âIn Chinese mythology,' the silly woman was saying, âthe dragon symbolises the element of water, and it was believed that dragons were responsible for bringing rain. In its aspect as the source of all fertility and increase, the dragon was adopted by the Chinese emperors as a royal emblem; in particular the dragon with five toes or claws on each foot, as in this example, painted on silk during the Ming dynasty, depicting the Dragon King of the Yellow River teaching the first Emperor the Chinese written language. Notice the distinctive colour tones, typical of the period . . .'
At the back of the group, Karen yawned, trying without much success to be discreet about it. She knew that yawning was likely to distract the rest of the group and spoil their pleasure, and she felt bad about that. But she couldn't help it. The reaction was entirely automatic, being the result of too many deathly boring teatimes spent gawping at interminable collections of family albums - here's one of us outside the temple, now here's your uncle standing in front of the main gate, and here we both are looking up at the gate, and this is just inside the gate, though really it's a bit too dark to see anything. Ordeals like that leave an indelible mark on a child's mind, triggering involuntary reactions; so, even now, the very sight of a picture of a dragon made her yawn.
And besides
, she told herself,
if that's supposed to be Uncle Biff, they've drawn his eyes far too close together. Makes him look like an Airedale terrier
.
She smiled. Uncle Biff wouldn't like that; not one bit. In fact, it was probably just as well for everyone living within convenient flooding distance of the Yellow River that this particular gem of Chinese cultural heritage had been looted by flint-hearted Western imperialists and carried off to a far land where Uncle Biff wasn't likely to see it; because when he got upset, did it ever rain . . .
âAccording to traditional Chinese beliefs,' the silly woman continued, âeach quarter of the compass is ruled by a Dragon King, who in turn is owed fealty by a complicated hierarchy of lesser dragons - thereby mirroring contemporary Chinese society - down to the smallest lake, stream and well, each of which is governed by its own resident dragon. It was believed that dragons were able to manifest themselves as fish, and also to take human form when circumstances required, so that recurring themes in folklore include the fisherman who takes pity on a fish and throws it back, only to discover that he's spared the life of an important dragon who is thereby permanently obligated to himâ'
Karen couldn't help clicking her tongue. Recurring theme in folklore - once it had happened, just once. But what else can you expect when the media get hold of a story and start playing with it? As for âobligated': do a mortal a favour and they think they own you. She played back that last thought and frowned at it; sometimes, when she wasn't careful, she sounded just like her father. Yetch.
âAnother such theme,' said the silly woman, âconcerns the son or daughter of a dragon king who falls in love with a mortalâ' She stopped and looked round to see what had made that peculiar noise. âFalls in love with a mortal,' she continued, âand takes human form in an attempt to pursue the ill-fated relationship. Invariably, of course, these episodes always end tragically, since such a pairing would represent an imbalance of the Elements, thereby violating the fundamental foundations of Chinese philosophyâ'
Bullshit!
screamed Karen's voice inside her head.
And âfundamental foundations' is tautology
. Scowling furiously, she turned on her heel and marched out of the gallery before she said something out loud that might land her in court - though by rights it was the damned silly woman who should be in the dock, charged with and convicted of Contempt of Dragonsâ
Except that all dragons everywhere would agree with her (except one) and really, Karen had come here to get away from that particular thought. By now, true enough, she was used to the idea that her own kind didn't have the imagination to see past their silly old traditions and rubbish, which was why she was here, dressed in the monkey suit, instead of back home, where they claimed she belonged. Hearing the same old nonsense trotted out by a human, however, disturbed her considerably. Surely they ought to know better; after all, she told herself, sweeping out of the museum gates into the street, they weren't all a load of blinkered, scalebound old stick-in-the-muds who reckoned something was true just because they all believed it was trueâ
She shuddered and squirmed as the first big, fat raindrops slapped her face. Wet! Nasty!
Fumbling in her haste, she yanked the small folding umbrella out of her pocket and tried to get it to work. It refused, of course; she had an idea that the wretched thing had somehow recognised her, and was grimly carrying on the age-old umbrella/dragon war by means of sabotage and mechanical terrorism. By the time she managed to get its idiotic squashed-cranefly legs into place, she was pink with rage and frustration, and the rain was bucketing downâ
Well, of course. Cause and effect.
Looked at one way, it was just plain silly . . . Because she'd only been a human for a few weeks, she hadn't even begun to come to terms with rain (its feel, its sudden onslaught, how squishy and cold and uncomfortable it felt as it trickled down between collar and neck), so that every time the stuff hit her she couldn't help an involuntary spasm of panic, laced with more than a dash of irrational anger. Since she was a dragon - the hell with false modesty; since she was the daughter of the adjutant-general to the Dragon King of the North-West, no less, with the hereditary title of Dragon Marshal of Bank Holidays and a maximum capacity of 2,000,000,000,000 litres/second/ km
2
when she got angry or upset, it rained.
She happened to glance down, and saw that already the paving stones beneath her feet were awash with eddying, dancing rainwater, while overhead the sky began to resonate with basso-profundo flatulence. Any moment now, there'd be lightning, and probably gale-force winds and armour-piercing hailstones to follow, and all because she couldn't make sense of this stupid goddamned umbrella . . .
She stopped trying, and slowly lowered the thing until it was resting upside-down on the pavement, its flabby fabric drinking up the rainwater.
Calm down
, she told herself.
It's all right. A little rain never hurt anybody
.
(
Please
, she prayed silently,
please don't let any of my friends from Home see me like this; especially not that cow S'ssssn, because if she were to find out I'll never hear the end of it if I live to be a million - which I already have, of course, and that doesn't make it any easier
. . .)
People, humans, were staring at her - girl with lowered umbrella standing perfectly still in the rain, of course they were staring, and as the embarrassment began to bite, so the rain thickened. (They'd scrambled the B-92s now, the big, fast saturation-grade raindrops with the enormous payload and the smart guidance system, the latest in launch-and-forget technology; humans assumed they were imagining things when they got the impression that modern rain was somehow colder and wetter than it had been when they were young, but that was mortals for you.) The frustration of knowing that she was making things even worse made her angrier still, at which point the first lightning bolt split the sky, like God arc-welding . . .
Karen closed her eyes and concentrated. It should have been easy, because all she had to do was think
STOP
â
(But that was when she was in her own body, not this cramped, largely unfamiliar right-hand-drive contraption; somehow it worked so that her instincts interfaced with the controls just fine, whereas her conscious thoughts had to stop and grind their way through the
Owner's Handbook
and the Help files in order to get the simplest thing doneâ)
âWhich raised the questions, âHow do you think?' and âWhat's the proper Think command for Stop?' and âWhich of these is the Send button, anyway?'; and struggling with all that nonsense made her feel so uptight and irritableâ
At which point, someone grabbed her by the arm and dragged her, quickly and with humiliating efficiency, back into the shelter of the museum doorway. âYou're soaked,' said a familiar voice.
Sheet lightning filled the sky, thunder rattled the window-panes, drains and soakaways within a five-mile radius gave up and went into denial - indications that Karen wasn't entirely pleased to see the person who'd just pulled her in out of the rain. âYes,' Karen muttered, âI am, rather.'
âYou were just standing there, getting wet.'
âYes.'
âOh. Any particular reason?'
âI like getting wet.'
Her rescuer - imagine the Botticelli Venus dressed in a sensible waterproof jacket, of the kind they sell in camping shops - curved her lips slightly in a small, bewildered-contemptuous smile. âFair enough,' she said. âNext time you might want to try swimming, though. Same net effect but your clothes stay dry.'
Karen tightened her scowl up by a click or so. âActually,' she said truthfully, âI can't swim.' (Now why on earth had she gone and told her that? No idea; it had just slipped out, like a coin falling out of her pocket when she pulled out her handkerchief.)
âReally?'
âReally,' Karen replied.
Not in this body
,
anyway
, she didn't explain.
âWell, well. I'll have to teach you one of these days. I learned to swim when I was two.'
Too what?
Karen didn't say. Another odd thing; it had nearly stopped raining, even though Karen was so livid she could cheerfully have sunk all twenty claws into the bloody woman's face.
Hard to understand, that. She could only assume it was something to do with the crushing weight of inferiority she always felt whenever she was in Ms Ackroyd's company. âI bet,' she muttered. âCame naturally to you, I suppose.'
âYes, as it happens. Of course, it's always easier to learn something if you start young.' Not a drop, not a single molecule of water appeared to have lodged anywhere on Susan Ackroyd's super-polymer-monofilament-this-that-and-the-other-upholstered person. Dry as a yak bone in the Gobi Desert, she was. Typical. âHow come you never learned to swim, then?'
âNever got round to it.'
âAh. Look, it's stopped raining. A bit late as far as you're concerned,' Ms Ackroyd added. âSee you tomorrow, then.'
Karen watched her walk away without saying a word, mostly because the things she really wanted to say couldn't readily be expressed in the effete languages humans used. If, as she asserted, she'd never really understood what love meant until she'd turned her back on the cloud-capped battlements of Home and come down to live among the humans, the same also went for hate, redoubled in spades. Oh sure, she'd felt the odd negative emotion or two in her time - she'd disapproved of evil and disliked the dragon senators who'd criticised her father's handling of various issues and taken against some of her more obnoxiodus relatives and been annoyed by several of her contemporaries at school - but hate, the real hundred per cent proof matured-in-oak-vats stuff, had taken her completely by surprise. She
hated
Susan Ackroyd with a pure, distilled ferocity she hadn't believed possible a few months ago. She hated her for her straight blonde hair, her unflappable calm, her brilliantly incisive mind, her knack of being abominably insulting while not actually saying anything rude, her ability to wear a potato sack and still look like a refugee from a Paris catwalk, the shape of her ears, her unshakeable common sense, her dry, understated sense of humour, her weakness for fresh vanilla slices, her skill at mental arithmetic, her hand/eye coordination, her rare and beautiful smile, the way she could open difficult bottles and jars with a bare flick of the wrist, her taste in shoes, the easy way she could admit it when she came up against something she couldn't do, the evenness of her teeth, her excellent memory for telephone numbers, the fact that she could swim.
Because she was the Competition.
For the sake of the unharvested crops and the water table and the already over-abused sewage systems of three counties, Karen made a mental effort not to think about that. It was, after all, her day off, when she should be happy and relaxed and at ease; nothing but blue skies. It was her day off, when she shouldn't be here at all, or anywhere, on her own . . . or where the hell was the point in having run away from Home and come here in the first place?
Humans, she decided, were much, much better at unhappiness than dragons could ever be; it came naturally to them, like swimming did to Susan Ackroyd. But, since they still retained the vestiges of a survival instinct, they'd found ways of coping with it; none of them so unfailingly effective, so elegantly simple, as the cream doughnut. Dragons had nothing like that. Thinking about it, she almost felt sorry for her tediously contented species.
The woman in the cream-cake shop recognised Karen at once, which was hardly surprising, but at least she had the tact not to make an issue out of it; she simply looked blank, as if drowned rats who asked for three cream doughnuts were something that happened every day. Once Karen was out of the shop and comfortably relaxed on the warm steps of the square - just the sight of the exuberant cream bubbling up out of the fissured doughnut had been enough to haul the sun out from behind the clouds - she felt like a completely different person. Like, to take an example entirely at random, a red-lacquer-and-gold dragon bursting through the clouds into the pure blue above, the exact opposite and equivalent of a diver plunging into deep blue water.
Homesick? After all the trouble she'd been to, getting away from there in the first place? Not likely.