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The meeting between the martial arts student and his master is a long-standing convention in movies, books, comics, and anime. It has been done countless times, from kung-fu and samurai films to
Star Wars. I've written several versions of it myself, each time looking to put a bit of spin on it so it's exactly the same ... but totally different ...
Here is the latest version, from
Champion of the Dead:
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Saturday, Kane had gone to check out a kung-fu school over on the east side. He’d watched the class for thirty minutes, and was pretty sure he could take anybody in the place, including the teacher, so he bugged out. There was a new guitar store downtown just opened, and he wanted to cruise the place and see what gear they had, so the trip wouldn’t be a total loss.
He cut through an alley on his way back to where he had parked his car. He was in a hurry, because the meter was about to run out and he didn’t want to get a ticket, but he came to a door, painted a bright red, inset into the dirty brick.
There was a sign, a little hand-painted thing on the door.
He had no clue what it meant, but it caught his attention:
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The door wasn’t locked, and when he pushed, it opened.
Place smelled like the sandalwood incense his Gram burned. She was an old hippie who never got tired of telling him how great the fucking sixties had been, must have said that a thousand times. Yeah, peace, love, harmony. Where had all that gone? They hadn’t done too good a job, the hippies. Quit too soon.
Then again, Gram had taught him how to play the guitar, and he was long past “Michael, Row the Boat Ashore,” and “Kumbayah,” so he owed her for that.
The inside walls were painted red and yellow, electrically-bright, and there was a short hallway that led to the right.
He heard some men singing -- well, droning, more like, four or five of them, and he edged toward the sound.
Around the corner, the first thing he saw was a large, blue plastic bucket full of sand, with several sticks of smoking incense stuck into it. That explained the smell.
The room was big, high ceiling, almost square, more red and yellow, and in it, there was one old man seated crosslegged on a cushion, eyes closed and mouth open, and all those voices were coming from the one old man.
Wow.
Kane recognized the clothes -- a dark red robe over a yellow shirt, both sleeveless, exposing the old man’s arms. Tibetan. He had seen that movie with Keanu Reeves about Buddha, and this guy had the look, yeah, some kind of Buddhist.
He started to ease back into the hall, but the old man opened his eyes and grinned real big. Lot of smile wrinkles next to his eyes. “Ah. You have arrived!”
Well, yeah. But he must have mistaken Kane for somebody else.
The old man caught the look. “You are a warrior, right?”
Kane shrugged. “Yeah. Sort of.”
“You came for
Dmag-lag-rtsal.”
Kane must have looked puzzled again. Mahg log pretzel?
“That’s what it says on the door.” More of that wrinkled smile.
Right, like he could read that shit.
The old man stood. Well, actually, he more like ...
arose, straight from the crosslegged sit, floating slowly upward like smoke.
Nice move, for an old guy.
“We might as well get to it,” he said. He motioned with one hand to Kane:
Come at me.“What?”
“What? You never saw a kung-fu movie? You are the young, but cocky warrior who considers himself adept at martial arts. I am the old master who can turn you inside out without raising a sweat. You attack, I demonstrate my superiority, you are then eager to become my student.” He gave Kane that big, shit-eating, really-wrinkled grin.
Kane laughed. Yeah, he had seen that one a bunch of times. Half the kung-fu movies made had that scene in them.
The old dude was nuts. He didn’t need any part of that. He shook his head. “I don’t think so.”
He turned to leave.
“Are you certain? Better check.”
Kane frowned. Check? Check
what? He turned around --
The old man was gone.
“Not there, here,” he said. “Behind you.”
Kane spun, dropped into a cat-stance, his hands coming up into fists. The old man was between him and the door.
Holy
shit!
“Come, come,” the old man said. Still smiling like a loon, and giving him that wave-in. “Give us a punch.”
Kane came out of his stance and lowered his hands. “If you can fucking
teleport, there is no fucking
way I’m swinging at you!”
“You are smarter than you look. My students sometimes call me ‘Rinpoche,’” he said. “Are you ready to learn?”
It was beyond weird, but he felt it, immediately. Whatever the hell was going on here, he had to know. Just like that. “Yeah. My name is Kane.”
“Oh, yes. I know who you are. And what.”
Sam didn’t know what that meant, but it looked like he was gonna miss the new guitar store, and get a parking ticket, too.
But, turned out he didn’t get a ticket. Karma, maybe ...