She rose. Her bare feet whispered across the tatami. Then she moved.
Fifty-eight. She closed her eyes. This was the forbidden part. She brought her hands together, not in prayer, but like the jaws of a steel trap. Then she exhaled—a sharp, percussive kiai that was too loud for her small lungs—and fell backwards into a roll. Rika nishimura six years 58
Two. A step, a pivot, a palm strike to the solar plexus of a man made of air. She rose
Master Hiroshi shook his head. He gently closed her tiny fingers over the wood. Fifty-eight
But she didn't stop. Mid-roll, her right leg shot out, sweeping the leg of an invisible opponent. She landed on one knee, one fist pressed to the floor, the other cocked back. Her ponytail, tied with a red ribbon, dusted the mat.
“What is the meaning of the number?” he asked, for the hundredth time.
The polished floor of the dojo smelled of straw mats and ancient sweat. Six-year-old Rika Nishimura, small as a sparrow, knelt in a perfect seiza despite the ache in her knees. Her gi , stark white and stiff with starch, was three sizes too large, the sleeves rolled up in thick, clumsy cuffs.