skimp on the job and stint on materials at times. The zoo had requested for us to build them a cage. It was only later on that I discovered our cage wasnât of the set standard. I only found out that there were issues with our agreement after sending it to the zoo. I have to admit that Iâm to be blamed for not supervising my staff properly,â he narrated with a softer and gentler tone.
âI understand,â I responded faintly.
âWhat are your plans then, Master? Can you bless my house, please?â Zhao Bayi requested.
âLetâs go back to the house and search for clues first.â
My mind wandered to the real dragon the wind fox warned me about.
Perhaps the dragon was hiding in the zoo.
The jeep stopped.
We alighted and headed toward the villa.
All of us got a shock upon opening the door.
In the few hours that we were gone, the whole apartment had turned into a mess.
It was as if someone had ransacked the whole place.
âMust be the foxâs doing,â I mumbled.
âItâs not safe here,â Zhao Bayiâs wife said.
The next thing I knew, Zhao Bayi was on his knees in front of me. âYou must help us, Master.â
Expressionless, I asked, âAre you sure you havenât offended anyone else?â
He thought about it for a moment before nodding.
âWill you go upstairs with me, Master? I would like to see if the safe is still around,â Zhao Bayi pointed upward.
I followed him to the master bedroom on the second floor.
It was completely empty except for the big wooden bed.
Zhao Bayi pointed at the headboard. âItâs missing.â
âCall the police first while I make a trip down to the zoo. Move out within these next few days. Give me your contact number and wait for my good news,â I instructed.
Zhao Bayi nodded. He wrote his number down for me and slipped a thousand dollar bill into my pocket.
I left the villa, hailed a taxi and rushed to the zoo.
It was especially lively and packed that day.
I bought a ticket and entered.
There were all kinds of signboards introducing the different types of animals.
Penguins, lions, elephants, pandas...
Wait, pandas?
Theyâre considered to be national treasures. How could our small county zoo possibly get a hold of them?
I walked toward the sectioned area for pandas to check it out.
A stench invaded my nostrils the moment I stepped inside.
It was indescribably pungent.
There were about seven dogs kept inside the metal fence.
Excited visitors were observing and discussing the dogs.
âWhatâs the point of coming all the way here for these dogs?â I said out loud.
They looked over at me before a small voice rang, âThis manâs nuts.â
âHeâs mental.â
âCalling pandas dogs? Weirdo.â
âGo back to school if you canât even tell them apart.â
I wondered what was going on.
I noticed someone photographing the dogs and I leaned over to take a look. The image he had captured was indeed that of pandas.
Oh my god.
I retrieved my mobile phone and launched the camera.
I snapped a photo of the dogs and they, too, transformed into charmingly naive looking pandas.
Have I gone berserk, too?
I rubbed my eyes and the dried donkey blood fell off my eyelids.
Oh. Thatâs why.
The donkey blood had opened up my third eye and allowed me to see demonic creatures.
I left the crowd and walked over to other exhibition halls.
All I saw were dogs but the images that I snapped were those of all kinds of animals.
Frustrated, I gave Senior a call.
After explaining the situation to him, he listed at least ten demonic beasts that couldâve been the cause of this.
Left confused and drained, I hung up.
Immediately after I ended the call, Zhao Bayiâs number appeared on my screen.
âWhatâs up?â
âWhose disciple are you?â he asked dully.
That wasnât his voice for sure.
âWhose disciple?â I repeated.
âYou smell foreign.â
âSmell? You can smell me? You know where I am?â
âWe have similar smells. Whose disciple are you? My older or younger brother?â
Instead of answering, I surveyed my surroundings.
There was only one slightly taller building around.
I stared at it and answered, âYouâre in there? You kidnapped Zhao Bayi?â
âAnswer before asking.â
I let out a helpless sigh.
Similar smells... older and younger brother... mixed dragon and pure dragon?
After a short consideration, I tried my luck. âTao Tie.â
âFifth brother? I havenât seen him in a long time. Come on up. Someone will lead the way. I have so many questions for you.â
I quickly made my way to that building and the person guarding the doors took me by surprise.
It was a wind fox disguised as a female employee.
âYou guys kidnapped him?â
âGo up and youâll know,â the wind fox replied laughingly.
Before I could ask another question, she turned around and entered the building.
I followed suit.
The elevator doors opened and she walked in.
Again, I could only follow her.
Inside the elevator, she started, âI had thought that you were of a mixed bred. Who wouldâve known that you have the same blood as our master.â
I replayed her words silently, a rough idea of what was going on forming in my mind.
Same blood as Tao Tie? One of the nine sons?
The doors opened slowly and she made her way out.
I saw Zhao Bayi and his family, their backs toward me as they knelt in front of a chair.
I walked out and the man on the chair spoke up. âYou tried to get them to hide? But to where?â
âWho are you?â I asked.
âI was merely teasing them, I didnât expect to attract such an important figure. Tao Tieâs disciple, why are you working for bad people?â
Bad people?
âIâm only helping whoever I believe deserves it,â I responded.
âDeserves it? Do you know how evil these humans are? I spent so much on the steel fence but they gave me a bunch of rusted trash,â he complained, repeatedly slamming his fist on the table with enough force to cause the room to shake.
Zhao Bayi cried out, âIâve learned my lesson, Iâve learned my lesson.â
âHeâs admitted his mistake. Why wonât you forgive him?â
âWhose side are you on, boy? Elbows bending outward? Tao Tie will be infuriated to have a disciple like you for sure. Wait a minute, youâre a human?â
He stood up and waved his hand.
I was dragged over to his side by a gush of air.
His hand was held firmly against my body.
He sniffed me for a few seconds and commented, âYouâre strange, boy.â
âHow so?â I managed to squeak out.
âI, Pu Lao, have never seen someone like you. A human without a soul.â
âPu Lao?!â I exclaimed.
âIâm the dragonâs third son and the zoo is my business.â
âBut theyâre all dogs,â I said stupidly.
âWhat we see are dogs but humans would be able to see all kinds of animals. What can I do? Humans like me,â Pu Lao smiled.
âWhat are you going to do to Zhao Bayi? And what are you going to do with me?â
âItâs just a small matter, initially, but now that youâre involved... Iâll need to correct that attitude of yours and I donât care if youâre human or not. Pass my test and all of you will be fine. Otherwise, Iâll add you guys to my pet collection downstairs,â he said with a malevolent laugh.
âAttitude? What attitude do I have?â I struggled.
He threw me onto the ground and said, âIâm not mad, but youâre still unsure of what you represent. To other spirits, youâre a dragon and not human. You have to correct yourself.â
I remained silent.
âIf you refuse to learn, Iâll make you join the animals downstairs as a way to discipline you on Tao Tieâs behalf. It would also prevent you from getting into trouble elsewhere, shaming his reputation.â
Things werenât good, I knew, but there was nothing I could do.
My body was aching from that slam.
âWrite down the passcode of your safe and that will be the end of this matter. Tell anyone about what happened and youâll die,â Pu Lao warned Zhao Bayi.
Zhao Bayi made a few bows before writing something down on a piece of paper. He then quickly pulled his family away, running and shouting, âIâve learned my lesson.â
The wind fox came over and pulled me off the ground.
Pu Lao sat back down and looked out of the windows at his zoo.
âWhere are you taking me?â I asked.
âRest first. Thereâs no rush,â the wind fox answered coyly with a grin.