Β© 2024 by the author using the pen name
UpperNorthLeft
.
This story was submitted for the
YAY TEAM 2024
event.
All sexual activity is between adults 18 years of age or older.
Many thanks to
Jalibar62
for casting his keen editorial eye on this story, for spotting grammatical faux pas, and for making numerous other suggestions that improved the story greatly. Any remaining errata and mental lapses are all mine.
* * *
A four-foot hardwood staff went whistling by my head, and my sedate Saturday morning suddenly got a lot more interesting. The staff missed my skull, but not by much. It brushed the hair on my head in passing, and my hair is pretty short.
I turned and automatically brought my own staff up into a guard position to block any subsequent strikes.
However, my attacker stared at me in horror, and said, "Oh my God! I'm so sorry!"
We were fellow students at the Sakura aikido dojo in Seattle's Green Lake area. We had been separately practicing the strikes, parries, whirls and thrusts of a 31-count kata with the
jo
-- the Japanese short staff. When you do the
jo
kata slowly it is almost a meditation. At full speed, you become a whirling wall of fast-moving wood, and any sensible person will stay way the hell away from you, even if they're armed with an Uzi.
If you're not an oblivious asshole, you try really hard to keep your own personal whirling wall of wood from whacking your pals. The woman next to me was clearly aghast at having nearly split my skull. I decided to take the high road, and smiled. "No blood, no foul."
"But I almost hit you! I should have been paying more attention."
"It's okay. I know you'll be more careful next time." I paused. "However, if you
really
feel that bad, then buy me a cup of coffee after practice."
She gave me a pained smile. "Okay, it's the least I can do."
We resumed our
jo
katas -- this time with a lot more space between us. No further mishaps occurred.
After practice, I changed out of my
gi
, took a shower, and waited for her in the front of the dojo. Huh -- I had a date for coffee with the Ice Queen.
* * *
I earned several computer science degrees from Texas A & M, and then moved to Seattle three years ago to become a software engineer. After baking in the summer sun of Texas for most of my life, life in the cool mists of the Pacific Northwest suited me just fine. Several years here among the neutral speech patterns of the Upper North Left had morphed my Texas drawl into what my Aunt Alice in Austin referred to as "Aidan's Yankee clip". I love her dearly, but it tickles me no end to imagine how shocked she would be to hear words coming out of the mouths of true Yankees from New Hampshah or Lawn Gyland. But I digress.
One does not live by code alone. After buying a cool house in the Green Lake area and a Subaru Outback, I needed a social group. I had a few friends at work and met a few more going on hikes organized by the local REI mother ship store. However, some of my best friends were folks I had met at the Sakura aikido dojo, which is located just north of Green Lake. I had discovered the dojo while walking home one evening. I was entranced by the whirl and flow of bodies on the mat, and how they tumbled gracefully in a swirl of black and white uniforms. After a newcomer's workshop, I was hooked.
I'd been practicing aikido for about three years, and no one had ever attacked me on the mean streets of Seattle. However, aikido gave me confidence and a sense of community. I had just earned the rank of 1st
kyu
, which would be equivalent to a brown belt in other dojos. The next step up the aikido food chain for me would be
shodan
-- a first degree black belt. Making the final leap to black requires a huge amount of work. I had to learn a zillion new techniques, and also polish the ones I already knew. This goal brought me to the dojo several times during the week, and at least once on the weekend.
* * *
Not long after I became first
kyu
, the Ice Queen joined our dojo. As we knelt in
seiza
position on the mat, waiting for Sally Sensei to begin our practice, Bill -- one of my dojo mates -- leaned over and whispered "Hey, check out the hot chick in the
hakama
."
Hakama
are the baggy, black samurai pants worn by our black belts. The woman he indicated was kneeling two rows in front of us and I couldn't tell much about her, other than that she was slender, and wore her straight, dark hair in a ponytail.
Sally Sensei knelt in front of the class and led us in our bowing-in ceremony. She then said, "Nyssa just moved here from Houston and is joining our dojo. Please make her welcome here at Sakura."
We spent the rest of the class practicing various throws and joint locks. We shifted among partners, and I ended up with Nyssa several times. Now that we were standing, I could see that she was about two inches shorter than my middle height. The first time we paired, I bowed and said, "I'm Mac. Welcome to the dojo."
She bowed without speaking, and we took turns throwing each other around on the mat. Throughout the practice, she didn't smile or talk, and her aikido technique was flawless. I was familiar with all the throws and pins we practiced together, but mine seemed clunky and crude compared to her precise and graceful moves.
One of the first things you learn in aikido is how to fall. At first, you fall with a lot of crashes and crunches and it hurts. With practice though, you slowly polish the rough edges off your technique, and your falls begin to flow into graceful rolls. The pain eventually goes away, and you actually look forward to falling. Your falls also start making a lot less noise, and become swooshes rather than splats. Nyssa's rolls were whispers, and made my own rolls sound like a threshing machine by comparison.
* * *
So it went for the next few months. Nyssa came to several evening classes per week. She was polite, but rarely spoke to anyone other than Sally Sensei. She never smiled, and one of the other men in our dojo dubbed her "the Ice Queen". That nickname initially caught on among our
aikidoka
, but its usage stopped dramatically after the first time Sally Sensei heard it used.
The word "aikido" is often translated as "the way of the harmonious spirit". Sally Sensei is an exemplar of such a spirit. She is one of the merriest people I have ever met, and joyfully shares her mastery of the art with every one of her students. We all adore her and would do anything to make her proud of us.
Having said that, you can imagine how we feel during the very few times that she gets truly pissed off. The sunshine goes behind a cloud and the joy is temporarily gone. You feel like you have shamed your parents, your grandparents, and all of your future children and grandchildren. So when Sally Sensei said, "'Ice Princess.' What a
mean
thing to say," the light went out of her eyes, we all felt like the mutant scum that festers on the bottom of the deepest, darkest septic tanks.
The rest of that practice was a joyless motherfucker of an hour. We all went home depressed, and I had trouble sleeping.
The next day in the dojo, the sunlight was back in Sally Sensei's eyes, and I suspect that we all silently vowed to never, ever disappoint her like that again. I know that I did.
However, as much as we all now deplored the term "Ice Queen", I couldn't help feeling that the phrase contained a tiny grain of truth. Something about her indeed seemed frozen, and I had no idea what that might be.