Path of the Warrior Ch.1
By Shadow Ryu
The twenty-first of July was never much of a day for Ryu. While other people
his age would be out celebrating their birthdays in various fashions, he was
meditating in an empty alleyway in Thailand. He never made a big deal out of
his birthday. It was just another day to train, another day to live. Whether or
not he had just turned seventeen did not matter much to him.
It was his first time travelling alone. He had often travelled with his
sensei and fellow student, Ken, most recently into China, where both he and his
friend excelled against their opponents in a friendly competition. Gouken, his
teacher, had advised him to start seeing the world as it was on his own. Ken
had recently left their old training grounds to pursue his own future, and his
sensei decided it would be a good time for his other student to also discover
his own path. Although reluctant to leave at first as Ryu generally wanted to
stay on the training grounds, his sensei eventually convinced him to leave. In
truth, after spending the last month on his own, Ryu found himself enjoying his
travels so much that he didn't understand why he was so initially against
leaving Japan.
Ryu had travelled through south-east asia. He was now intending to make
Bangkok his main destination, but was content now to spend a few days around
Nakhon Ratchasima in the southern central part of Thailand. The past few days
were particularly uneventful for him, at least compared to the fights he had
gotten into in Laos the week before. He generally attracted a lot of attention
with his uniform wherever he went, often that of a hostile nature. But it all
led him to where he was now; doing his daily meditation chores to start of the
next day of his journey.
In a sudden second, his was distracted from his meditation by a small sound
of a light footstep on concrete a few feet from him. Looking over at where the noise
originated from, he saw a young boy, no more than eight years old, looking at
him in awe. The boy tensed up and shyly backed away when Ryu looked at him. Ryu
noticed this and tried to relax the boy a bit by giving him a small smile.
"Hello." he said simply to the boy. "How are you?"
After greeting the boy, Ryu suddenly felt something coming toward his face.
Reaching his hand up, he grabbed a foot that was about to hit him in the face.
Turning his attention away from the boy, he saw four teenagers, three of them
very skinny and one very fat, standing on the other side of him. Quickly
leaping to his feet, he threw the one boy who had tried to kick him to the
ground. He looked over at one of the skinny teens and realized that he was
holding his dusty duffel bag.
"Thief?!" Ryu said to himself. He immediately grabbed the nearest
thief and threw him into the alley wall, kicked him in the side with a
roundhouse and tossed him over his shoulder. The three other thieves watched in
awe of the quick attack and paused long enough to look at each other before
realizing it was in their best interest to run away as quickly as possible. The
one thief that had snatched Ryu's duffel bag took off first, with the other two
trailing behind. As Ryu tried to pursue them, the more rotund thief who could
not run nearly as quickly as the other two decided to stop running. Turning
around, he produced a knife from his pocket and pointed it menacingly at his
pursuer.
Ryu stopped, noticing the possible threat, but only to get his bearings. The
moment the obese thief lunged forward with the knife, he kicked it out of his
hand and spun around kicking his attacker in his belly and knocking him out of
the way. Without delay, he then rushed on to try and catch up with the other
two thieves who had now gotten a rather substantial head start. As the alleyway
ended, he looked around quickly but could only see the skinnest one running
down the west side of the street. Taking off as fast as he could, Ryu pursued.
Due to the fact that this particular thief was not in great shape, visible by
the way he was sucking air, it did not take him long to catch him. Grabbing him
from behind, he pushed the skinny boy, who looked no older than fifteen into a
wall of a store and looked into his eyes. The boy responded with a look as
though he was fearing for his life.
"Where's your friend?" Ryu asked him in English. "The one
with my bag?"
The boy only responded with the same scared look.
"Where can I find your friend?" Ryu asked again, this time in
Japanese, his original language.
The boy said something in Thai that Ryu could not understand. With a sigh of
frustration, Ryu relaxed the grip on the boy and looked around again trying to
find the other thief. When he failed to locate him, he swore in Japanese and
then pushed the boy aside. He was not interested in beating up these boys. All
he wanted was to get his bag back. The thief ran off immediately, not looking
back after his attacker had let him go. All Ryu could do was watch him run.
Scolding himself for being so careless and not being able to prevent the theft
from happening in the first place, Ryu wondered what to do now that all the
money he needed for his trip was still in the stolen bag. He took one last
hopeless look around for a glimpse of a boy with his duffel bag, swore once
again to himself in Japanese, and then decided it was time to start searching.
*****
Narin ran through the streets as quickly as his little feet could take him,
nearly tripping a few times as he continued on. He wouldn't stop though. After
seeing the man in the karate suit do what he did, he had to tell Thuy all about
it. After a few more minutes of running, he jumped up the front stairs of
Thuy's restaurant and barged through the front door. There was a wide smile on
his face that beamed through despite the huffing and puffing that came from his
mouth as he did.
"Thuy! Thuy! I've found someone!" he said brightly. "I've
found someone who can help!"
Thuy looked over at the young boy with a concerned glance. She shook her head
slightly in the hope that it would prevent the boy from saying anything else.
Narin did not realize that she currently had an unwanted visitor.
Unfortunately, the big brute who had come to pay her a visit had already taken
notice of the youngster. Narin's smile quickly disappeared when he felt
something metal wrap around his neck. Suddenly lifted off his feet, he felt the
metal choke at his throat.
"No! Stop it!" Thuy yelled. "Let him go."
Narin's face was quickly turning red from being choked. Looking to his side,
the boy could see that his assailant, a dark-skinned brute with a punk-like
blonde hairdo, was smiling at him as he looked him over. His generally happy
appearance had quickly turned to that of horrid fear of what this brutish
figure could do to him. As the grip seemed to tighten, Narin tried to kick
frantically out of his grasp.
"I don't know, dearie." the brute said. "This might be an
efficient way to make you learn to pay off your debts. My employer wasn't too
happy with you missing your last payment, so he sent good ol' Birdie here to
come settle up." Although he was a rather intimidating looking fellow and
had the most negative of intentions, Birdie certainly talked in a genuinely
professional tone. This was his job after all.
"Please! He's just a kid." Thuy pleaded. "I'll pay you off
anyway I can, just leave him alone, please!"
With a quick flick of his wrist, Birdie removed the metal cuff around young
Narin's neck disappeared and the youngster fell to the floor on his bottom.
"Well, this is your last warning, old lady. You've got two days to pay up,
or there won't be anything left of your fine establishment. You don't want
trouble do you, miss?"
Thuy ignored the question and walked over to Narin and tried to help him up,
swearing at the intruder under her breath in her native Thai language as she
did. He coughed a little, and began to cry. The poor boy certainly had the
scare of his life.
"Nothing personal, of course." Birdie said in a casual friendly
manner. "Just doin' what pays my bills is all." With that, Birdie
turned away, and promptly waddled to the door, punching a hole in the wall and
smiling at the inhabitants once before leaving.
Wiping his tears away, Thuy sighed at her misfortune. Although she was only
in her fifties, she seemed quite a bit older. The stresses of trying to keep
her little restaurant open, with so little help from anyone were finally
getting to her. Now, without enough money to pay off a debt she had obviously
made with the wrong type of people, she had more stress on her than ever.
Fighting the tears, Narin managed to choke out some words. "I've found
someone who can help you, Thuy." he said. "He's a great fighter, I
can tell. He can protect you!"
"Relax, boy." Thuy responded. "Just relax for now." She
helped the boy onto a chair, thinking to herself what an overactive imagination
he had. Even if the young boy had found a great fighter, she didn't know how or
even why a fighter would want to help her anyways.
"I'll go find him." Narin told her. "I know he'll help us,
you'll see!"