San Francisco, November, 1941
Bayang

Her prey was only ten feet away now.

The boy called Leech had a shock of brown hair but the fold at the corner of his eyes suggested some Asian blood. He was small for his twelve years, but that was probably from lack of proper nourishment since he had grown up on the vicious streets and alleys of San Francisco. He was quick but not particularly strong. Nor did he seem aware of his powers yet. But she knew better than to be deceived. Beneath the childish exterior beat the heart of a cold-blooded killer who had to be stopped before his special abilities could turn him into a monster.

His chubby friend, Koko, presented only a slight difficulty. Oh, Koko looked harmless enough with his pear-shaped body and plump cheeks, but he carried a faint whiff of magic—though not enough to threaten Bayang.

It should have been easy to kill Leech, but he had acquired a bodyguard, Primo Chin. Primo was not particularly tall but built as solid as a boulder, and everything about the man suggested that he could be lethal with his fists and feet. Whether walking or standing still like now, the man was always balanced on the balls of his feet, keeping his center of gravity about his hips, ready to spring into action at any moment. And his eyes were always scanning his surroundings alertly. More importantly, he reeked of wizardry.

Her discreet inquiries about Primo Chin had met with blank walls—no family, no history—as if he had suddenly popped out of thin air into a San Francisco street. All she knew was the obvious: that Primo had plenty of money but never spent it unless it was on her prey.

Bayang concluded that unknown persons had sent Primo to protect Leech. After she was done here, she would have to ferret out their identities and deal with them, too. But that could wait. First things first.

Despite the urgency, Bayang had bided her time. Patience was the reason why she had survived this long and why she had been successful in all of her tasks, even murder.

When Primo began educating the boy in both fighting skills as well as regular school subjects, she had worried a bit. She knew Primo was actually preparing her prey for his true powers by developing his body’s agility and balance and his mind’s focus and knowledge.

If Primo had begun the actual lessons, Bayang would have had no choice but to attack immediately. Even if it meant her death, her prey could not be allowed to survive.

However, as long as Primo’s instruction remained at a basic stage, Bayang had waited, hoping that an opportunity would present itself. When she learned they had bought tickets for the incoming show at the Hearn Museum, she knew that her moment had come. She would make her move within the galleries where the crowd would mask her approach and the man would be distracted by the displays.

She purchased a ticket, too, joining the line on the appointed morning. The museum’s massive, windowless, cream-colored walls dwarfed the people eager to see the new exhibit, the Treasures of the Silk Road, that was going to open today. Two-story-length banners hung down the front and the sides with pictures of gold and jewels, and in smaller letters at the bottom proclaimed: “Kushan: The Empire of the Moon.”

San Francisco was a city that valued spectacle and style in everything from its architecture to its criminals and even its politicians. And what could be more spectacular or stylish than to see priceless antiques that no one else in America had seen?

The spectators were in a holiday mood because the autumn sun had burned through the morning fog, and sparkled through the water rising from the fountain. Water sprites, looking graceful even in their baggy civil-service uniforms, molded the fountain spray into ever-changing shapes that seemed to dance across the surface of the reflecting pool. A naiad was tidying up some dead leaves at the base of her tree, its branches pruned over many years forming knobs. Seagulls had floated in on the winds from the sea and were drifting lazily in the cool, crisp air.

The fine morning seemed like a good omen for her task. As Bayang felt the sun against her face, she reflected idly that it was not bad for a human city.

She had not asked to be an assassin and even now part of her hated killing. Time and again, she had asked to be transferred to other duties, but her superiors had refused. They told her that this assignment fit her talents the best and, besides, she had developed an unusual tolerance of humans. Most of her people would have been uncomfortable meeting a single hairless ape, let alone rubbing shoulders with them. More importantly, what she did was for the good of their people.

However, after so many centuries plying her trade, the explanations had worn thin and she was weary of her missions. She forced those thoughts aside, telling herself she needed to focus on the task at hand. Her eyes swept the scene again.

On one side of the broad museum steps, a newsreel crew was setting up a large, cumbersome movie camera to record the momentous occasion.

Food sellers had wheeled their carts next to the line of waiting spectators. Already, enticing smells were rising from the pots and grills as frog-shaped imps heated the food. Bamboo trays of dim sum were already steaming and kebabs were sizzling on the grill so that the air was filled with delectable smells.

A vendor in fool’s motley was helping his pumpkinlike imp blow up balloons. A mountebank in rented wizard’s robes and cap had set up some boxes and was trying to interest a group of young men in a game of “Find the Pixie Beneath the Walnut Shells.”

In fact, before the spectators reached the sanctuary of the museum, they were going to have to run a gauntlet of peddlers, entertainers, swindlers, and beggars—very similar, Bayang thought, to the group running City Hall across the plaza, except that the politicians had brass name plates to separate themselves from the rabble by the museum.

She glanced down when she felt a slight tugging. A three-inch imp with purple leathery skin straddled her purse as it attempted to pry open the clasp.

The imp grinned up at her sheepishly and touched his forehead. “Morning, ma’am.”

Bayang took pride in her disguises. Any apprentice witch could change her physical appearance, but it took skill to transform what lay beneath the skin. Bayang had become a good enough actor to go on the stage if she wished.

She had assumed the character of an office worker in her sixties, with a back slightly hunched from slaving over a desk most of her life, eyes squinting because she couldn’t afford eyeglasses on her meager salary. She appeared to the whole world as a mousy woman who thought herself extremely daring for playing hooky from her job this morning. In short, someone whom most people would ignore.

Suddenly her face wrinkled into a puzzled but kindly expression that was in contrast to her low, menacing words to the imp trying to open her purse. “Go away or I’ll feed you to the pigeons. Ones with dull beaks so it will take a long time.”

“No need to get nasty,” the imp complained as it dropped out of sight among the forest of legs.

When Bayang raised her head, she saw Primo studying her. He couldn’t have heard her warning to the imp so, still keeping in character, she spoke loudly and excitedly to her neighbor in line, a middle-aged man, about how good the nearby salamander was at juggling flaming balls, and when the salamander swallowed the balls one after another, she applauded as if she had never seen anything so marvelous in her dull, gray life. When his master held out his belled hat, she dropped a quarter into it as if she considered that a queenly award.

From the corner of her eyes, she saw that Primo was surveying another part of the crowd now, apparently having decided she was harmless.

As the great bronze doors suddenly swung open and the ripple of excitement passed through the humans, she knew that it was almost time to finish her task and once again protect her people.