#only to then have MK lose control and go full ''harbinger of chaos''?
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So, I personally believe that Wukong knew about MK's monkey identity the whole time (here's my decent sized theory post on it; tldr: SWK had to have known he didn't give MK powers), but yeah. It really makes you question, why did Wukong sincerely believe that MK could handle the Demon Bull King by himself? SWK does something similar in 3x14, letting MK go on his own to stop LBD's reality ending flame attack.
So like, Wukong KNOWS how powerful MK is, but MK doesn't know how powerful MK is. MK believes in his friends first and himself last, contributing to the "they tell us a story and we find that smidge of motivation we need" phenomenon.
And, tbh, I'm not sure MK ever fully believed that being a hero was all "fun and games". Like, even from AHIB:
MK: "But what about DBK?"
Sun Wukong: "Pffftt, what about DBK? You can handle it! Consider it a trail!" MK: "But I- *sighs*"
-
That is not the face of someone who's excited to be the Monkey King's new successor lol. He knows the weight of the task that's just been handed to him—which continues into 1x01 Bad Weather:
Wukong: "A-anyway, nothing worth anything comes for free *coughs*." MK: "But what about my friends? The city? They're all counting on me!"
-
This is about the point in the ep where it's clear MK's earlier "let's take down the bad guys!" excitement was just part of his false bravado ("fake it till I make it?"). He really does understand the responsibility he has as the Monkie Kid. MK is constantly worried that he's not strong enough, that he's doing things wrong, and that the next challenge that comes along is something he's won't be ready for (i.e. all of s2 past Minor Scale, 1x10 when MK expresses doubts of beating DBK, etc.).
And God, don't even get me started on MK's perception of Wukong. The contrast between Ink Mk going "We're just like Wukong! A fraud! A trickster! Destructive!" and MK then later going "But Monkey King's a Hero he wouldn't just-". The drama, the cognitive dissonance, the fact that one of MK's main gripes with Azure is the way he tried to turn MK against Wukong ("When really you were just using me to get what you wanted! To turn me against my own mentor!"). Like uh-oh we are in trouble.
So I'm like, utterly obsessed with MK and Wukong's relationship, because it's like, Wukong has borderline unreasonable faith in MK and MK is willing to put pretty much anything on the line for Wukong (risking the curse being released in 4x02, ready to "meet his fate" FOR him in 4x13), yet MK is also purposefully ignoring SWK's mistakes/flaws and thinking in binaries of "good guy" and "bad guy". And at this point I'm not sure what they wouldn't do for each other, or where is too far to go for each other, and let me tell you girl it's edging on unhealthy.
#Am I perhaps rooting for SWK to have absolute faith in MK and believe sincerely in MK's goodness#only to then have MK lose control and go full ''harbinger of chaos''?#Yes. Yes I am#Look the way Wukong practically cheers at MK's monkey form in 4x13 is so disconcerting#Literally felt like if people started clapping after Mei got the Samadhi fire in 3x10#Like: ohhhh haha Wukong you just have that much faith in MK huh#And it's gonna come crashing down#Like ''MK's heart has always been in the right place! All he does is help!''#And then BAM. MK snapping#*cough* anyways#that's enough from me asdfadsf#lmk#lego monkie kid#the light is no mystery#lmk analysis#long post
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<- Day 10: Care
Fluffy February Day 11: Quest - The Monkey King and The Monkey
Fandom: Lego Monkie Kid
Characters: Sun Wukong, Nezha, Jade Emperor, MK
(Lots of mentions of MK but actually pops up near the end, Sunburst Duo, Harbinger of Chaos MK, Alternate universe)
Word count: 4971
Summary: (TW: mentions of execution of a child) Takes place after the Samadhi Fire was separated from Red Son. In an alternate universe, Sun Wukong is summoned by the Jade Emperor, who gives him one final task: Wukong is to kill the Harbinger of Chaos before he can lay waste to Heaven— and the rest of the universe. But this has to be a mistake. The Harbinger of Chaos is just a little kid. Wukong’s next decision would be a lot easier if he didn’t want the Harbinger dead, too. (Inspired by The Horse and the Infant animatic)
Wispy indigo reached across the sky; rich, deep, and stunningly royal amongst the full galaxy beyond it. The stars glittered and winked, as if the world’s problems were only a fleeting thing to them. The night slept along. It would have been difficult for it not to, Wukong realized, since the sky in itself seemed to be a lullaby.
He could call it a painting. It had that look after all; like it had been touched up to perfection; like the splattered stars randomly lined up right where they were supposed to be. But Wukong didn’t consider himself an artist. So, then, would it really matter if he thought the night was beautiful or not?
What a strange thing to think. He should be rewarding himself with a good night’s sleep. Instead, here he was mulling over creation. Ridiculous.
“Wukong, I know I’ve already said this, but thank you,” came a familiar voice.
Wukong snorted to himself and turned to smile at his ex-sworn brother.
“I don’t mind the thanks– this’ll be the only time I get to see this side of you, so I’m enjoying it the best I can– but you were just about ready to go for my throat a few hours ago,” he said.
The Demon Bull King’s sincerity wavered at the tease, but he had always been an honorable opponent. He shook his head to keep the annoyance at bay and titled his broad nose up at the stars.
“This was important to me. Meeting Lady Iron Fan felt like my new beginning– if you’re going to make that face, look at me when you do it. I know you’re a hopeless romantic, simian. Hmph. As I was saying�� meeting Lady Iron Fan felt like my new beginning. And now I’m here with it laying in my palms, and I don’t want to hang on too tight or cradle it too carelessly,” said the Demon Bull King. “I want to be tactical with every step I take. The possibility of losing Red Son to the Samadhi Fire… it was… not an ideal thought. I had worried you weren’t taking it as seriously as I was.”
The Mystic Mountain did have a view Wukong could appreciate (when they weren’t in the middle of sealing an inextinguishable fire). But the colorfulness of it all quickly became sorrowfully bland. Wukong frowned at the twisted feeling and eyed the Demon Bull King. He had turned away to somewhere Wukong couldn’t see.
Wukong imagined it would have been where Lady Iron Fan, their son, and the others had spread out their own camps. With the journey too far and the extraction of the Fire too exhausting, it had been a practical decision to stay the night. Even Nezha had stayed; not by any other compelling force other than being a good sport to those who couldn’t simply bounce off to heaven.
The Demon Bull King’s eyes glinted with the surrounding stars. The look on his face was soft, like an old dog born on the streets.
Wukong remembered distant times where the young Demon Bull King had been eager to crush bones on the battlefield; where he had dreamed of only power and control; when family had been something the Demon Bull King had laughed at.
He turned away.
“Look at you, being a sap. It’s an… interesting look on you.”
“It’s hardly something I want you getting used to,” the Demon Bull King snapped. “In the morning, we will part ways and carry on with our existences. I have respect for you tonight. But what I do tomorrow and the days after will be separate from your shenanigans.”
Wukong could say a few different things to that. ‘When did things change?’, for one. ‘I can’t understand how you feel’, for another.
“Well said.” he settled on. He picked at a furry knot that had formed on his wrist and then groaned. “It’s not like I’d find any joy being in your inner circle. You’d drive me crazy with your incompetence to boil pasta.”
The Demon Bull King huffed and then grumbled.
“Sorry, what was that?” nudged Wukong.
“It was one time!”
Wukong’s fur bristled at the tone, but grinned knowingly. This was familiar territory. He was very good at dancing this dance.
“You boiled it twice as long as we told you to.”
“We put in double the pasta! It should have been double the time!”
“It doesn’t work that way! If you put the pasta into boiling water at the same time–”
“No! That doesn’t make sense. If you cook a thick slice of meat and a thin slice of meat, the thicker slice is going to need more time–”
“–because the heat is spread out! It’s not touching the outside and the inside at the same time.”
The Demon Bull King snorted, glanced back at his family with clenched fists, and then shook them in Wukong’s general direction.
“It is,” he said.
“Okay, it is but the pasta is like a million thin slices of meat so–”
“–it equals one thick slice of meat.”
“It’s admirable that you’re willing to die on this hill even though you’re wrong,” said Wukong smilingly.
“You irk me with your breathing.”
The Demon Bull King had obviously chewed more than he could swallow. He didn’t enjoy lengthy conversation to begin with, and had only prepared himself to say thank you and promptly scatter. The more Wukong went off-script, the more frustrated the Demon Bull King would become.
That was one thing that hadn’t changed about him. Wukong hid a fond smile at the thought.
He coiled and uncoiled his tail, sighed quietly, and then said, “I think I’m getting a little tired,” even though he wasn’t.
“Me too,” agreed the Demon Bull King, even though he wasn’t.
And that was it for the night– maybe even the rest of Wukong’s life. There would likely be no other times like this; a group of these warriors united under the stars; because the “battle” had already ended, and the rest of their lives readily laid in wait. Could he return to Flower Fruit Mountain and get fat off fruit for the rest of his life? It was what he had wanted, before. But the times had changed, and the desires had changed, and the people had changed…
But he was alone before he could find the words.
‘And that was just it, was it?’ he thought, watching the Demon Bull King return to Lady Iron Fan’s side with certainty. Things were moving before he was ready. He couldn’t pick up the pieces and place them back like pawns. “Forever” was much too long of a time for him to protect.
The last thought twisted in his belly. It squirmed, hissed, and Wukong suddenly felt sick with anger.
“…The sun, the sun,” Wukong murmured through his clenched teeth. He took a peek at the lazing moon and lashed his tail. “You bring us colorful light. You beautify the lovely flower of our soul.”
Wukong had believed it to be a lousy lullaby when his Master had taught him it. Tripitaka hummed it to himself first, caught the attention of a curious monkey, and sneakily recited the tune to his hyperactive pupil. Now, Wukong glanced at his sleeping form next to Ao Lie and passed quietly.
“Today we grow under the sunlight,” he mumbled, raising his hands and finding his cloud had obediently appeared at his side. Something twinkled on its surface. Maybe stars, maybe just a trick in the moonlight. He blinked the illusion away and settled into the cloud’s weightless surface.
“Tomorrow we will create a colorful world.”
The sky continued to spin.
“Wukong.”
Wukong’s eyes flung open. He shot frantically to his knees, felt the cloud disperse below him, and in the space between him and solid ground, his tail lashed out and sprung him back to his feet.
Nezha’s serious expression didn’t budge.
“Come on,” said Wukong, “I still got it.”
“Not if you’re letting anyone sneak up on you like that in your sleep,” replied Nezha, helpfully. He gestured his spear behind Wukong, urging him to look.
Ao Lie smiled a cat-like smile behind him and waved. He looked a little pale and might have been sweating more than usual, but nothing to call for concern. Beside him, Sha Wujing sipped what was probably tea from his chipped little cup. Wukong nodded politely at them.
On the other side of the site, the Demon Bull family had already left– no goodbyes were exchanged, only an air of respect– and Wukong’s twisting belly threatened to rear its ugly head again. The morning was still pink and yellow, young and new. It didn’t surprise Wukong that two warriors had woken up bright and early for the trek ahead.
“What’s wrong?” asked Wukong.
Nezha glanced back at the two pilgrims, then lifted his brows. “Private business, meant to be discussed privately.”
Wukong sniffled, but Nezha’s facade left little wiggle room; the poor prince’s fingers tapped anxiously against the shaft of his spear, hidden to the untrained eye, obvious to the Great Sage. Something was brewing behind the scenes. If it had anything to do with Nezha, then it had something to do with Heaven.
“Go ahead,” said Lie, snapping Wukong out of his thoughts. He smiled at him brightly. “We’re only waiting for the Master… err– Sannnzanggg– to wake up. I wouldn’t forgive myself if I left without saying goodbye, but it was a pleasure seeing you again, Wukong.”
“And Bajie,” added Wujing. The fins along his jaw fluttered as he took another long drink of his hot tea. “He hasn’t woken up yet.”
Lie huffed humorously, probably thinking over the previous day. He blinked at the snoring pig and then said, “yes, well, but it’s not like he did anything but stare the entire ritual.”
Nezha narrowed his eyes expectantly at Wukong and clenched his weapon.
“Right, then,” said Wukong, “tell the Master my goodbyes for me. ”
Briskly, Nezha turned and began to stride away from the group.
“Wow! Impatient today, huh?” called Wukong. He picked up into a jog to catch up and slipped in front of Nezha, beginning to walk backwards. “I didn’t want to embarrass you in front of the pilgrims, but I think you woke up on the wrong side of the bed this morning. Missing your holy, phoenix down-stuffed mattress in Heaven? How’re your joints? Stiff?”
Nezha wrinkled his nose (likely in warning) before finally stopping just underneath a jutted-out slab of stone; a defect in the site’s structure, perfect for a top-secret discussion.
Wukong tilted his head.
Usually, Nezha was straight to the point. He knew his duties and he knew how to do them, but something had shifted in the air– and Wukong’s worry shifted with it.
“Something must really be wrong if you look so… dejected. Cheer up, Nezha! It’s not like the world is ending,” he said.
“The universe is ending.”
“Hhhphhh… rough night?”
Nezha finally ripped his gaze from the stone behind Wukong and glared.
“Yes, actually. Can you stop being a fool for a moment? As you can probably tell, there’s a lot to say about this, and I’m trying to… find the right words.”
“Right,” said Wukong, “then let me help you out. I have a hunch that Heaven needs help from their old buddy the Monkey King to hunt a scary monster threatening to tear down the heavens. How’s that sound?”
“It’s more than that,” insisted Nezha coldly. He hung his head, sighed, and then steeled himself. “You’re infuriating, Sun Wukong. The only reason I’m before you right now is by orders from the Emperor. I respect you for your friendship with the Great Monk, but I advise you not to test your luck.”
The dawn shimmered against Nezha’s spear as it rocked back and forth from his fidgeting. Just beyond its point, Lie hovered over Sanzang just as he had when the Great Monk was still under their protection. Old habits die hard. Wukong understood the rigid behavior of Nezha when faced with duty and pride.
“I thought I had already served the sentence Heaven gave me.”
“This isn’t a sentence. You are an ally of Heaven,” Wukong made a face at that, and Nezha continued sterner, “and that means that the Jade Emperor may summon you as he pleases. What he may do if you do not answer his call remains to be unseen.”
Now that Wukong thought about it, maybe he shouldn’t have been so quick to reminisce over retired warriors. A threat to the universe simply meant another round for the Great Sage. He wouldn’t have to return to Flower Fruit Mountain just yet.
Wukong leaned back on the stone, twirled his trusty tail, then smiled.
“Fine. I’ll take the bite.”
The perfect, crisp air filled Wukong’s lungs and lingered like smoke.
“We have the enemy contained deep in the palace,” one of the guards was saying, probably someone of high-importance, but not high enough to matter, “where the Emperor will be waiting for you.”
“Seems like extra effort to bring me in if you’ve already got the guy,” said Wukong. He sniffled, caught wind of unripe peaches, and rubbed at his nose.
Heaven never changed much. The scents were the same, the lights were the same, and even the tiniest of pests couldn’t wiggle their way through security. If anything, the number of guards out in the garden seemed to have doubled the last time he was here.
Wukong smirked and titled his head up.
“While we have the source of the problem, the universe’s destruction has already been set into motion. The Emperor believes that our captive is our only way of discovering how to place everything back the way it was.”
The marble steps of the palace tapped under Wukong’s feet. His eyes peeked down to catch sight of any blemishes on the floor; smudges, cracks, anything out of place really; and only found his reflection.
Really? Were the floors that shiny? What overkill.
“If I’m not supposed to be finding this universe-destroying demon, then what am I supposed to be doing?”
His escort hesitated. He looked up at the heavens for assistance, fixed his helmet, and then continued with a brisk shrug, “uh, not my department. Sorry, sir. Please just follow me.”
Wukong rolled his eyes.
Heaven had plenty of secrets, but only few could really keep their mouths shut about it. Maybe he should have been more on-guard about the whole thing. This could have been a trap to imprison him, or an ambush behind the Emperor’s back. But that didn’t make sense. Nezha might be a strike to the shin, but Wukong didn’t think him to be deceitful.
The air went chilly the further down they went. Something like fog began to build, dewy on Wukong’s fur and itchy between his chest and armor. Marbled flooring twisted to stone; first neatly placed in a silly little flowered pattern, then turning chipped and askew.
He stepped over a particularly deep hole between two old stones. For a moment, he wondered if the flash of scuttling legs in the crevice were real or just his imagination– but then the smell of mold and dust washed over him.
“What a cruel place to keep your prisoners,” said Wukong, quietly. He blinked at the rows of torches and let the raspberry hues guide his eyes.
The guard hummed. Maybe he was still flustered about his close-fumble earlier, because he wasn’t making eye contact anymore.
They passed through the hall. The cells enclosed them from both sides.
“Only the worst of the worst are here,” said the guard. “The ones who have tried to bring down the Jade Emperor directly receive very long sentences. Not all of them live to see the end of it.”
Wukong eyed what looked like splintered bones between some bars. Then, he smiled.
“Ran out of mountains to use?” he asked.
The guard nervously cleared his throat.
Very little signs of life remained in this deep, forgotten prison. The spiders here would die from empty webs. The bones of past sentences were picked clean and likely crumbly to the touch. Only one other being lurked the cells, far against the corner, just before they reached the arch at the end of the hall.
A demon with bright, orange eyes grinned at him in the darkness.
Wukong slowed. He looked over long fangs and slithering hair. With a blink, he quickly caught up to his escort.
“Go in,” said the guard before Wukong could ask about the strange demon, gesturing to the entryway. He shifted his feet. He looked a little like a board; maybe a penguin; antsy and tense in the newest shift in the air. With a deep breath, he announced into the doorway, “Sun Wukong, Great Sage Equal to Heaven!”
Something rumbled. Fog blew out like a breath and swayed Wukong and the guard.
Wukong frowned, gave the guard a parting glance, and entered.
Wukong enjoyed biting more than he could chew. Not only was it a fun challenge, but the risk kept his muscles used, his mind spry, and his heart young. It was like eating peppers for the spice and suffering the kick afterwards. Wukong could risk it, because Wukong always survived, and death could never claim him.
Despite that, Wukong wouldn’t say he was “getting old”. It was honestly more of being “forever young”. The Great Sage couldn’t just retire. Retiring was for old people and fighting dogs– but he supposed that if he said that, it would mean that the Jade Emperor would have to retire. And soon.
Wukong looked over the blue-purple ombre cuts that were splitting at the seams against an undefeatable entity and instinctively stepped back.
“What happened to you?” he blurted, and then promptly nipped that disrespect in the bud. “Uhhh– errr– hi.”
The cuts– Wukong noticed stars shimmering in them, almost like a galaxy– warbled and sang like a winding clock.
“Hello, Monkey,” replied the Emperor. He said it almost like he was spitting it out, but Wukong tried not to take it personally. There could have been a number of reasons right now why he was being snippy.
The great force neared from the opposite side of the room. The fog, chilly to the bone, twisted in the space between.
“Hi,” said Wukong again. He blinked and cleared his throat. “So, what’s the problem?”
“You are here because Heaven needs your personal experience to help get rid of our prisoner.”
“Get rid of?” echoed Wukong.
“It can’t be killed,” said the Emperor, and Wukong’s eyes gleamed, “not in the normal sense. Yet it is too destructive to be imprisoned. Our only choice is to have it eradicated. As an ‘immortal’ yourself, you would know a thing or two about finding the loopholes in such matters.”
Wukong cocked his head and considered that. Killing an immortal? Just about everyone in Heaven was immortal. He had tried once, failed, and paid the price for it. And then he went on an entire quest to learn how to not kill people.
But this prisoner– this immortal– was immortal in a way that even Heaven couldn’t decipher it, much like how they couldn’t decipher Wukong’s layers of immortality. Except this immortal was… worse? Worse enough, at least, to not risk even the five-hundred-years-under-a-mountain punishment.
“What have they done?” he asked.
“Their existence is what threatens the universe.”
‘That doesn’t make any sense. Can you stop beating around the bush and tell me what’s really the problem?’ Wukong wanted to say, but the Emperor was brief for a reason, answering only what Wukong asked, and leaving the unknown unknown. Wukong needed to be clever if he wanted the full story.
“Like a harbinger?”
The Emperor tilted his chin up and said, “what an interesting choice of words. Yes, I like that. It’s a harbinger.”
“What of?”
“Chaos, I presume.”
“You don’t know?”
“I know better than you will.”
“Who sent it?”
“The Goddess Nüwa.”
That startled Wukong’s train of thought. He cringed, shook his head, and settled his hands on his hips.
“The Goddess of creation? She made humanity and now she wants to destroy it?”
“You fail to understand me, Monkey. My problem is not with Nüwa, it’s with her rebellious children. Will you lend me your aid or not?”
This was ridiculous. Absolutely ridiculous. The last thing Wukong wanted to be was a pawn for something he didn’t understand. The Master had urged him to think before he got too cocky in combat, and boy was Wukong thinking now– thinking about how much he was likely missing from this narrative.
‘The sun, the sun’, Wukong thought.
A deep grumble started in the Emperor’s throat, almost debating with itself. Wukong perked up, interested, but tried not to show it.
“I do hope you know,” said the Emperor, “that the Harbinger threatens all life– all existence– including yours.”
“…I doubt it,” said Wukong. He blinked– because his reply had blurted out of his mouth without much thought– before adding, “What I mean is that I can survive without food, without water, without air, and no blade can ever fatally puncture me. I can’t die; no name in The Book to change that.”
The Emperor quirked a large brow, then asked, “Do you think you’re exempt from the ‘entire universe’?”
Oh.
Well, maybe not, since Wukong lived in this universe. But he’s always been exempt before. The thought of something Wukong had never even met ending not only everyone else’s existence, but his as well? Come on.
…right?
Granted, he shouldn’t make it all about himself. His mind wandered to the other pilgrims, who didn’t have the mercy of a long life that Wukong (thought) he had. Then, he thought of his old brothers, and found that that had only been a drop of poison for his growing doubts.
This could have been a trick. The Emperor may have just wanted to use him. Something cold traveled up Wukong’s arm– likely the cool fog catching up to him– and his mind turned to the only thing he could think straight on.
Nothing could kill Sun Wukong.
The Staff chimed and twinkled. It extended from his ear and dropped familiarly into his hand.
“Where is it?” he asked.
The Jade Emperor’s face didn’t twitch. Part of Wukong had expected a look of triumph, or a twitch in his resolve, but that didn’t happen. The Emperor took two or three long strides (or floated, Wukong couldn’t tell), lifted his cape, and swooped it where he stood. In its fluttering wake, a cradle of leaves and moss popped out from the drab colors of this forgotten room.
Wukong, immediately, wanted to drop his weapon.
“No,” he spat, suddenly very angry, “No! Do you think this is a joke?”
“If you think I’m trying to play tricks, then I can advise you to close your eyes, count to ten, and look again.”
“You’re…,” Wukong started. He bared his teeth, taking in the Emperor’s challenging gaze before forcing his attention down toward the Harbinger.
The little monkey in the cradle looked up. It had been sleeping innocently, and it fluttered its eyelashes at the sudden light. Now, it was blinking those honey eyes at him.
“Hi,” it said in a tiny voice, fit for such a tiny thing.
The end of Wukong’s staff clinked against the stone floor.
“What is going on here?” he said, ignoring the child. He could feel his fur prickling with anger at the stale scent of Flower Fruit Mountain coming from it, weak and caked with something earthy and milky, but there.
“Do not forget what I’ve told you. The Harbinger being a stone monkey shouldn’t influence the facts; it’s dangerous, Monkey, and it’ll only grow to be our enemy if you allow your feelings to complicate.”
“A stone monkey!” cried Wukong, “my stone monkey, even! Born on Mount Huaguo! You’ve stolen it!”
“A Harbinger of Chaos!” shot back the Emperor, and Wukong willed himself to stay quiet. The little monkey shivered at the whipping fog. It reached up to Wukong with little hands, but he was quick to dodge them. “I urge you to think straight, Sun Wukong. Your similarities to it may have been the reason I chose you to meet me here, but the similarities end with your ability to change. You had opportunities, Monkey, but this one is doomed from the start. There is no changing what it will become. If you cannot see that, then you are as foolish as you were underneath that mountain.”
That cold, twisting anger curdled in Wukong’s belly. He ached to give the Emperor a piece of his mind. ‘Find someone else to do this’ he wanted to say, ‘how dare you shove the duty onto me’. But a voice, little but powerful, was chanting; ‘this thing will kill you. It could kill you. You need to kill it first’.
Wukong’s mouth went dry.
The little monkey cooed. Wukong, on instinct, tilted his head at it, and found that it was staring intensely at Wukong’s tail. He flicked it nervously. The little monkey giggled at the way it twisted.
“Mnkey,” it squealed, proudly, “mnkey!”
Wukong could feel the Emperor’s gaze on him. He was in the spotlight now, not the Harbinger, and whatever steps he took had to be perfect. What he wanted and what the Emperor wanted were quickly becoming blurred lines. Did the staff stay or go? Did he swing now or later?
“You want me to kill it?” he asked, stupidly, just to make sure.
“Yes.”
“I…” Wukong quickly tried to pull anything from his head, “I don’t know how, but if I could just have time to figure it out…”
The Emperor’s wounds warbled. Wukong watched one split further, cautiously, and he feared for a moment that he would just have to start lashing at the little thing. How cruel it would be if he had to force himself to stay here until it perished.
But then, the Emperor said, “Make haste, then. We can’t afford to waste the precious time that remains. Take the thing. Bring it wherever you’d like; the middle of nowhere, under the sea, to your mountain; find a way to get rid of it. I will have a member of my court check in on you daily.”
Daily? Eugh. How was Wukong supposed to relax when all he could look forward to was one check after another? They might as well be trapped down here for all of eternity.
“Right,” said Wukong, looking at the monkey, “yeah, rodger that.”
The monkey– Wukong didn’t want to call the monkey ‘it’ anymore– must’ve liked something that came out of his mouth. They smiled at him with itty bitty teeth, and Wukong felt cold at the way his heart melted.
“Right,” he repeated. He sent a fleeting glance at the Emperor before removing his cape.
The air here was chilly. The monkey’s fur was raised by the goosebumps forming on their skin, so he wrapped the poor thing with his cape and brought them up to his chest.
Something like a “thank you” mumbled from the monkey’s mouth. They tried to grasp onto Wukong’s fur, but the swaddle was too constricting, and his chest plate blocked any further attempt.
“I expect to see you soon, Monkey,” said the Emperor.
Wukong only nodded. He didn’t want to be in this foggy room anymore.
The Harbinger likely didn’t understand the conversation that had just happened. They looked too young to formulate too many words, much less distinguish between more than a couple– but sensing the tone was probably different. They were blinking at him as if spooked. Maybe they were clever enough to realize that they might have not been completely safe after all.
When Wukong left the room, the first thing he heard was a soft exhale.
He turned and glared at the prisoner.
“What?” he snapped, and the little monkey tensed. They cooed, as if trying to calm him down, and he pointedly ignored them.
“Nothing,” insisted the snake demon. But his voice was bubbly– giggly, almost– and he smiled toothily at Wukong. “You’re just an interesting character, Great Sage, just as I expected you to be.”
Wukong frowned. He couldn’t entertain this demon. He, too, had been a prisoner of Heaven once, but this one would likely go mad before he was freed of his misery. Wukong had gotten lucky. Wukong didn’t feel entirely lucky.
“Are you one of Nüwa’s children?”
The demon tilted his head. There was a hint of surprise that flashed across his eyes, but it may have been more amused than anything else. He tested the weight of the shackles around his wrists. They clinked, scraped against scales, and then settled.
“Aren’t we all?” he replied.
The Harbinger giggled. They must have thought his striking, glowing eyes were interesting. The snake demon smirked at them in return, lifting his fingers to wave them at the little thing.
Wukong, suddenly remembering that this whole story was lost to him, felt horribly like a pawn. He readjusted the child in his arms and briskly headed toward the stairs.
What would Wukong do? Was he to head back to Flower Fruit Mountain? That might be the best course of action– to regather himself from this unexpected event. Then again, he had no idea if the Harbinger had powers; like laser eyes, or fireballs. Maybe keeping them in a collapsable mountain wasn’t very smart.
“You bring us colorful light. You beautify the lovely flower of our soul,” he murmured to himself. The Harbinger pressed their head against the cool chest plate to listen. Wukong’s chest tightened. “Today we grow under the sunlight, tomorrow we will create a colorful world.”
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