"I understand that this is difficult for you, my child," Kwan said, his voice dripping with false sympathy. "You mustn't worry. Shou Lung will always care for you, no matter what your mother has done."
"She hasn't done anything!" Ji insisted.
"That isn't for you to say," Kwan replied, his voice growing angry.
Oblivious to the old man's threatening tone, Ji responded. "You weren't even there!"
"That's enough!" Kwan roared, an angry swish of silk indicating that he was rising to his feet. "Remove the children!"
"No," the emperor countered. "The boy is right. Tell me what happened in the Virtuous Consort's garden."
Being addressed by the Divine One himself doused the fire in Ji's heart. He swallowed, looked to his mother's prone form for reassurance, then finally turned back to the emperor.
"We saw something in the tree," he said, looking at the floor. His voice was now quiet and weak.
"What?" asked the emperor. "What did you see?"
"A man."
"Are you sure?" the Divine One asked. "Could it have been something else, like an owl or a cat?"
Ji frowned and looked at his sister uncertainly. She shook her head sternly, and Ji turned back to the Son of Heaven. "No," he said. "We're sure. It was a man."
"Perhaps one of General Batu's spies, come to fetch his wife," Kwan said, the fabric of his hai-waitao whispering against the chair arms as the old man finally returned to his seat. "If there was anybody in the tree at all."
"What are you suggesting, Minister?" The emperor asked.
"Nothing that you have not thought of already, Divine One," Kwan replied politely. "Merely that Wu has coached her children in answering our questions."
"That is for me to decide," the Son of Heaven replied. Addressing Ji again, he asked, "And then what happened?"
"We ran to get the guards," the boy replied, pointing a slender finger at the soldiers behind him. "Mother climbed the tree."
"Why do you think she did that?" Minister Kwan asked.
"To catch the man!" Ji replied, frowning at the minister's silly question.
"Wu is not a large woman," Kwan said, addressing the emperor. "Do you really think she would chase a spy alone?"
A long pause followed, and Wu realized Kwan's rhetorical question had made an impression.
Ting Mei Wan came to the kneeling mother's rescue. "In all fairness, Divine One," she said, "General Batu's wife is reputed to have skill in the art of kung fu."
Kwan scoffed, but Wu breathed a sigh of relief. When State Security troops had been assigned to the Batu household, Ju-Hai had made a point of saying that he controlled Ting. Apparently, he had not been lying.
After a moment's pause, the emperor said, "These children must be tired. Perhaps it would be better if they returned to their home."
Ju-Hai signaled to two State Security guards, but Ji stepped boldly forward. "I want to stay," he said.
"Of course you do," the Divine One replied patiently. "But I am the emperor, and you must do what I say. Is that not true?"
Ji looked to his mother's kneeling form, then to Ju-Hai. The minister nodded to indicate that what the emperor said was, indeed, correct. Dropping his gaze to the floor, Ji said simply, "Yes."
"Good," the Divine One replied. "Take your sister and go home with these soldiers. Your mother will be there when you wake in the morning."
The reassurance did nothing to relax Wu. From what she had heard, the emperor often said one thing and did another.
The guards came into Wu's field of vision, and she watched them take her children's hands and turn away. Both Ji and Yo looked after their mother with sad eyes. Wu wanted to kiss and hug them, but she had not yet been given permission to rise and dared not risk offending the emperor.
After the children were gone, the emperor said, "Lady Wu, please stand."
Wu stiffly did as asked. Her body, unaccustomed to the abuse of kneeling for so long, protested with pain. "My gratitude, Divine One," she said, bowing.
"What happened in the Virtuous Consort's garden?" the emperor asked, his enigmatic eyes fixed on her face.
"It was as Ji said," she replied. "He and Yo saw a dark figure. I climbed the willow tree in an attempt to capture him."
"You are an intelligent woman," Kwan said, shaking his white-haired head in skepticism. "Too intelligent to do something so foolish."
"I did not consider it foolish," she countered, purposefully neglecting to address the minister by his proper title. "My husband and father are both away fighting the barbarians, and we all know there are spies in the summer palace. These spies would like nothing better than to see the emperor's armies destroyed, making me both a widow and an orphan in a short period. Given the chance to capture one of those spies, I think it would have been foolish to let the man escape, don't you?"
Kwan looked from Wu toward the emperor. "Perhaps," he said, "if your husband is truly fighting the barbarians, and not rejoining his ancestral relations."
Wu decided to ignore Kwan. As her husband's political enemy, the old man was clearly more interested in discrediting Batu than in finding the spy. Instead, she turned her attention to the emperor himself. "Divine One, while it is true that my husband and his army have disappeared, anyone who claims Batu Min Ho has betrayed Shou Lung is lying."
"Surely, you can prove what you say," Kwan objected, moving to the edge of his chair with a menacing glint in his eye.
"I could," she responded, "but not while there are spies roaming the summer palace. I will not endanger my husband and the empire so needlessly."
"Lady Wu, Minister Ju-Hai believes in General Batu without reservation, and so do I," said Ting Mei Wan. "Yet, Minister Kwan has met your husband on several occasions, a privilege that few of us have been afforded. His bad opinion carries a great deal of influence within the summer palace. Is there nothing you can say that would prove your husband's loyalty?"
Wu hesitated. By now, it might be safe to disclose that the provincial armies had left disguised as merchant cargo, but Wu doubted that the revelation would quiet the court gossip. Without knowing her husband's entire plan, suspicious minds would simply assume that Batu had sailed away with the army instead of attacking with it. Worse, someone might realize that he was going up the Shengti to cut off the barbarians' advance.
After several moments of consideration, Wu said, "No. I will say nothing."
"You must be able to tell us something," Ju-Hai pressed.
Wu shook her head. "No."
Kwan smiled malevolently. "You are protecting your husband, no doubt?"
Wu nodded, giving the old man an icy stare. "Exactly."
"An admirable reason," Kwan said, turning to the emperor with a smirk on his lips. "From whom are you protecting him?"
"From you," Wu answered angrily. "And from the spy—if you aren't one in the same." As soon as the words left her mouth, Wu chastised herself for letting anger dictate what she said. Her father had often told her that such lapses only demonstrated lack of self-control and betrayed the speaker's weaknesses.
Kwan lifted his wrinkled brow in shock and anger. Ju-Hai and Ting grimaced. Behind Wu, the guards rustled expectantly, ready to take her into custody.
The emperor frowned. "Lady Wu, you cannot say such things."
"Forgive me, Divine One," she answered, barely keeping the anger out of her voice. "But has Minister Kwan not called my husband a traitor, me a child-deserter, and my son a liar? Perhaps it is inappropriate to take offense at an old man's words, but I cannot be blamed for defending my family's honor."
Ju-Hai took her by the arm. "Please, Wu, remember to whom you are speaking."
"I will," she replied, bowing her head to the emperor.
For several moments, the Divine One stared at Wu in open astonishment. Finally, in a carefully controlled voice, he said, "I see where your son comes by his brazenness, Lady Wu. You are lucky that I am fair, for I will not take your outburst into account in making my decision."