Monday, August 31, 2009

Once Upon a Time in Beijing...6: "The Young and the Wrathless"

Once upon a time in 2009 the Year of the Earth Ox , in the very auspicious month of August, three adventurous and unsuspecting friends named Niao-Miao, ChehCheh and her beloved Lhooh (by this time if you don't know who they are already, then you obviously haven't been reading 1 to 5 of this series!) - went to Beijing to sight-see and exercise.

One such "exercise" was a stroll to the Temple of Heaven. It's literal name is actually Altar of Heaven and it is a complex of Taoist buildings in the Xuanwu District. It was usually visited by the Emperors of different dynasties for their annual offering of prayers for good harvest.

One thing to note before proceeding is that Lhooh looks like a jolly ever-smiling Japanese, ChehCheh a petite and tanned-looking Filipina and Niao-Miao, with the exception of her ever-present hat, which was a dead giveaway to her being a tourist, looks Chinese enough to pass for a local. In other words, the three do not look related to each other.

As the usual wont after all that walking and climbing, the three energetic ones went to a stall to look through their wares and buy something to drink. They encountered an American woman who was for some time already having  difficulty in confirming from the seller if the green tea drink they had for sale had sugar or not (she had not gotten to the point though of trying out ChehCheh's way of pantomime).

Being the kind and good man that he was, Lhooh offered to interpret her request and the American was quite grateful for getting what she wanted at long last.  Lhooh and ChehCheh were quite chatty and friendly with the woman and talked of different topics.

After some point, the American guilelessly asked both, "Is she your daughter?" indicating the quietly smiling Niao-Miao at her side.

The three froze and sweat-dropped. Separate thought bubbles formed above each their respective heads.

Lhooh (deflated):
"After all the translating I did for her, this is how she repays me? By implying I am old enough to be a father of a woman in her late thirties?!!"


ChehCheh (slack-jawed):
"WHHUUTT?  Excuse me...I am younger than her! Okay, I admit... maybe a few months diff...but I am still YOUNGER!!"


Niao-Miao (pondering): 
"Hmm...maybe I should ask my brand-new parents for a monthly allowance?"


The American continued blithely and figuratively placed the final nail in her coffin by remarking further aloud, "Well, with Asians one never knows....and she looks so young..."

ChehCheh (with demonic red eyes and steam coming out of her ears):
"And I look old? I am SO going to scratch your eyes out you....you heartless !@#%$@*$^ woman!"


Lhooh (with protruding arrows in the heart and stomach and gritting his teeth painfully): 
"Just because I gained a few ounces...fine... more like pounds! ...It doesn't mean I look like an old, fatherly guy! Grrrrr! &*^$!*%@# woman!"


Niao-Miao (concerned look):
"Oh dear, my brand new father and mother seem to be turning purple...hope they didn't catch a virus or something else here in China..."

American woman (puzzled look): 
"Strange folk! Maybe they have multiple personalities - one moment so jolly, the next second, they are like limp noodles...but are there noodles which are purple-colored? I've never actually seen one, but this IS China, so I shouldn't be surprised..."

As Niao-Miao suddenly said into the gathering silence that they were really just good friends traveling together in Beijing, she warily checked her friends' stony expressions to see if they had already cracked into itty-bitty pieces.

The American woman finally said goodbye after a few more comments on her trip, saying that she had to rejoin her party, and with a cheery wave and "Nice meeting you!" she drifted off.

Niao-Miao turned to her friends but before she could say something, Lhooh began in a fatherly way - "Okay dear daughter of mine," and continued huffily - "no dinner for you tonight!" He then indignantly marched off into the sunset.

One millisecond after, ChehCheh smiled at her and said in suspiciously dulcet tones, "And as for you my young daughter," and at this point Niao-Miao's eyes widened "...no more midnight snacks...forever!" and with her hackles still flying high into the sky, ChehCheh quickly followed after the father...ehrm...I mean Lhooh.

Niao-Miao wailed on cue and like pouring salt into a wound, called after them in the loudest voice imaginable (with matching pathetic sobs), "Waaah!! Honourable father and mother!.... What did I do?!"

Her brand-new parents wrathfully chorused from a distance, "You are grounded...for 100 years!"

DISCLAIMER: While the tale has some factual basis, the thought bubbles and other actions after the shocking statement were all made by up the author because she was not old enough to know what really went on her parents' minds at that time.


36 comments:

  1. couldn't resist including it in my tales....hehehe!

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  2. anak----i swear, we almost dig her eyes!

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  3. bwahahahhaha!!! you made my day, CATGIRL!!! bwahahaha!!!

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  4. hehehehe!

    feeling unwanted child ...*sobs pathetically*

    seriously, I can afford to laugh at this, but maybe if I were in your shoes and asked if I was the mother of Loo, I'd be hyperventilating on the floor...

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  5. Actually I was thinking of putting sugar into her drink ...... LOTS & LOTS OF SUGAR!!

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  6. hi Chi, at last, nag post ka rin ng reply...hahaha!

    kidding aside, I know and am thankful you do visit my pages and posts...pero karon ra ko kakita ni comment ka...

    glad to know you enjoyed the tales :-)

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  7. hahaha!

    how sweet of Father Loo....*grin*

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  8. actually, Cuh, you can write na a novel out of this.."6 days in Beijing" thanks for sharing!

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  9. hehe..masyadong lengthly ba Nonzki? I'm afraid I just got carried away typing on and on..more suited to comic strip I think...

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  10. no...but it's like a good journal for a book na ...you write good!

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  11. thank you for your kind words, I guess enjoying the experience made it easier for me to recount it...hehe! and of course, di naman ako yung injured party *wink*

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  12. and as a thank you to Father Loo, I would like to acknowledge that like any good father *ehem* he let his daughter borrow money from him...hehe..with no interest I think...

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  13. ooh..I didn't notice, but mother snapped a picture of the American woman :-)

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  14. pwedeng pwede ka talaga scriptwriter sister. : )

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  15. eh ano nangyari, did the rude american finally get her green tea without sugar?

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  16. thats her holding the bottle of the green tea drink without sugar...she got it before she asked Loo the 64-million dollar question...hehe!

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  17. thanks :-) who knows, I may decide to try writing for the fun of it...

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  18. Why, Cat? Are you not having fun, yet?

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  19. it would be fun if I could make such an activity pay :-)

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  20. Ok. But next time, please don't start your write-up with, "Once upon a time," ha?

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  21. Here are some openings:

    Hamlet – by William Shakespeare
    Begins with character asking:
    “Who's there?”

    The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes – by Arthur Conan Doyle
    A Scandal in Bohemia
    Begins with:
    To Sherlock Holmes she is always THE woman.

    Actions and Reactions - by Rudyard Kipling
    Begins with:
    It came without warning, at the very hour his hand was outstretched to crumple the Holz and Gunsberg Combine.

    THE LOVES OF ALONZO FITZ CLARENCE AND ROSANNAH ETHELTON
    by Mark Twain
    Begins with:
    It was well along in the forenoon of a bitter winter's day.


    ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND by Lewis Carroll
    THE MILLENNIUM FULCRUM EDITION 3.0
    CHAPTER I - Down the Rabbit-Hole
    Begins with:
    Alice was beginning to get very tired of sitting by her sister on the bank, and of having nothing to do: once or twice she had peeped into the book her sister was reading, but it had no pictures or conversations in it, ‘and what is the use of a book,’ thought Alice ‘without pictures or conversation?’


    Peter Pan (Peter and Wendy) - by J. M. Barrie
    Chapter 1 - PETER BREAKS THROUGH
    Begins with:
    All children, except one, grow up.

    The Prince and Betty- by P.G. Wodehouse
    THE PRINCE AND BETTY
    CHAPTER I - THE CABLE PROM MERVO
    Begins with:
    A pretty girl in a blue dress came out of the house, and began to walk slowly across the terrace to where Elsa Keith sat with Marvin Rossiter in the shade of the big sycamore.

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  22. ah..pero kc I need some common thread in my Beijing series...kaya once upon a time...sort of the movie featuring Jet Li? you know..the Once Upon a Time in China...

    hayaan mo..if ever I go to Sicily or Russia, it will be something different..but still connected to a movie or book...

    hmm...probably a passage from the Godfather or yung From Russia with Love :-)

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  23. ...na shock kayo, na right there and then the woman should have been corrected di ba..ayy...well maybe Niao-Mao ´has got a real baby face...:)

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  24. well...parang nauuhaw lang talaga yung American, hindi ko mapagkakamalan na anak niya si Niao-Miao..

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  25. could be...thirst does strange things to a person...baka mirage :-)

    or baka kc sugar-free drink, kaya ganon...

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  26. hahah! if we were in the middle of the Gobi desert sana, we could blame that...

    anyway, its one more bonding story *wink*

    I sometimes now teasingly call Loo as "Father Loo" when I see him, but then on second thought, I said its incongruous as it makes me think of priestly figures in dark robes...maybe "Pops" would be more modern...

    but you know, if Loo was a priest, I bet you he'd have the mass-goers in stitches with his sermons...*grin*

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  27. hmm...you'd say that Ted, unless you were the one mistaken as my father....hahaha!

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  28. The stories are funny and well written. BTW: I'm told I look young for my age. ;-)

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  29. ok, but I may still look younger than you...

    *wears pigtails and brings lollipop*

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