foot into Jeeha’s groin.
Mandatory drill sessions lasted for only two hours, but the first-years began staying in the studio to practice their forms long after the period had ended. The only problem was that the students with previous training seized this chance to show off. Nezha performed a series of twirling leaps in the center of the room, attempting spinning kicks that became progressively more flamboyant. A small ring of his classmates gathered around to watch.
“Admiring our prince?” Kitay strolled across the room to stand next to Rin.
“I fail to see how this would be useful in battle,” Rin said. Nezha was now spinning a full 540 degrees in the air before kicking. It looked very pretty, but also very pointless.
“Oh, it’s not. A lot of old arts are like that—cool to watch, practically useless. The lineages were adapted for stage opera, not combat, and then adapted back. That’s where the Red Junk Opera got their name, you know. The founding members were martial artists posing as street performers to get closer to their targets. You should read the history of inherited arts sometime, it’s fascinating.”
“Is there anything you haven’t read about?” Rin asked. Kitay seemed to have an encyclopedic knowledge of almost every topic. That day over lunch he had given Rin a lecture on how fish-gutting techniques differed across provinces.
“I have a soft spot for martial arts,” said Kitay. “Anyway, it’s depressing when you see people who can’t tell the difference between self-defense and performance art.”
Nezha landed, crouched impressively, after a particularly high leap. Several of their classmates, absurdly, began to clap.
Nezha straightened up, ignoring the applause, and caught Rin’s eye. “That’s what family arts are,” he said, wiping the sweat off his forehead.
“I’m sure you’ll be the terror of the school,” said Rin. “You can dance for donations. I’ll toss you an ingot.”
A sneer twisted Nezha’s face. “You’re just jealous you have no inherited arts.”
“I’m glad I don’t, if they all look as absurd as yours.”
“The House of Yin innovated the most powerful kicking-based technique in the Empire,” Nezha snapped. “Let’s see how you’d like being on the receiving end.”
“I think I’d be fine,” Rin said. “Though it would be a dazzling visual spectacle.”
“At least I’m not an artless peasant,” Nezha spat. “You’ve never done martial arts before in your life. You only know one kick.”
“And you keep calling me a peasant. It’s like you only know one insult.”
“Duel me, then,” Nezha said. “Fight to incapacitation for ten seconds or first blood. Right here, right now.”
“You’re on,” Rin started to say, but Kitay slapped a hand over her mouth.
“Oh, no. Oh, no, no.” Kitay yanked Rin back. “You heard Jun, you shouldn’t—”
But Rin shrugged Kitay off. “Jun’s not here, is he?”
Nezha grinned nastily. “Venka! Get over here!”
Venka broke off her conversation with Niang at the other end of the room and flounced over, flushed at Nezha’s summons.
“Referee us,” Nezha said, not taking his eyes off Rin.
Venka folded her hands behind her back, imitating Master Jun, and lifted her chin. “Begin.”
The rest of their class had now formed a circle around Nezha and Rin. Rin was too angry to notice their stares. She had eyes only for Nezha. He began moving around her, darting back and forth with quick, elegant movements.
Kitay was right, Rin thought. Nezha really did look like he was performing stage opera. He didn’t seem particularly lethal then, just foolish.
She narrowed her eyes and crouched low, following Nezha’s movements carefully.
There. A clear opening. Rin raised a leg and kicked out, hard.
Her leg caught Nezha in midair with a satisfying whoomph.
Nezha uttered an unnatural shriek and clutched his crotch, whimpering.
The entire studio fell silent as all heads swiveled in their direction.
Nezha clambered to his feet, scarlet-faced. “You—how dare you—”
“Just as you said.” Rin dipped her head into a mocking bow. “I only know one kick.”
Humiliating Nezha felt good, but the political repercussions were immediate and brutal. It didn’t take long for their class to form alliances. Nezha, mortally offended, made it clear that associating with Rin meant social alienation. He pointedly refused to speak to her or acknowledge her existence, unless it was to make snide comments about her accent. One by one the members of their class, terrified of receiving the same treatment, followed suit.
Kitay was the one exception. He had grown up on Nezha’s bad side, he told Rin, and it wasn’t about to start bothering him now.
“Besides,” he said, “that look on his face? Priceless.”
Rin was grateful for Kitay’s loyalty, but was amazed