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        Yasmin looked out of the coach window at a mesmerising view. Mesmerising 
        and vertiginous, because the narrow road clung to the side of a mountain 
        on one side and dropped hundreds of feet into a wide valley on the other. 
        Beyond the valley through which a lazy river undulated were verdant slopes 
        giving way to a other range of purple, mist-shrouded mountains some miles 
        away across the wide valley. She looked again at the river glittering 
        in the sunshine and tried to contend with the mind-blowing natural forces 
        that, according to her o’llevel geography lessons, carved out landscapes 
        like this. 
        “And this definitely ISN’T pre-communist China?” she 
        asked, just for confirmation as she looked at a wagon pulled by oxen and 
        driven by what she tried not to think of as a ‘coolie’ in 
        a wide brimmed hat because she was sure that wasn’t a politically 
        correct term. The wagon halted with its wheels half over a roadside drainage 
        ditch to make way for the coach belonging to a richer class of traveller. 
        The man kept his eyes down as one who knew his place until they had gone.. 
        “It is Xian Xian,” The Doctor answered. “A planet colonised 
        by humans from China who, having arrived by deep space cruise ships then 
        abandoned all technology and sought a simpler way of life such as their 
        ancestors had known.” 
        “So…. All the traditional Chinese customs?” Yas asked. 
        “Everything except foot binding and dog-eating festivals,” 
        The Doctor assured her. “Though the roles women are expected to 
        play in Xian Xian society are rather better than they were on Earth. In 
        fact, the Mandarin whose territory we are visiting is Lady Tseng. I’ve 
        met her twice before, in two different incarnations, so she will understand 
        my latest phase. I’m looking forward to seeing how things are since 
        I helped rid her daughter of a nasty parasitical alien occupying her brain.” 
        “That can happen?” Yasmin asked. 
        “Rarely,” The Doctor assured her. “We’re nearly 
        there. Look… Tseng palace is just another mile ahead.” 
        Yasmin couldn’t see anything remotely resembling a palace at first, 
        then as the road twisted around the mountain and further down into the 
        valley, she saw a cluster of tall pagoda like roofs that appeared to be 
        clinging to the mountain. As they drew closer she could see that the palace 
        was, indeed, built against the base of a sheer escarpment. A high wall 
        surrounded it, and beneath that a village huddled. It was one of those 
        places where work and leisure took place outdoors. Weaving, spinning, 
        basket making, cooking, woodwork, forging of metal, all went on while 
        children played and elderly people sat and watched. 
        Along the main road to the palace gate class distinctions were again obvious 
        as the people paused about their work and bowed as in reverence to those 
        who travelled by such a conveyance. 
        “You would think people starting again on a new world would have 
        eradicated poverty,” Yasmin commented.  
        “They’re not poor. They have food and warm homes,” The 
        Doctor told her. “Schools, medicines. Everything that poverty is 
        measured against. What they haven’t eradicated is class distinction. 
        There is still a strata of society who work by the sweat of their brow. 
        But they are not unhappy.” 
        Yasmin wasn’t wholly convinced. But then how DO you define poverty. 
        All that talk about kids going hungry without school dinners during the 
        holidays always struck her as a bit off. None of the kids running around 
        the estate where her parents and sister still lived looked hungry. Jamie 
        Oliver might do his nut about the beans on toast/fish finger and chips 
        style of fare they were filling up on, but they were ok.  
        And maybe these people, some of whom were cooking something far more complicated 
        than fish fingers in huge pots over open fires in the street, ate rather 
        better than that. And they probably didn’t need sixty inch TVs, 
        automatic washing machines or X-box consoles so they wouldn’t feel 
        hard up without them. 
        Inside the palace walls poverty and deprivation had never been heard of. 
        Yasmin and The Doctor were escorted by servants in red and gold livery 
        along corridors hung with fine silk hangings. These puzzled Yasmin at 
        first, then she realised that, from the faux silk throws on her mum’s 
        sofa through her local mosque, to the Baitul Futuh , the huge central 
        mosque in London she had visited once with her family when she was twelve, 
        she had mostly known interior décor as the non-figurative art of 
        Islam with its intricate geometric patterns and abstract shapes. This 
        palace was the polar opposite. It was ALL figurative. Dancing girls and 
        gilded aristocrats were crammed onto every length of delicately embroidered 
        silk. The only designs that weren’t of human likenesses were animals 
        – dragons, lions, serpents of all sorts, huge insects that she really 
        hoped had been drawn out of scale with the humans.  
        But very definitely a culture unlike her own.  
        The receiving room was a luxurious blend of red lacquer, gilding and even 
        bigger and more magnificent silk tapestries full of that figurative art, 
        all telling what Yasmin was sure had to be fascinating legends from ancient 
        China if she had time to look at them closely.  
        The Mandarin, Lady Tseng, was an elderly woman, perhaps in her seventies, 
        her face lined deeply, her hair silvery white. But she had an elegance 
        about her when she stood to greet her honoured guests and a haughty, aristocratic 
        air when she sent an attendant to fetch refreshments. She was dressed 
        in what Yasmin knew, though she wasn’t sure why she knew, was called 
        a cheongsam. It was a silk dress that closely hugged the Lady’s 
        slender figure from a little round collar to just above her silk slippers. 
        In a dress like that, foot binding wasn’t needed to ensure short, 
        dainty steps. The servant girls who shuffled back into the room with wine 
        served in stemless gold goblets and trays of exotic food had about twenty 
        centimetres of slit in the side seam of their cheongsams to allow them 
        to get around quickly but the Mandarin herself had no such concession. 
        People moved at her speed when she walked. 
        It must have been her own fashion choice, Yasmin reasoned. Lady Tseng 
        was the boss, in charge of a whole district, like a landlord, mayor and 
        judge all rolled into one. Nobody, surely, told her what she had to wear 
        or how to walk. 
        Yasmin and The Doctor were invited to sit at a long, low table where the 
        refreshments were set. Silk cushions were their seats. Yasmin watched 
        Lady Tseng half lying, half sitting - ‘side saddle’- with 
        her legs together beneath the tight dress. The Doctor in her usual culottes 
        and braces sat straight backed with her legs crossed yoga style. Yasmin 
        chose something of a compromise, sitting upright but with her legs to 
        one side, a police officer’s posture from which she could spring 
        up quickly should the need arise..  
        The wine was heady and the dainty finger food a variety of sweet, savoury 
        and spicy flavours, none of them anything like the aperitifs at the all-you-can-eat 
        Chinese buffet in Sheffield city centre that Yasmin had occasionally visited 
        with friends.  
        The conversation mostly went over her head as The Doctor and Lady Tseng 
        talked about the problems of being a Mandarin. A lot of it seemed to be 
        a daily round of people bringing disputes and grievances for judgement. 
        Mostly they were of the ‘which brother owns that ox’ sort 
        of complaint. There were rent quibbles and apprentices demanding better 
        payments from their masters. Once, last year, a dispute about ownership 
        of a horse had led to murder and Lady Tseng had to have the man sent to 
        the prison at Xian Xian city under sentence of death. The Doctor agreed 
        that she had no choice.  
        Yasmin was a little shocked. Capital punishment wasn’t something 
        she was accustomed to, growing up in twenty-first century Britain, and 
        she had rather assumed that The Doctor’s views on such things would 
        have been more on the liberal side. 
        “On my world there was instant vaporisation or a minimum ten thousand 
        years in cryogenic prison,” The Doctor said. “Xian Xian’s 
        crime and punishment IS liberal by comparison.” 
        It wasn’t exactly an answer, but before she could question either 
        The Doctor or Lady Tseng further a gilded servant announced the entrance 
        of Madame Li Su and her daughter, Su Ling. 
        Daughter Su Ling had little to say since she was about a month old and 
        wrapped in so many layers of silk only a patch of face was visible until 
        her mother was seated at the table and had dutifully handed the child 
        to Lady Tseng, the very proud grandmother.  
        The coming of a baby into any group of women has a predictable effect. 
        Even The Doctor, for whom motherhood probably wasn’t going to happen 
        any time, smiled widely. Yasmin, who considered it a possibility for her 
        future once her career as a police officer was assured and she found somebody 
        she wanted to raise children with, but very certainly not yet, couldn’t 
        help hoping she might be allowed to hold the baby for a little while. 
         
        “I’m glad to see you well and happy,” The Doctor told 
        Lin Su, and Yasmin recalled the almost throwaway line about ridding Lady 
        Tseng’s daughter of an alien brain parasite. “And happily 
        married?” 
        “Lord Changming… the Mandarin’s brother and trade ambassador 
        from ChengChang district,” the young lady explained. “He and 
        I….” 
        “He came to negotiate a trade agreement with my counterpart on the 
        other side of the mountain,” Lady Tseng said with an indulgent tone. 
        “He spent far more time walking in the gardens and sitting by fountains 
        than he did in my presence, but the agreement was completed and he returned 
        to his brother with a rather different proposal to be brokered. The match 
        was eminently suitable, of course, and I am pleased to see my daughter 
        happy. Mandarin Cheng is unmarried and childless, therefore little Su 
        Ling embodies a future merging of the districts under the House of Tseng 
        which is also agreeable to all.” 
        “Very agreeable,” The Doctor agreed. “May I….” 
        She reached and took the baby in her arms. Yasmin knew The Doctor wasn’t 
        a medical doctor, as such, but she got the feeling that she was performing 
        a little subtle paediatric examination as she held the baby. All must 
        have been well since she allowed Yasmin a brief cuddle before the mother 
        was allowed to reclaim her child.  
        “Assuring your family’s future through healthy progeny is 
        the best of ambitions,” The Doctor commented. Perhaps there was 
        a hidden reference to Lin Su’s past trouble…. Or not. 
        “Where is Changming this afternoon?” Lady Tseng asked. 
        “He and his retinue rode out to meet the Honourable Inspector of 
        Taxes on the road from Xian Xian,” Lin Su answered. “A man 
        with such important duties must be honoured by an escort.” 
        “Indeed, he must. They will all be here by nightfall, I trust. There 
        will be a grand banquet in tribute to The Doctor and Yasmin as well as 
        the Honourable Inspector.” 
        The term ‘grand banquet’ promised much. In preparation Yasmin 
        was introduced to bathing with no less than four attendants. She was then 
        carefully dressed in a silk cheongsam of pale green with yellow butterflies 
        flying around in a spiral from neck to hem. Her hair was piled up on top 
        of her head and decorated with more silk butterflies, and the effect when 
        she saw herself in a mirror was impressive. 
        “I’m Madame Butterfly,” she said, though suspecting 
        that probably wasn’t a good thing to be in any literal sense. She 
        had never seen the opera, but she had a vague idea that the girl probably 
        died in the end. Still, she felt wonderfully feminine in the costume. 
        She spent a lot of her time in police uniform or practical clothing for 
        running around alien planets. It was good to feel like a girl for once. 
        The Doctor was not in a cheongsam. Instead she was wearing loose silk 
        trousers and a long overshirt with wide, bell like sleeves. It was something 
        like what Yasmin’s grandmother would call a Salwar Kameez, but there 
        was probably a Chinese name for it. Like the Salwar it was a gender neutral 
        choice, though The Doctor managed to look feminine in it all the same. 
        Her theme was lotus flowers on the silk and in her hair.  
        “High born ladies of Xian Xian,” The Doctor said as they were 
        escorted to the banqueting hall by male servants in purple silk with ornamental 
        swords at their hips. 
        Lady Tseng and her daughter looked like versions of ‘traditional’ 
        Chinese willow pattern plates, the older woman in translucent blue with 
        white detail, the younger in white with blue patterns.  
        The men wore silks, too, but they had no chance of outshining the women. 
        Nor did they seem to want to do so. Lord Changming was very attentive 
        to his wife and mother-in-law. The honourable inspector of taxes, by name 
        of Lei Jing Geo, looked like a civil servant dining with ‘old money’ 
        aristocrats might look anywhere in the universe, keen to mind his manners 
        and impress his ‘betters’.  
        There was entertainment during the sumptuous meal of many courses in the 
        form of a musician playing a ‘pipa’, a Chinese lute, and a 
        very pretty young woman who told traditional stories in song.  
        It was mostly just background sound, but Yasmin found herself paying attention 
        to one of the stories as The Doctor and Lady Tseng talked intergalactic 
        economics. It concerned a supernatural being called the Ba Jiao Gui. 
        “Did I understand that right?” she asked the Honourable Taxman. 
        “The Banana Tree Ghost?” 
        “You did, Madame,” Lei Jing assured her. “The Chinese 
        Banana Tree was transplanted to Xian Xian many generations ago and grows 
        in most districts, though its fruits are not edible as you might imagine.” 
        “And the ghost?” 
        “It is to be hoped that we did not import those along with the seeds 
        of the trees,” Lei Jing answered. 
        Yasmin agreed. The ghosts, according to the song were not to be trifled 
        with. They could be summoned with gifts and promises and in old China 
        they were often consulted over matters of chance like lottery numbers. 
        How many people actually got the big win that way is uncertain, but if, 
        having been given such fortune by the Ba Jiao Gui, proper thanks were 
        not given, then there were terrible forfeits, usually the life of a loved 
        one. 
        Harsh, Yasmin thought, but perhaps not surprising. It was never wise to 
        double cross a fairy in any culture.  
        But it was just a story, she reminded herself. Such colourful tales turned 
        up everywhere, some of them remaining buried in the past, others given 
        a new shine by Disney. Either way, nobody took them seriously. 
        Nobody except Lord Changming. Yasmin noticed his face as he stared at 
        the singer. If she didn’t know better she would have thought he 
        was actually scared. His face was pale and waxy, his lips trembled and 
        his eyes were wide as if in shock.  
        The song ended and the pipa tune quickened in tempo. The next offering 
        was a comical song of a young man who asked another kind of demon or ghost 
        for a love potion and ended up in a situation much like Titania in a Midsummer 
        Night’s Dream, except he was doomed to permanently declare his love 
        for a long haired mountain goat. 
        A MALE goat, at that, which was the rib-tickling punchline of the tale 
        judging by the laughter around the table. Yasmin thought Lord Changming’s 
        laughter was a little bit forced. He was definitely shaken by the darker 
        tale of the Ba Jiao Gui. Every so often as the evening wore on, Yasmin 
        noticed the young Lord’s expression fade to something like anxiety, 
        only to be fixed back into an attentive smile before his wife or Lady 
        Tseng might notice. 
        She mentioned it to The Doctor later after they had dismissed their attendants 
        and were settling down to sleep in their tapestry rich guest chamber. 
         
        “This would be in the way of a copper’s intuition?” 
        The Doctor asked her. “Suspicious body language and the like?” 
        “Yes, you could call it that. Changming was worried about something… 
        something that the story of the Ba Jiao Gui triggered. When the girl was 
        singing he was absolutely petrified, and later he phased out all the time 
        as if it was preying on his mind.” 
        “Mmmm.” The Doctor thought about the matter briefly then shook 
        her head. 
        “Not our problem. He’s a Mandarin lord. He has power of life 
        and death over a whole territory. He should know how to solve his own 
        problems.” 
        Put that way, Yasmin had to agree. She slipped inside the silk sheets 
        of a huge, luxurious bed and thoroughly appreciated the wealthy end of 
        Xian Xian society even if she still wasn’t sure about the lower 
        class lives she had glimpsed. 
        She slept soundly until just before dawn when a blood-curdling scream 
        roused the whole household. 
        “It’s inside the palace,” The Doctor said as she and 
        Yasmin leapt from their beds awake and alert. 
        There were no more screams, but as they ran along a corridor and down 
        a flight of steps there were urgent cries for help. The Doctor pressed 
        past two young serving girls in their night attire and knelt beside a 
        figure stretched pathetically on the floor. 
        “Who was she?” The Doctor asked as she confirmed that the 
        young woman was dead. 
        “She…. She is my daughter’s night nurse,” said 
        Madame Li Su as she arrived at the scene. “Her name is… was… 
        Ang Fu Wai. She….” 
        “Yas…. The nursery,” The Doctor ordered peremptorily, 
        cutting off all other thoughts. Yasmin ran just a little slower than Madame 
        Li Su and reached the nursery with her. The need for somebody in that 
        room with her police experience if not her jurisdiction was obvious. 
        Her heart was in her mouth as she ran. The thought of harm done to the 
        baby was just too horrible. When she saw the window drapes blowing as 
        if somebody had entered or left that way she thought the very worst. 
        But a gurgling sound from the crib relieved her. After a brief glance 
        at the child she ran to the window and looked out. 
        There was a long drop to the garden below and no sign of a rope or ladder. 
        At first she was sure there was nobody around in the half light, then 
        she spotted Lord Changming. He was half dressed, shoeless, but thrashing 
        plants to pieces with a long sword as if he sought an intruder hiding 
        among them. He was particularly brutal to what was either a short tree 
        or tall shrub with big spiky yellow blossoms that he was hacking all over 
        before taking a long swing and severing the whole of the bush from its 
        stem like a swift beheading. 
        He almost looked as if he thought the tree was the murderer and he was 
        taking out his revenge upon it. 
        There was movement behind her and Yasmin turned to see Madame Li Su lifting 
        the baby from the crib. It was only then that the idea of a ‘changeling’ 
        came into Yasmin’s mind, but the mother seemed to know her own child 
        and The Doctor, hurrying to join her, quickly pronounced ‘no harm 
        done’.  
        “But who killed the nurse?” Madame Li Su asked. Having assured 
        that the child was well, she was justifiably concerned for the servant 
        whose body, respectfully covered in a cloth, still lay at the scene of 
        the crime. 
        “That still remains to be seen,” The Doctor answered her as 
        they stood by the body. “Death was by ligature strangulation. There 
        are thin marks around her neck from some kind of cord that was pulled 
        tightly until she was asphyxiated.” 
        Yasmin shuddered. It sounded like something out of CSI. And perhaps it 
        was exactly that. The Doctor was the crime scene officer, and she would 
        be the one to find out who had done this terrible thing – with Yasmin 
        as her assistant. She briefly wondered if it ought to be the other way 
        around. Yasmin was a REAL police officer after all. 
        But The Doctor was the one with the Police Box and a dozen lifetimes of 
        experience. She was in charge. 
        “The murder weapon isn’t here,” The Doctor continued. 
        “And I can’t say for sure what it was. Not an ordinary rope 
        or cord. The marks are a strange texture and uneven thickness. I’ll 
        need to think about that.” 
        “Was she killed here?” Yasmin asked, looking around to see 
        if something that could be the weapon might be lying unnoticed.  
        “I think so,” The Doctor confirmed. “There wasn’t 
        time between the girl screaming and all of us reaching the corridor. She 
        must have run from the nursery, drawing her killer away from the baby. 
        But that leaves us with the problem of where the killer went. Ruling out 
        the window where Lord Changming was interrogating the plantlife there 
        are only two directions….” 
        “And people came running both ways,” Yasmin confirmed. 
        “I want to talk to everyone in the Palace,” The Doctor announced. 
        She stood and pointed to a pair of guards making the huge mistake of being 
        seen doing nothing. “You… see that the doors are all locked. 
        Nobody leaves the palace. You…” She pointed to one of the 
        serving girls. “Rouse the kitchen staff. See that everyone is given 
        breakfast, then interviews will be held in the receiving room.” 
        The Doctor was only a guest at the palace, but the note of authority in 
        her voice was obeyed by all. Even Lady Tseng herself made no objection 
        and in the receiving room two chairs were set on the dais so that she 
        and The Doctor sat in equal status. Madame Li Su and her husband were 
        next in status.  
        Yasmin took a place beside the court recorder and the honourable Tax inspector. 
        She watched with no little awe as The Doctor, who faced even the direst 
        perils with a grin and a clever quip conducted the murder inquiry with 
        a solemn tone and a stern expression that booked no dissembling while, 
        at the same time showing gentle patience to nervous and bewildered servants. 
         
        Unfortunately, the result of a whole morning’s interrogation was 
        a huge negative. Nobody knew anything that might identify the murderer. 
        The Doctor and Lady Tseng conferred in low voices, neither entirely sure 
        what more could be done. 
        “Hold on,” Yasmin said, interrupting their conference. “There’s 
        some people you haven’t spoken to. The entertainers from last night….” 
        “They did not remain in the palace,” Lady Tseng answered. 
        “There is a house outside the walls where such visitors are accommodated. 
        It… is a tradition.” 
        ‘Mummers and acrobats must be outside the town boundaries by dusk’, 
        thought Yasmin. A municipal rule found almost everywhere that travelling 
        performers were associated with vagabonds and thievery.  
        “But they might know something,” The Doctor suggested. “Have 
        them summoned.” 
        The summoning was done with alacrity. The rest of the household was sent 
        about their duties as the pair of musicians were brought into the receiving 
        room.  
        The pipa player looked bewildered by the summons and answered the questions 
        put to him in a nervous but almost certainly truthful tone. 
        The woman, who identified herself for the court reporter as Mi Sang Miao, 
        spoke with a confidence that ought to have convinced all present of her 
        innocence, but, strangely it did not. There was something in her voice 
        that caused consternation to anyone who had learnt to listen like a police 
        officer. 
        And Yasmin had certainly learnt to do that. She was also very good at 
        interpreting body language which was much harder to control. 
        Either way the woman was lying.  
        And something else. It was even more subtle than her attempt to deceive, 
        but Yasmin recognised it from her years as a lowly probationary officer 
        of the South Yorkshire Police Service.  
        Contempt. 
        In a world where social hierarchy was everything, standing in the presence 
        of the ruling Mandarin, and The Doctor, who was a figure of authority 
        ANYWHERE, this lowly travelling musician was behaving like a BMW driver 
        in a sharp suit who didn’t think he had to explain to a female muslim 
        in a constable’s uniform why he had parked in the disabled zone 
        outside the leisure centre. 
        She wasn’t even looking at Lady Tseng. Rather she was looking to 
        her left side where Lord Changming sat beside his wife, Madame Li Su, 
        their baby cradled in his arms. 
        Changming rose from his seat, slowly, looking back at the singer with 
        an expression that was very easy to interpret. 
        Fear.  
        The same fear he had displayed last night whenever he thought nobody was 
        looking.  
        “The Ba Jiao Gui!” Yasmin exclaimed. Later she wondered if 
        it was a copper’s intuition or a far deeper, primal instinct that 
        let her put together all that body language and facial expression into 
        a likely explanation. “Doctor…. The Ba Jiao Gui!” 
        The Doctor looked at Yasmin, then quickly turned to look at Mi Sang Miao 
        – if that was her true name.. In the moment that took, the singer’s 
        face turned a mottled green with a texture like cracked dry mud., Her 
        eyes lost all their colour except a bloodshot yellow and her lips curled 
        back to reveal sharp brown incisors. The whole face contorted into an 
        expression of pure hatred directed at Changming. She let out a low keen 
        that had little human voice left in it and thrust out her arms. The wide 
        sleeves of her shirt fell back as thin vines shot from her wrists. Yasmin 
        was probably the only witness who thought of Spiderman throwing out his 
        webs. The The Ba Jiao Gui’s vines lashed out just as quickly, tangling 
        around Changming’s legs and tightening until he could no longer 
        stand. Yasmin rushed towards him, grabbing the baby from his arms as he 
        fell to his knees. The Doctor put herself in front of them all, drawing 
        her sonic screwdriver from within her gown and aiming it at the grey-green 
        vine. There was a sizzle and an acrid smell as the vine was severed. 
        “The same texture as the ligature that killed Ang Fu Wai – 
        the nursemaid who we have all managed to forget about in all this drama,” 
        The Doctor confirmed, grasping a piece of it in her hand. “Strong 
        stuff, nearly unbreakable. We have our murderer.”  
        Lady Tseng’s guards had already surrounded the girl, two of them 
        holding sharp swords against her wrists, just above the place where she 
        had sprouted deadly vegetation. Another held a dagger against her neck. 
        “She IS the Ba Jiao Gui,” Yasmin confirmed. “The banana 
        tree ghost. Though not so very much of a ghost, really.” 
        “She’s flesh and blood,” The Doctor confirmed after 
        a sweep with the sonic in analysis more. “She’s also plant 
        fibre and chlorophyll, which is actually not totally unique in a universe 
        of amazing diversity. I was once flirted with by a tree called Jabe…..” 
        “Yes….” Yasmin quickly cut of one of The Doctor’s 
        anecdotes. “But why? What does she want with the baby? Because it 
        IS little Su Ling she wants, not her dad, not Ang Fu Wai who stopped her 
        in the nursery.” 
        “Yes…,” Madame Li Su demanded. “Why HAS she been 
        trying to take our baby?” 
        She directed her accusation at her husband, still kneeling, his legs still 
        tightly tangled in pieces of the severed vines, his head bowed in unmistakeable 
        shame. 
        “You were so ill throughout your confinement,” Changming said 
        to his wife. “I feared the child would not be born alive. I… 
        I made a bargain with the Ba Jiao Gui…. I did it for you, and for 
        our daughter. I did it for you….’ 
        “What was the bargain?” Lady Tseng asked in a quiet, controlled 
        tone which nonetheless had an edge of suppressed anger that may yet be 
        unleashed. 
        “He promised me the child if I assured it would be born healthy,” 
        said the Ba Jiao Gui as Changming floundered for words. 
        “You’re kidding!” Yasmin exclaimed. “Who in their 
        right mind would do that? Your own wife… your own baby…..” 
        Madame Li Su might have asked the same question if she was not holding 
        back her anger in emulation of her mother. 
        “I never meant to keep the bargain,” Lord Changming protested. 
        “I would never have given her the baby….” 
        The Ba Jiao Gui snarled incoherently, but her meaning was clear enough. 
         
        “So you are dishonourable as well as a disgrace to your father’s 
        House,” Lady Tseng said to Lord Changming with a little more of 
        the suppressed anger showing. “You do well to hang your head. You 
        should rightly be ashamed of yourself.” 
        “Yes, he should,” The Doctor agreed. “But that is a 
        family matter. What we must deal with here is justice for an innocent 
        young woman who did nothing but try to protect the baby from an intruder.” 
        She turned to look into the burning eyes of the Ba Jiao Gui and shook 
        her head safely. ‘ For that, YOU should be ashamed and you SHOULD 
        be punished. And I’m actually sorry about that, because it is actually 
        HIS fault for making that bargain. Once it was made you were bound to 
        fulfil it in every way – by making sure the baby was born fit and 
        healthy and with all ten fingers and toes - and also by claiming the child 
        as your end of the bargain.” 
        “It is a geas upon me to close every bargain I make,” the 
        Ba Jiao Gui admitted. “The nursemaid… tried to stop me. But… 
        you should know… her innocent death lifts the geas… the bargain 
        is unmade. I cannot pursue it any longer. The child is safe from me.” 
        “That is honourably said,” Madame Li Su conceded. But….” 
        “But Ang Fu Wai is still dead,” said The Doctor, again with 
        a sorrowful shake of the head.  
        The Doctor stepped back, knowing that the rest was out of her hands. Lady 
        Tseng, still calm and controlled in her tone formally pronounced the Ba 
        Jiao Gui guilty of murder. 
        “I can be merciful,” she added. “I will not have you 
        executed., “But you will be jailed for the rest of your life. My 
        geas on you is that you will not use any of your unnatural gifts upon 
        your jailors, amd should you escape your jail your life will be forfeit. 
        Is that clear?” 
        “It is clear, and it is a bargain,” the Ba Jiao Gui replied. 
        Lady Tseng nodded. The guards took the guilty creature away. For a long 
        few minutes nobody else spoke or moved, then Madame Su Li stepped towards 
        her husband. 
        “For the sake of our child I forgive your dishonourable behaviour, 
        and will not cast you from her or me,” she said. Lady Tseng nodded 
        her approval of her daughter’s idea of a family intervention and 
        smiled faintly. 
        “Ang Fu Wai will be given an honourable funeral. Her family will 
        be compensated. Her name will be remembered and revered in this House.” 
        “Indeed,” The Doctor added in agreement.  
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