Schooled(23)
She stood on tiptoe to press her mouth to his. “I’ll miss you every moment. But I can’t wait to get the inside scoop on Ronin as a boy from his mama.”
Without breaking eye contact with Amery, Ronin said, “No embarrassing stories from my childhood, okay, Mom?”
Tamara laughed. “No promises about that, Ronin-san.”
He groaned.
One more kiss, one more softly whispered I love you, and she forced herself to follow Tamara onto the tarmac.
***
It’d been a hellish week. No Amery. No respite in his training.
“Pay attention!” Master Daichi shouted. “Ten more.”
Ronin’s arms and legs were as limp as ramen. In all the years he’d trained with Daichi he’d never given up, never refused a command, never complained.
Evidently that was about to change.
He managed the spider crawl on the inside of “the box.” Halfway down, his body just gave out and he fell the last eight feet. With his years of jujitsu training he’d learned to make safe falls, so nothing was hurt worse than his pride.
“Hachidan,” Daichi barked. “Get up. Go again.”
Ronin shook his head, sweat flying everywhere as he rolled to his knees. “I’m done in.”
“You are done in when I say you’re done in.”
Grabbing a towel, he mopped his face. “Let me rest and regroup.”
“That was not a request.”
He heard the sharp crack at the same time he felt the sting of Master Daichi’s belt connect with his quadriceps. He’d learned not to flinch over the years, but it’d been a long time since Sensei had employed his belt as a disciplinary measure.
When Ronin didn’t react, he knew another lash was coming. But he was prepared. He focused on hearing that whisper of fabric on fabric. He’d have less than a split second to counter the strike.
At the barely perceptible shush of Daichi’s sleeve brushing his pant leg, Ronin’s arm shot out. He wrapped the towel in his hand around the belt, stopping the strike from landing.
Ronin glanced up to meet Master Daichi’s surprised gaze. “Yes, Sensei, I pay attention. Even when you work me to exhaustion, mentally and physically, I’m learning from you.”
Silence.
“And that is why you are his most respected student,” Yasuji said from behind them.
Master Daichi harrumphed. But he didn’t release his belt, nor did Ronin release the towel.
“Enough,” Yasuji said. He untwisted the towel from around the belt, holding both in one hand. “Brother. Take a break. Allow Master Black to do the same.”
Surprisingly, Daichi obeyed. He retreated in silence.
Yasuji pointed to a bottle of water on the low table. “For you.”
Ronin cracked the cap and drained the bottle in four swallows. “Thanks.”
After Ronin caught his balance and his breath, Yasuji said, “May I ask you a question?”
“Of course.”
“What are you still doing here? When your lovely bride awaits you in Tokyo?”
“Finishing my required training. The final week is not to be filled with distractions, which is why my lovely bride isn’t here.”
“And what new things have you learned?”
Yasuji rarely questioned him like this and it caused Ronin to scroll back through the past five days’ training exercises. He hadn’t learned anything new; he’d just fine-tuned previous lessons. “I’m not sure I follow what you’re after, Master Yasuji.”
“My brother demanded you train with no distractions, which would lead me to believe he had new things to teach you. But you’ve not learned any deeper ties to meditation. You’ve not learned new offensive or defensive techniques. No new weapons have been introduced. So tell me again; why are you here?”
“Because Sensei demanded it,” he said by rote.
In that moment, the wooden recitation of that statement and the wrongness of his blind obedience collided. He finally understood why his teacher had issued the demand; only to see if Ronin would obey it.
Goddammit.
His gaze zoomed to Yasuji. “You knew this additional training wasn’t necessary but just another one of his mindfucks?”
“I’m surprised you didn’t catch on before now.”
“So all of this—the endless drills and never-ending physical challenges were for Daichi’s amusement?”
“No. He is your sensei; he expects obedience from you above all else. But he’s also a man, Ronin. An old man.” He sighed. “As taxing as the challenges have been on you in the past year, the year has been just as bad on him.”
I doubt it.
“Even after your recovery from injury you will continue to be in your prime for the next twenty-plus years. There’s no longer anything more you can learn from him. He knows this. Part of him has feared reaching this point.”