The next day dawned clear and cloudless,
with Mount Hua rising into the sky along the horizon in sharp crisp lines.
Sei Koko's shrine was packed with believers for the morning service. Many
voices recited the Heart Sutra in a flowing chant. Sei Koko stood tall and
prayed using enigmatic hand gestures. She was a small woman, but her
presence was large beyond limits when she was in her shrine. No monks were
allowed in, but Yang Chun himself showed up to pray. His wife had
been in poor health and had not shown up recently, staying bedridden. The
air was choked with smoke from incense burners.
After the service, Sei Koko sat opposite
Yang Chun in a room next to a small library of sacred Daoist scriptures.
All of the texts in the library had been collected by Yang Chun. The
Daozong--a commonly known collection of about fifteen hundred Daoist
texts--had been completed some years before Sei Koko settled at the
shrine. Sei Koko didn't care much about these texts, but she kept them
organized in the library for appearances' sake.
The offerings piled up on wooden boxes in
the corner of the room interested Sei Koko far more than Yang Chun's
library of scriptures. All the offerings from believers were collected by
Sei Koko's attendant after each service and delivered to this room.
"We are pleased that the number of
believers has increased during morning services of late," Yang Chun said,
using the royal 'we.' "We are sure that they find it enlightening to gaze
upon the face of a saint."
"It is a blessing to see them all," Sei
Koko said. "The increase in believers is also due to your daily devotion
to your own faith, Lord Yang Chun."
"You give us too much credit. Please
accept this morning's offerings."
Sei Koko glanced casually at the offerings
and gave Yang Chun a restrained nod. Yang Chun knew that Sei Koko sent the
collected offerings somewhere else, though he wasn't certain where or for
what purpose. He didn't pry. To a man of Yung Chun's wealth and
properties, the offerings were trivial, and he let Sei Koko do whatever
she pleased with them. Yang Chun believed in Sei Koko with all his heart.
More offerings meant that Sei Koko's fame was spreading, which added shine
to his reputation as a pious man.
"By the way, Lord Yang Chun," Sei Koko
said. "If I may, I'd like to speak for a moment about your lady wife's
illness."
"Sadly, she has not shown any sign of
improvement," Yang Chun said, using a less formal tone. "I fear her faith
is not strong enough."
"I do not believe the illness can be cured
with stronger faith, an elixir, or anything of the sort."
Yang Chun's face changed color. "What? Is
there truly nothing to be done?"
"No, there is a way to help her, I think."
Yang Chun looked at her pleadingly and
said, "Please tell me. I'll do anything to help save my wife."
"She has already seen the bodhisattva of
universal compassion. We must not let this rare encounter go to waste. If
we build a temple here, erect a golden Daoist statue and pray to it, I am
sure that miracles will occur. Your wife will be completely cured."
"I see. I believe that you are right."
"After the temple is built, I shall recite
prayers to the bodhisattva every day. This would bring better fortune to
the whole of your house. I would like to do this to repay at least some of
your kindness."
"I am grateful. I am only too happy to
cover all construction costs. I will also provide you the land on which to
build this temple."
Yang Chun's reply was exactly what Sei
Koko expected, but her expression showed no gladness at having her sudden
request granted. Building a temple to the bodhisattva of universal
compassion would take at least three months. Selecting a place to build a
temple was also difficult; the place needed to be quiet, out-of-the-way,
and on sacred ground.
"I have an idea for a place to build the
temple," Yang Chun said. "The eastern side of Mount Hua is largely
uninhabited, and people rarely go there. Please select a parcel of land
from there."
"Thank you very much. We will be moving
out of the west garden immediately. I would like to make a pilgrimage to
the sacred mountain of Yongxing to offer prayers before construction
begins. Ko Biji and Danshi will be staying behind, so please take good
care of them."
"I will make the travel arrangements and
place a reliable attendant in the guardhouse. Please leave it to me and
don't worry about a thing."
***
Yang Chun's villa was located along the
valley on the eastern side of Mount Hua. There were no houses nearby, and
it was isolated on the edge of a cliff at the foot of the mountain. The
front was forested and protected by a thick wall made of packed earth.
There was a guardhouse at the gate in the wall.
A middle-aged woman hired by Yang Chun
moved in to handle matters at the shrine in Sei Koko's absence. Although
there were almost no visitors, she was tasked with watching over those who
came and went. She also carried out odd jobs when called upon by the the
main house and acted as a liaison with Yang Chun. Although the place where
Sei Koko was moving to for prayer was relatively isolated, it was
fortified well and benefited from the protection of a high cliff behind
the house. Sei Koko's temporary residence was an old wooden building with
two floors. Inside there were several large halls and over a dozen rooms,
as well as a study, a medicine room with a kiln, and kitchen facilities,
all connected by a single hallway.
***
Shortly after moving to her temporary
residence to the east of Mount Hua and completing preparations for
deciphering the Heavenly Book, Sei Koko got on the road to Hezhong (Shanxi
Province). There were few travelers on the mountain road, even on such a
clear day.
Sei Koko smiled as she walked, wrapped in
memories. "Yang Chun is a weak-willed man, so I'll ask him to give me
plenty of money. People of faith always have some weaknesses. I'll exploit
them all."
Until now, Sei Koko had been moving the
offerings off the premises with the help of an attendant. The attendant
selected the offerings, loaded them onto a cart, and then carried them off
to a secret location. This attendant was originally employed by a wealthy
merchant in Sichuan, but he was found guilty of embezzlement of public
funds and was taken in by Yang Chun's family. He was a believer himself,
and young. He had knowledge of how to use paper money, which was currently
in vogue, which was why Sei Koko had hired him on to start with.
The world's oldest paper money was called
jiaozi, and it began to be used in the capital of Sichuan Province
during the Song Dynasty (960 to 1279 CE). The weight of iron coins was
inconvenient, so wealthy merchants formed a union and obtained official
approval to create paper bills with the same value as the coins.
Incidentally, the first paper money in the western world was made a long
time after this.
And now, around fifty years after the
initial creation of paper money, Sei Koko mainly collected coins, which
were common and convenient for accumulating wealth. However, the coins
were subject to strict government regulation and control, so there was a
fear that they could be seized to alleviate the government's financial
difficulties. As these fears spread, the value of iron coins declined. Sei
Koko had her attendant exchange all her coins to silver and stored them in
the basement of her home.
Sei Koko considered all this as she
climbed the mountain path. She remembered the instructions she'd given to
Ko Biji and Tanshi before she left. "Deciphering the Heavenly Book
requires careful preparation. I thank you, Tanshi, for climbing the sacred
mountain and obtaining it, but your work is far from over. I am going to
climb Yongxing Mountain and pray for our success; I'll only be gone for a
few days. While I am gone, purify your body and mind, cutting yourself off
from all emotions and desires. Practice sitting meditation daily for as
long as you can. And don't forget to strictly observe all sexual precepts
while I'm away."
She'd given these instructions, but she
didn't expect Tanshi to actually follow them.
I know that they're in a relationship, and there's no way I can protect
them from the consequences of that. Now that I've obtained the Heavenly
Book, Tanshi no longer matters, but...
The sun set in the west as Sei Koko
thought about her situation. Long ago, while traveling, Sei Koko had heard
that this mountain was connected to Empress Wu Zetian. She had always
wanted to make this pilgrimage, and today her wish had come true. However,
even when she got close to the top of the mountain, there was no sign of
Empress Wu Zetian or anything to do with her. Sei Koko looked, but found
nothing.
"I suppose the connection to the Empress
was just a rumor," Sei Koko murmured to herself. She regretted that she
hadn't stopped in the village at the foot of the mountain.
Sei Koko stopped for the night along a
narrow forest path. She would be sleeping outdoors tonight, and she could
always look for signs of Empress Wu Zetian again in the morning.
Sei Koko admired Wu Zetian and worshipped
her as a deity at the Daoist altar in her shrine. She believed that the
Heavenly Book had fallen into her hands solely because of her daily
prayers to the Empress.
Restless, Sei Koko got back on the forest
path and looked for a better place to camp. As she walked, a dark swirl of
wind accosted her, pushing her back and down so that she fainted.
When Sei Koko regained consciousness, she
heard music playing all around her. The sky was dark, but there were
lights nearby, bright as daylight. She sat up, looking around with her
eyes wide.
Sei Koko lay on the ground in a palace
garden. Fireworks burned in all directions, shooting into the sky and
exploding overhead. A pearl curtain hung in the center of a high platform:
the perfect place for a nobleman or woman to sit and observe the
fireworks. On either side of the curtain sat ladies-in-waiting dressed in
purple robes and tiaras made of gauzy silk. The music continued to play,
though Sei Koko didn't see any musicians.
As Sei Koko gaped in shock, one of the
ladies-in-waiting stepped forward. "Please have some decorum. You
are in the presence of Empress Wu Zetian," she said in a scathing tone.
Empress Wu Zetian was the first, last and
only female ruler of China. She was Empress during the Great Tang Dynasty,
and ruled over China during a renaissance of art, culture and trade. Born
the daughter of a wealthy lumber merchant, she was chosen by the Emperor
Taizong (c. 598-649 CE) at the age of fourteen as a concubine. After
Taizong's death, she stayed at a temple, but was picked up by Emperor
Gaozong (ruled c. 649-683 CE) and became a concubine again. The
intelligent and beautiful Wu Zetian took over government affairs in place
of the sickly Emperor Gaozong. Two years after Gaozong's retirement, she
finally became the Empress herself--after serving as a concubine for
seventeen years. Wu Zetian ruled for forty-five years, wielding immense
power and influence, and passed away at the age of eighty-two.
In life, Empress Wu Zetian was an ardent
believer in Buddhism and Daoism, but in private life she was also
extremely promiscuous. She favored a renowned defrocked monk with
extraordinary stamina
1 and dragged
men into her bedroom regardless of their status if they pleased her.
Politically, she set up a private secret police and attempted to purge the
political world of her enemies. When she was old and infirm, her
opponents, including Zhang Jianzhi,
2
drove out Wu Zetian in favor of her son. Empress Wu Zetian died hating her
enemies, unable to avenge herself.
Sei Koko stared at the lady-in-waiting
with an expression of disbelief. She couldn't possibly be before Empress
Wu Zetian--the empress had died three hundred and eighteen years
ago.
"How can something like this happen...
where am I?" Sei Koko tried to keep her voice low, but the lady-in-waiting
heard her.
"Your doubt is understandable, but the
Empress is here," the lady-in-waiting said.
"She is here..."
The pearl curtain parted soundlessly,
revealing Empress Wu Zetian upon a throne, wearing her hair in a topknot
to denote her status. She was eighty-two years old, and much of the beauty
of her youth had withered.
Sei Koko prostrated herself before the
empress.
When the lady-in-waiting spoke again, her
tone was more polite. "You have worshiped the empress for many days and
nights. This is the result of your devotion. Please step forward."
Sei Koko crawled forward and prostrated
herself again.
Then Wu Zetian spoke in a cultured and
dignified voice. "Sei Koko. You and I have quite a history. I am afraid
that your conjectures and theories are correct--my spirit has been lost in
the underworld for all this time."
Sei Koko gasped. "I have always worshipped
you as my goddess. You rose to the highest position of power that a woman
can achieve. Why are you lost in the darkness of the underworld? What are
you looking for?"
"I mastered the arts of a sorceress and
enjoyed many blessings in life, but that life was cut tragically short. It
is said that Peng Zu enjoyed youthful energy and vigor even when he was
seven hundred and sixty-seven years old; I think I should like to emulate
that. And the resentment I felt at being betrayed by Zhang Jianzhi
and the others has not disappeared. The time has come for me to be reborn
as a young woman once again."
"Reborn?" Sei Koko asked.
"I remarked upon my connection with you
already. It is not a shallow connection. Your daughter's life will be cut
short because of me."
"What? Ko Biji will die?"
"Do not grieve for her. She will be
reincarnated. And when my soul is reborn through her, I will chase all my
previous aspirations. I shall ally with the man that heaven has decreed
for me and take over the world."
Sei Koko shook all over. What Wu Zetian
was saying was completely unbelievable. "You are saying that Ko Biji will
be reborn as you, and that you will take over the world?"
"Yes. I require a sorceress for this. I
shall regain my former power and then some, and then I shall have my
revenge on Zhang Jianzhi and all who aided him."
"To think that you would go so far..." Sei
Koko was terrified by the depth of Wei Zetian's grudge against those who
had wronged her.
"Sei Koko. You are a foundling from
Ōmushū,
3 correct?"
"Yes." Hearing the name of her home after
such a long time caused Sei Koko a touch of embarrassment. She looked
away. Sei Koko hated thinking of her past.
"There is no need to be self-conscious,
Sei Koko. I know all about you."
Sei Koko was horrified. She thought that
she had fled her past successfully, and had no desire to let it touch her
here. "I see." She tried to say more, but Wu Zetian talked over her.
"For the sake of your future, you must
reflect on your past. You were picked up by a traveling foreigner, and as
a child, you were dragged to Khitan and Tangut, to India and to the
western continent, where you endured a series of hardships... And at the
age of eight, that foreigner made you his wife."
"Oh, how cruel... Please, say no
more."
The stranger had adopted Sei Koko when she
was very young. He was said to be the child of an Indian and a westerner.
Regardless of who he truly was, he disguised himself as a traveling
merchant and made a living as a trader across China and the rest of the
world. He was knowledgeable in foreign languages and sold information
about each country to their enemy nations. He had likely picked up Sei
Koko in the first place in an effort to obscure his true identity. Sei
Koko's linguistic ability was the result of this stranger's education.
"Your resentment, your hatred... the
stranger who raised you died, and your lonely wandering continued."
"Please, stop." Sei Koko threw herself
down in agony.
"Listen, Sei Koko. During your wanderings,
you were attacked by foreigners and gave birth to a child with an unknown
father. You hated the men, you hated the parents who abandoned you... no,
you hated everyone. Every single person in the world."
Tears streamed down Sei Koko's cheeks. She
hung her head to hide the shame she felt.
Still Wu Zetian did not cease her
exploration of Sei Koko's past.
"I told you to listen. Now I ask: who was
it that trampled upon your youth and ruined your life? Who was it that
sent you into the realm of vengeful ghosts and unthinking beasts? Your
hatred came from those people."
Sei Koko bowed all the way to the ground,
weeping.
"Don't cry, Sei Koko." Wu Zetian sounded
consoling and sad herself. "I will rescue you from this hell. You are
fortunate to have gained so many followers, but does collecting their
donations truly soothe your soul? For what purpose have you become a
religious leader? Success in this area will not make up for the horrors of
your past. No, you must dream bigger. Your ambitions must encompass the
entirety of the earth."
"I should try to take the world for
myself?" Sei Koko asked softly, raising her tear-stained face.
"That's right. I will take over the world
like I did before, seize the greatest wealth and power, and get revenge
for all the humiliation and hardships I've suffered up until now. That
revenge shall be yours as well."
"How?"
"I will become the reincarnation of Ko
Biji and protect you. Bet everything on your daughter's reincarnation."
A new light shone in Sei Koko's eyes. Her
daughter would be the reincarnation of China's powerful empress, and she
would be Wu Zetian's guardian. It seemed unreal.
"The world today is corrupt. There is no
order, only chaos, and the people have fallen into evil. The only way to
fight this evil is with more evil. This is the perfect opportunity for you
to use evil to regain your good fortune."
Sei Koko put her hands together and stared
at Wu Zetian. Whether it was evil or magic, if she could borrow the power
of China's most powerful woman, she would have nothing to fear. She made
up her mind and said, "Empress, I will follow your instructions." She
bowed deeply once more.
"The time will surely come when you must.
Until then, gather your allies, study the Heavenly Book, and work hard to
understand Daoism. There is no need for haste. Await Ko Biji's
reincarnation, and do not fear."
"Um... yes, I shall," Sei Koko said,
stumbling over her words.
"Misfortunes in one's previous life can
create obstacles for reincarnation. Do not permit your daughter to take
any man to herself. If she dies with love for that man unfulfilled, you
will suffer for it in the afterlife."
Sei Koko bowed with her forehead to the
ground.
"Never doubt anything, Sei Koko. Do as you
are commanded."
"Yes, I will follow your orders."
Sei Koko looked up and was startled.
The palace of Wu Zetian had disappeared,
along with the empress herself. The music Sei Koko had heard went suddenly
silent. The forest surrounded her, accompanied by the echo of a cold
wind.
It was as if none of what Sei Koko had
seen was real. "Was it a dream?" Sei Koko asked herself.
The eastern horizon was white with predawn
light. Sei Koko stood up and staggered into the trees. She stopped still
when she saw a moss-covered stone lying in a bamboo thicket nearby. In the
morning sun, she saw that the stone was inscribed:
Dedicated to Empress Wu Zetian of Tang.
"It was not a dream," Sei Koko murmured.
"This is a message from the empress!" She knelt down and prayed before the
stone for a long time.
Translator's Notes
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