Hong Kong Young Writers Anthologies Fiction 12 | Page 248

nowhere, and crushed the minion behind her that was thinking of a sneak attack. Lai Hei represented the element stone. Dragon fought too, in fact, he had a different style. He waited until the minions came close, and then unleashed a water tornado invisible to naked eye, making the minions drop to the ground, unconscious. No one knows what happened, because the tornado travels like light and has no sound at all. Dragon is water. Tiger fought like a jackal combined with a lion, bear and eagle. He swiped his claws around, causing flame to alight from his paws. He bit hard on the minion who was coming close to him, and the minion was set alight. Tiger is fire. After all those fighting, they went deeper into the mines, covered with bruises and scratches and some stains of blood. At the very end was the king. He was as tall as a 10 story building, and had aquamarine skin and his wings were dark purple. He shoved them a paper and told them to do it. He sat there, watching like a hawk. The paper was a test, and the questions ranged from: When did Shanghai stop? to What are the foods in Shanghai? It was a piece of cake, and she wrote this: 1. about 1945. 2. During the 1920s and 1930s Shanghai became known as "The Paris of the East, the New York of the West. 3. The women wore things called Qi Pao. Men wore clothes like what we wear in Chinese New Year. Poor people just wear ragged clothes, but still okay…… until finally went home by finishing it. And saved the people. She then went back home.