Disclaimer
Anyone who knows anything about the British presence in the Far East at the turn of the twentieth century will soon realise that I know practically nothing. The following story is pure fantasy and has as much historical and geographical accuracy as, for example, Pirates of the Caribbean, possibly less.
So, where is it based? Hong Kong? Malaya? Singapore? Well, none of the above, it's just somewhere 'east of Suez, where the best is like the worst'.
If you're one of those who find historical bunkum off putting, who can't or won't accept it for the twaddle it is, then please don't bother contacting me to point out that, for example, that my Chinese characters would speak Cantonese, not Mandarin because (a) I've already warned you and (b) I'm not that interested.
Once again I've had problems with the Literotica categories. It might have fitted under 'Interracial'. The background to the plot is the tension between the British and the Asian locals, and I won't gloss over the racism of the period although I'm a firm believer that the content of the heart is more important than the colour of the skin. It might also have been posted under Non Consent or, at a pinch, BDSM. Although there are no whips or chains, well, not in the usual sense, the reader should be aware that our heroine is in for a hard time along the way. Her trials and tribulations are very much part of the story. But, in the end, it's a love story and a lesbian one at that. As such it belongs under Lesbian Love and that is where I will post it.
Finally, of course, all characters participating in scenes of a sexual nature are over eighteen.
Dedication
This story is gratefully dedicated to my two greatest assets,
Estragon - the ruthless eliminator of the clichΓ© and punctuator in chief who has put much unsung effort into making this as good as it can be.
OneWhoAdores who has pulled me out of more plot holes than I deserve and whose moral compass always points due north.
Without either of them this tale would never have been told.
Thanks guys
And so, on with the story...
Preamble
The sweat fell down in rivers as Jenny McTavish, a young journalist working for the Gotham Times, pushed on through the jungle. Was she letting herself get carried away, in more senses than one, or was she onto the scoop of her young lifetime? While on a stop-over in the Far East she had approached in a bar by someone with a story, and not just any old story. It would seem that, living close by, there was a Western-born woman who had been involved in the rebellion back in the twenties. Now, fifty years later, if Jenny was interested, she was willing to tell her story.
Was Jenny interested? Of course she was! But first she had to get properly briefed. She dashed back to the local office and spent the day on the phone. Pulling every favour she had owing to her and making promises well above and beyond
what she would normally do, she managed to get the Gotham archivist to search their library and send her the relevant cuttings using their new fangled fax machine. Did this woman, this Jun-Nui, really know the legendary Madam Hong? If so, this was going to be something very special and, pertinently, something to show all those male chauvinist bastards that the girls could play just as tough as the boys.
The following morning, at the crack of dawn, she had been met by a guide who led her, mounted on a mule, deep into the jungle. The guide insisted that Jenny should be blindfolded so all she could do was hang on to her mule to stop herself from falling. The farther they went the more they climbed until, high in the hills, the guide told her that she could remove the blindfold. They had reached a house and there, on the stoop, was an elderly woman. Her hair, although grey, was fair and her facial structure was European, not eastern. Her name might be Chinese but this was no Chinese woman, clearly a Westerner.
"Jun-Nui Hong?" Jenny enquired.
"That's me," the woman replied in perfect English. "And you must be Jenny. I hope your journey hasn't been too hard. Look, it's far too hot to go inside. Why don't we talk out here?"
"Is it true?" Jenny couldn't hold herself back. "Did you really know Madam Hong? She's bit of a heroine of mine."
"I'm surprised an American woman has even heard of her. An obscure rebel in an obscure war."
"Hardly 'obscure'," Jenny retorted. "She's an important icon of the modern feminist movement. That's why it's important that the rest of the world hears her story."
"An important icon of the modern feminist movement, eh?"
"Because she fought for sisterhood, she fought for freedom," Jenny insisted.
"Yes, she did," Jun-Nui conceded, "but let's not rush things. Sit down and I'll fetch you a drink. It's quite a long story."
Jun-Nui went to fetch the drinks and Jenny sat herself down, pulled out her notebook and turned to a fresh page.
"So what's a European woman doing out here? You are European, aren't you?" Jenny asked once Jun-Nui had returned, handed Jenny her drink and sat down beside her.
"Ah, that's all part of the story. I came out East in 1920. I wasn't Jun-Nui back then, my name was Vera, Vera Talisker..."
Prologue - 1919 - the Officers' Mess, somewhere in a far flung outpost of the British Empire.