Bone Crossed(39)

"So why didn't you help Mercy?" "It is your dojo, Sensei Johanson." Sensei raised an eyebrow, and Adam's sudden smile blazed out.

"Besides, I've seen her fight.

She's tough, and she's smart.

If she had thought she was in trouble, she'd have asked for help." I glanced around as I rolled over and stood up, as good as new except for the pretty bruises I was going to have on my belly.

Zee was gone.

He wouldn't have lingered, with Adam to take over guard duty.

His nose had wrinkled at the smell of sweaty bodies when we'd come in--he'd been lucky it was relatively cool this fall.

In full summer, the dojo smelled from a block away, at least it did to my nose.

To me the scent was strong but not unpleasant, but I knew from the comments of my fellow karate students that most humans disliked it almost as much as Zee did.

Drama over, Adam went back to the sidelines, loosening his tie and pulling his suit jacket off as a concession to the heat.

Sensei had us do three hundred side kicks (Lee was called from his position of disgrace to participate) first to the left, then to the right.

We all counted them off in Japanese--though I suspected if a native speaker had dropped in, they might've had difficulty understanding what we were saying.

The first hundred were easy, muscles warm and limber from earlier calisthenics; the second ...

not so much.

Somewhere about 220, I lost myself in the burning ache until it was almost a shock when we stopped and switched sides.

Wandering through the ranks of students (there were twelve of us tonight) Sensei adjusted people's form as he saw necessary.

You could tell those of us who were more serious because our two hundredth kicks looked just like our first.

Students less diligent lost height and form as exhaustion took its toll.

There were still some students in good form on the three hundredth kick--but not me.

AFTER CLASS, PEOPLE WERE TOO BUSY TRYING NOT TO stare at the werewolf--all the while getting in a good look--to pay any attention to me.

I changed in the bathroom and took my time, out of courtesy, so that they would all have time to change in the anteroom in front of the dojo before I came out.

Sensei was waiting for me when I emerged.

"Good job, Mercy," he told me with an emphasis that told me he wasn't talking about Lee.

It was odd that the words he had for me were the same ones, in a different language, that the woman in the taco wagon had used, meant the same way.

"If it hadn't been for this"--I tilted my head to indicate the dojo--"I would have died that night instead of my attacker." I gave him a formal bow, two fists down.

"Thank you for your teaching, Sensei." He returned my bow, and we both ignored the suspicious watering of eyes.

Adam was waiting near the front door carefully examining his fingernails.

He had chosen to be amused by all the people staring at him, which was a good thing.

He had a temper.

Sweat darkened his Egyptian-cotton shirt, so it clung to the round lines of his shoulders and arms, announcing to anyone that he was a hard body.